Europeans don't do these things??

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 20 сен 2024
  • Thank you for watching me, a humble American, react to American Things Europeans Find Weird
    Original video: • American Things Europe...
    Got a video request? Fill out this form!
    forms.gle/NeQp...
    Thanks for subscribing for more European reactions!

Комментарии • 3,5 тыс.

  • @hape3862
    @hape3862 Год назад +3288

    'Murica: "Free refills!"
    Europe: "Free healthcare!"

    • @Ray-lw2rh
      @Ray-lw2rh Год назад +189

      Ouch, that was brutal

    • @lillm6874
      @lillm6874 Год назад +41

      Exactly

    • @jgwill
      @jgwill Год назад +66

      Newsflash: Neither are free

    • @jgwill
      @jgwill Год назад +14

      also Murica: "Better healthcare"

    • @DanVibesTV
      @DanVibesTV Год назад +275

      @@jgwill European healthcare is cheaper to run for the governments, nobody goes bankrupt because of an accident. PLUS, Europe has better treatment outcomes. That is stuff that I happily pay taxes for. xD

  • @joanneaugust6611
    @joanneaugust6611 Год назад +234

    Americans "ughing" at European food in Europe is just the kind of ignorance we're used to from the folks over the pond. Belgium invented chips, they eat them with mayonnaise as well (among other things). Why do Americans think that their bastardized versions of our food are an improvement? Because they're not, I assure you. Literally everything from Ice cream over pizza to chocolate is worse in the US. And this is not an opinion. The list of nutrients agrees with me.

    • @RainbowHera
      @RainbowHera Месяц назад +9

      I got some US chocolate. Really not nice!

    • @harounel-poussah6936
      @harounel-poussah6936 Месяц назад +6

      Belgians invented "French" fries, and even the French agrees : French are not into IP infringement

    • @Taichientaoyin
      @Taichientaoyin 24 дня назад +10

      Glad I live in Europe. I love my fries with mayonaise.

  • @JB-zs1oq
    @JB-zs1oq 8 месяцев назад +296

    As an Aussie, I find it difficult to understand why there appears to be more checks on age to purchase alcohol then eligibility to purchase a weapon.

    • @CharlesRaines4946
      @CharlesRaines4946 3 месяца назад

      Maybe that's why there are so many school shootings in the u.s, it's simply easier to get a gun than it is to get a bottle of booze!

    • @priscilabeato
      @priscilabeato Месяц назад +4

      So true.

    • @marcleewinser8534
      @marcleewinser8534 24 дня назад +1

      This is because You are free to be asked many intrusive Questions over any random Stuff. And You hopefully have some Answers...

    • @adelheidunbekannt5670
      @adelheidunbekannt5670 15 часов назад

      Es ist viel sicherer einen 14 jährigen nevwaffe zu kaufen als bier

  • @Dqtube
    @Dqtube Год назад +1456

    Fun fact, many of us don't use the word crisps or chips because we are not native English speakers. English is the first language for less than 10% of Europe's population.

    • @JeroenJA
      @JeroenJA Год назад +71

      I think the only place in continental europe where the word crisp would let them think of fries first is Gibraltar 😂

    • @vtbn53
      @vtbn53 Год назад +58

      @@JeroenJA Nowhere are fries known as crisps, french fries is a misnomer picked up by the US military in the French speaking part of Belgium, they are actually "chipped potatoes" shortened as chips in UK English.

    • @vtbn53
      @vtbn53 Год назад +27

      @@JeroenJA Yes but nearly 100% of Europe has English as their second language albeit with an American accent (annoyingly)

    • @JeroenJA
      @JeroenJA Год назад +32

      @@vtbn53 say chips anywhere in the benelux, and it can only mean, euhm, chips, the thin slides fried you eat in front of the tv or so :).
      i meant to say chips!
      i often heard fish and chips as teenager, i needed a pic to understand they talked about fries ;-).
      but the dutch in the north of holland are worse, they call it 'patat' , just the half dialect flemish word for a potato, so just the raw version that hasn't been cooked with.
      there was a kinderen voor kinderen song :
      Kip patat en appelmoes,
      i only understood recently the writers mend fries! i always interpretated it as whatever kind of preparred potato , i still keep on interpreting it that way mainly ;) i just note that some weird connection is made in north to think only of fries..

    • @JeroenJA
      @JeroenJA Год назад +6

      @@vtbn53 the britisch empire is way over,
      the american century that started with the world wars and the USA playing the policeman of the world since..
      English would not have become the second language worldwide from just the English, it was mainly cause of the American, to learn programming and such you needed.. English, tv, movies USA is bigger.. so OF COURSE it's mainly american English ;).
      if it hadn't been it would have mend WAY less people spoke good English now ;).
      and in Europe that would have mend French and German would have stayed more important..

  • @maureenmolleron747
    @maureenmolleron747 Год назад +786

    You can eat a 5 course meal, because the proportions are very small. The idea is to TASTE!

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Год назад +26

      It's like an all-you-can-eat buffet, and you get a tiny piece of everything!

    • @evamg21
      @evamg21 Год назад +14

      I've come out from an 8 course meal hungry. So yeah. Portions are literal bite sizes sometimes.

    • @dan_kay
      @dan_kay Год назад +6

      Screw that. My idea of a dinner is to get enough nutrients into my body to make it through the next few hours. TASTE is overrated, if I don't get FULL.

    • @Lucifer-do7mf
      @Lucifer-do7mf Год назад +6

      @@dan_kay you my uncle by chance? XD he just shovels the food in and zooms back into work

    • @Misterjingle
      @Misterjingle Год назад +23

      @@dan_kay You get full with 5 courses meal buddy, go try a dinner in an Italian or French family, you will see if you dont get full. Taste and full.

  • @Brusselpicker
    @Brusselpicker 5 месяцев назад +242

    You are still treating Europe as a single country.

    • @On1_Master
      @On1_Master Месяц назад +2

      It is like that in most parts of Europe

    • @Liggliluff
      @Liggliluff Месяц назад +37

      ​@@On1_MasterWhat is? Things are very different. All of Europe don't speak English, and a small portion has it as a native language.
      Paying by card and phone is very common and sometimes required in Northern Europe, unlike what was said in the video.

    • @On1_Master
      @On1_Master Месяц назад +1

      @@Liggliluff Sorry I meant many parts not most

    • @JM-tz9ej
      @JM-tz9ej Месяц назад +38

      Nobody that live in Europe, treat Europe like one country, 😂😂, greetings from Germany. There are a different language in every country, different culture and systems.😉😉

    • @patrickporter6536
      @patrickporter6536 Месяц назад +8

      He doesn't understand the concept.

  • @alexanderblume5377
    @alexanderblume5377 Год назад +424

    "Free refills are the best in America"
    Ok, but that only applies to soda or coffee, now everyone knows that American coffee is worse than dishwater, and in an American soda there is 66% ice, so you need 3 fills to get a fair portion

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Год назад +18

      And it's quite the opposite in Germany. McD sells Jacobs coffee, a reputable big brand. probably the best coffee you can get for 1.29€ outside of making it yourself. (Used to be 1€ flat which was simply unbeatable)

    • @Maverick811001
      @Maverick811001 Год назад +15

      And corn sirap makes the soda taste terrible.

    • @alexanderblume5377
      @alexanderblume5377 Год назад +8

      @@HappyBeezerStudios Jacobs coffee is a very common brand for poor people who have spent literally billions on advertising but the quality is lousy however compared to American coffee it is practically the best you can buy in the US.

    • @jetfowl
      @jetfowl Год назад +10

      This is true. And the only good coffee is espresso.
      A shot of espresso at the corner tasquinha is the way to go.

    • @Layp107
      @Layp107 Год назад

      LOL

  • @nightcorelore5648
    @nightcorelore5648 Год назад +1423

    „Do you not have opinion segments in the news?“ is my new favorite non-satirical American question 🤣
    No, silly boy it’s the news… it’s supposed to be short, precise and most importantly neutral

    • @nightcorelore5648
      @nightcorelore5648 Год назад

      Then again in Germany the news often has to make clear, that radical political parties are infact … well radical
      They still don’t say it as an opinion, but rather say „they are often seen as radical right“
      Well honestly it’s just the right thing to do… it’s disgusting how many people vote for Afd

    • @karinwenzel6361
      @karinwenzel6361 Год назад +190

      In longer news "shows" you might get ONE opinion piece, but this has to be clearly marked, at least in Germany. It always starts with "Now a commentary by ... (full name)" and ends with "This was a commentary by ...".

    • @maxvandoorn3799
      @maxvandoorn3799 Год назад +13

      ​@@karinwenzel6361 die 24 Uhr Tagesthemen haben doch immer einen Kommentar zu einem Thema des Tages oder?

    • @xxxLesy
      @xxxLesy Год назад

      Also so many american news are hosted by comedians these days like John Oliver, Stephen Colbert, Trevor Noah ...
      And then there are all the annoying commentators. Not just the obvious ones on the right. There are equally annoying lefties like Rachel Maddow.

    • @jakubport7361
      @jakubport7361 Год назад +27

      yeah that question is so baffling

  • @MamaBulgaria
    @MamaBulgaria 6 месяцев назад +38

    I hate when the server comes every minute to check on me!!!!!and I have to smile and explain myself. I haven’t even takes a bite and she is already here asking me how is the food…

  • @Kris1964
    @Kris1964 Год назад +420

    You can have 12 courses …but the total volum of food stays virtually the same as a three course. They want you to sample delicious food …not to make you puke 😊😊

    • @renefrijhoff2484
      @renefrijhoff2484 Год назад +13

      Absolutely true. Also in that case your entire meal course takes a lot of more time to be able to digest instead of getting stuffed up to the point of puking.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Год назад +13

      Yeah, I always looked at it that way. Each course is just a small piece, but you get many small pieces. Some only see "12 courses" and complain that they can't eat that much. Some see the small portions and complain that they want to eat to stop being hungry. The truth lies inbetween.

    • @Layp107
      @Layp107 Год назад +2

      Exactly!

    • @NIlleyla
      @NIlleyla Год назад +11

      ​@@HappyBeezerStudiosI had to think of the joke if a man wants his pizza to be cut into 4 or 8 pieces and he answers "4, i don't have enough hunger to eat 8 slices of pizza"

  • @cheryla7480
    @cheryla7480 Год назад +740

    The funny thing about English teeth is that recent studies have found teeth in the UK stronger and healthier than American teeth! Apparently all the procedures Americans go through to whiten etc. end up weakening their teeth considerably, destroying the enamel at a rapid rate. People in the UK do practice dental hygiene they just don’t go to extremes to straighten or whiten that Americans do.

    • @AlphaSigmA1
      @AlphaSigmA1 Год назад

      The funny thing is that UK doesnt represent Europe nor brits represent Europeans.
      Uk is just one country among many others into europe as a continent. Nothing more.
      So the teeth issue is only between you and muricans. Same shit different asshole 😂

    • @aiun-iverse
      @aiun-iverse Год назад

      That doesn't suprise me at all. My personal impression is that Americans first and foremost care about looks, like white and straight teeth. Correct me if I'm wrong but aren't vaneers and crowns extremely popular in the US? They literally put a shiny fake tooth over the natural tooth, which can be totally rotten inside. On the other hand you can have discolored and crooked teeth that are perfecly healthy.

    • @kacperzboch7780
      @kacperzboch7780 Год назад +24

      on top of that if you dring tea after washing ur teeth it stays on them for the rest of the day.

    • @faithlesshound5621
      @faithlesshound5621 Год назад +53

      Children (but not adults) in the UK also have free dental care, but they don't have the same culture of forcing orthodontics onto kids. Also, sugar is still ever-present in food and drink but not to the same extent as in the US.

    • @Hitsugix
      @Hitsugix Год назад +76

      this is basically the same in germany. saying it's a lack of dental hygiene is really just rude and dumb.

  • @indrajukame
    @indrajukame 10 месяцев назад +100

    10:28 100% true! It would seem weird to see flags everywhere. In Latvia, everybody puts out flags only on national celebration or memorial days. And, no, not the flag of the EU because each country here has their own national flags!

    • @jwideuluisinaein
      @jwideuluisinaein 3 месяца назад +3

      here there might be a swedish flag here and there but it's definitely not as much as americans 😅

    • @flitsertheo
      @flitsertheo Месяц назад +2

      In Belgium on celebration days you may see the following flags :
      - town flag
      - province flag (10 provinces)
      - community flag (Flanders, Wallonia, East-Kantons)
      - Belgian flag
      - EU flag
      The flag of the local football (soccer) team is not an official flag.

    • @borutmacuh5127
      @borutmacuh5127 Месяц назад +3

      In Slovenia also, on National days or holidays and on certain public buildings!

    • @dazai_kinnie_n.1
      @dazai_kinnie_n.1 Месяц назад +3

      Latvia mentioned??? no way, I'm also latvian :D

    • @harounel-poussah6936
      @harounel-poussah6936 Месяц назад +1

      France : public buildings, public events (national day, memorial days, etc) , when there's a major sport event... You may see the local flags of regions etc on events, townhouses, as well as coats of arms...
      But if you see the French flag on a house out of some event where it fits, we'll definitively raise an eyebrow and think there must be some kind of looney there...
      Moreover, those that show up the flag the more have always proven to be the most antipatriotic ones, i.e. the far right on Hitler's payroll in the 30's/40's and now on Putin's payroll...
      By essence, you don't need to show the flag: you know who you are and you have nothing to prove to others, actually, I'm sure to be spotted as a French abroad because I'll definitively be the one seen with a baguette

  • @andreasloboda1794
    @andreasloboda1794 Год назад +432

    As Serbian, it is also weird to see anyone carrying guns. While we have a lot of guns around, they are mostly kept at homes, locked away. Carrying gun requires a different type of permit than just owning one.

    • @deutschegeschichte4972
      @deutschegeschichte4972 Год назад +7

      It is the same here in the U.S.A. I don't know why everyone seems to think we carry guns out in public. In most places it is actually illegal to. There are some places where its legal but that is most certainly a minority lol.

    • @zokilauda
      @zokilauda Год назад +25

      ​@@deutschegeschichte4972
      Perhaps due to the fact that in America it is still made far too easy for Civilians and mainly criminals.
      to obtain and own firearms.
      Compared to most countries worldwide.

    • @Ikkeligeglad
      @Ikkeligeglad Год назад

      Unless you want to kill Bosnians 😉

    • @Ikkeligeglad
      @Ikkeligeglad Год назад +1

      I have Serbian friends and Bosnian too so I know somthing!

    • @wewenang5167
      @wewenang5167 Год назад

      well not in texas...we carry guns everywhere including in stores.@@deutschegeschichte4972

  • @barbarusbloodshed6347
    @barbarusbloodshed6347 Год назад +339

    I'm German and I've met exactly ONE person here who enjoyed watching Wrestling.
    He had a mental handicap due to not getting enough oxygen during birth. Make of that what you will.

    • @goose-lw6js
      @goose-lw6js Год назад +26

      Wrestling was decently popular over here when i was a kid. When it was still called WWF with ppl like Hulk Hogan, Bret Hart, Yokozuna etc. But yeah, no adult watches that stuff and also not kids nowadays.

    • @ushiefreebird7470
      @ushiefreebird7470 Год назад +9

      Never heard of wrestling. Why would anyone watch that????

    • @winwinmilieudefensie7757
      @winwinmilieudefensie7757 Год назад +6

      😂😂😂😂

    • @thomasbarchen
      @thomasbarchen Год назад +4

      I am an American and I have been living in Germany since the early 90s, used to watch wrestling sometimes back then. Watching wrestling is like eating Pringles you know it is bad but what the heck you only live once. And it's good to recalibrate the brain after reading Schopenhauer, Husserl, and Heidegger.

    • @g-man4297
      @g-man4297 Год назад +3

      Wrestling used to be big in the UK back in the days of terrestrial TV before the internet, with it being on a Saturday afternoon on ITV guys like giant haystacks and Big Daddy but not nowadays.

  • @rydiavalentine
    @rydiavalentine 8 месяцев назад +13

    9:40 Spain is a very religious country but we aren't saying "God" every five seconds because of the "don't use God's name in vain" rule. I don't think saying "God" too many times is a sign of religiousness.

    • @maalfons
      @maalfons 14 дней назад

      Very religious country??? You live in a different country

  • @t.a.k.palfrey3882
    @t.a.k.palfrey3882 Год назад +303

    When the video said, "the US is the most Christian nation in the world", that was defined by weekly church attendance, and claimed adherence. Nominal Church membership is higher in many European countries, but people don't wear their faith on their sleeves as many US people tend to do.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Год назад +44

      And yet the have surprisingly few christian holidays. There are many nations that are "less christian" but have pretty much christian holidays as national ones. Like when americans are surprised that stores in germany are closed on sundays. There is the whole thing with not working on the seventh days.

    • @84com83
      @84com83 Год назад +5

      God bless................. - which "god"? - free choice(?)

    • @jenniferharrison8915
      @jenniferharrison8915 Год назад +13

      Amen brother! 🤣 Australian Christmas and Easter holidays are non trading days, the right to peace and quiet is not negotiable, the multicultural residents here generally respect that! 👍

    • @m0t0b33
      @m0t0b33 Год назад +14

      That's because it's considered facetious to do so. If you are of faith, you just do it for yourself and not the onlookers, therefore, it's less likely to see Europeans trying to shove their beliefs down people's throats (less likely doesn't mean entirely unlikely... there are exceptions).

    • @theseeker3073
      @theseeker3073 Год назад +3

      It’s defined by number of Christians, they have 246.7 million Christians, ~79% of their population. Not counting the Vatican, by population percentage, Romania would be the first at 99% of its population being Christians.

  • @Tharmorteos
    @Tharmorteos Год назад +115

    that's kinda interesting.
    when you joked about someone being "hardcore" for flying an EU flag, i was like "who the hell would put up an EU flag on their porch / house !?" and then it kinda hit me. you have to understand that people over here don't feel much of an attachment to the european union like the americans do towards the united states.
    my best guess is that it's because in europe, most of the countries speak different languages.
    another reason could be that each country in the EU is more independent than each state in the US.
    if the united states feels like a family to an american, the european union feels like a neighborhood to an european.
    so yeah, if i were to fly the german flag outside of any sports event, people would think i'm a nationalist; if i were to fly the european flag, people would think I'm a weirdo xD

    • @janao5017
      @janao5017 Год назад +24

      Also you can’t really compare the EU and the US. USA is a country, EU isn’t

    • @Celisar1
      @Celisar1 Год назад +8

      In Danmark and Norway you see lots of flags on private estates. It’s also a matter of culture.

    • @Tharmorteos
      @Tharmorteos Год назад +3

      @@janao5017 Of course you can compare these two. You can compare anything to anything else. It only depends on facets you are comparing. Yes, the USA is considered to be one country while the EU is a conglomorate of different countries, but I wasn't comparing anything systematic (neither the government nor the military nor the economy) but I was comparing how attached people generally feel in each "area".

    • @Tharmorteos
      @Tharmorteos Год назад +1

      @@Celisar1 Now i'm curious to whether those are danish flags or european flags? I've lived in germany for 37 years and now I live in poland. I've been to italy a few times and drove through france and I've never seen an European flag, only the national flags.

    • @janao5017
      @janao5017 Год назад +4

      @@Tharmorteos I mean sure but if you would ask US Americans how they fell about North America they wouldn’t be even nearly as patriotic as they are towards the USA. And if you ask a german how they feel about EU vs Germany you would get two different answers. It’s obvious that people wouldn’t feel as attached to a conglomerate of countries as they would to their actual own countries and culture. So no it’s not really comparable.

  • @engo8207
    @engo8207 7 месяцев назад +16

    One important rule for a good pizza (imho): less is more. It has to be thin, crispy and max. 3 toppings.

    • @AussieFossil
      @AussieFossil 19 дней назад +1

      Agreed! My 3 toppings are chopped prawns, ground chilli flakes and.......pineapple!

  • @elisabethfernbratt7337
    @elisabethfernbratt7337 Год назад +278

    It's a bit weird to say "Europeans"... We're not the same in the different parts of Europe. We're very different😅
    For example alcohol, Sweden is very strict when it comes to check ID. No matter if you are 18 or 72😮

    • @bjornh4664
      @bjornh4664 Год назад +5

      I'm 58 and haven't had to show ID for at least 25 years - despite looking 8-10 years younger than my actual age.

    • @filipasales9291
      @filipasales9291 Год назад +12

      Exactly in Portugal unless you look 10 nobody will ask you.

    • @deutschegeschichte4972
      @deutschegeschichte4972 Год назад +4

      It is also very weird to say "Americans". We are also extremely diverse.

    • @BresciGaetano
      @BresciGaetano Год назад +5

      Totally true. I'm from Italy and i remember very well when we had a cultural Exchange at school with a sweeden class... When they was here they all gone nuts becouse they could drink with no problem, and they was totally wasting themselves.
      In North-est Italy where i live wine Is like water almost and people start drinking a bit with their family from childhood. That come both with an higer consumption rate but also with a bigger consciousnes when It comes to drink. Getting drunk Is not Always the aim. Instead you are considered "pretty cool" when you can hold your consciousnes even drinking a lot not the other way around.
      In my city Trieste Is not so umusual for people to get in a bar at morning and ask for a "caffè corretto". The correction Is usually white grappa (70+ degree distilled grapes alchool). I used in my school years to get an hot chocolate with Bayliss before to enter school. I don't like coffee 😂

    • @merenwen4495
      @merenwen4495 Год назад +33

      @@deutschegeschichte4972y why is it weird? You are all from the same country. You all speak the same language, you all have the same culture and the same government. Europe is not one country, it’s a continent. We all speak different languages, we all have our own cultures and customs and our own governments.
      For instance, I am Dutch. I have nothing in common with someone from Greece. I can’t understand them, our food and cultures are vastly different and so are our governments. It’s like comparing Canada with Mexico.
      Let’s now compare someone from New Jersey and Texas. You speak the same language, you eat the same food, you have the same culture and the same government. Are you different? Sure, but so are southerners and northerners in my country, but that’s not the same.

  • @5556665012008
    @5556665012008 Год назад +330

    The paying with plastic thing is actually the opposite, the US was so slow to adopt chip and pin in the 90s and contactless in the 00s. When I was in the US I saw people pay by cheque which I hadn't seen since I was a kid

    • @Finkele1
      @Finkele1 Год назад +3

      true man, haven't used and don't like use bills bc it is just slow. For 10 years maybe...

    • @johnpublicprofile6261
      @johnpublicprofile6261 11 месяцев назад +20

      UK I haven't written a cheque in 25 years. And even plastic is becoming old-fashioned for many as they just tap with their mobile phone.
      It was ridiculous how long it took USA to stop using paper based card swipes!

    • @pikachuchujelly7628
      @pikachuchujelly7628 11 месяцев назад

      Well that's what happens when you travel to a third world country that thinks it owns the world.

    • @dustylong
      @dustylong 11 месяцев назад +8

      Very true! However, I think the plastic they mean in the video are creditcards. And then they're right, here in Europe we don't use them that much 🤗

    • @serinadelmar6012
      @serinadelmar6012 11 месяцев назад +5

      Same, I couldn’t believe they still had checks! it was a while ago though.

  • @quantonomy
    @quantonomy 3 месяца назад +19

    Kids in the US are irresponsible about alcohol because it is a prohibited thing. In Europe is not because it is not a big deal, we even given a little wine (mixed with water) to kids.

    • @flitsertheo
      @flitsertheo Месяц назад +3

      As a teenager I always had a Martini and wine whenever I went to a restaurant. Now as an adult I can only have the Martini because I am always the driver.

    • @peterjackson4763
      @peterjackson4763 Месяц назад +2

      The drinking age in the UK is 5 (at home). In a restaurant with a meal it is 16. You can't buy alcohol until you are 18.

    • @zagrizena
      @zagrizena Месяц назад +1

      It depends on the country. In the Balkans drinking age is mostly 18 old, but kids are not that much more responsible with booze. They just start fooling around earlier and they are mostly over it by the time more of the responsibilities start and Americans then only start drinking.

    • @marjoleintje2009
      @marjoleintje2009 9 дней назад

      That would depend where in Europe, you won't see that here in Sweden lol.

  • @exodud5016
    @exodud5016 Год назад +336

    For info : In France, our usual meals would be only a single dish with maybe cheese, depending on the household.
    For celebration meals, like Christmas, we would however have a big meal with entrée, main dish, cheese and dessert, and those meals would easily last 3-4 hours. Not because we eat more, but because we talk more and spend time with the family.
    Finally, for people in high society who go to many socialite parties, they would eat those 5 course meals, but each dish would have much less to eat. That is why in high class restaurants you usually find that meals are very small, it's because you're supposed to eat just as much as a normal one dish meal, but over 5 different dishes.

    • @chucku00
      @chucku00 Год назад +12

      "Entrée" veut dire plat principal en anglais US (mais veut bien dire entrée en anglais UK), il vaut mieux utiliser le terme appetizer.

    • @camembertdalembert6323
      @camembertdalembert6323 Год назад +5

      @@chucku00 appetizer c'est pas un apéritif ? genre, des cacahuetes ?

    • @chucku00
      @chucku00 Год назад +6

      @@camembertdalembert6323 Non, aux US c'est une entrée.

    • @lindamaes6454
      @lindamaes6454 Год назад +11

      I grew in Belgium and every main meal, it could be lunch or dinner, consisted of 3 courses. Soup or a small salad or another small dish, the main course and dessert or cheese.
      Now we only eat 3 or more courses at weekends or when we have guests.

    • @skaya79
      @skaya79 Год назад +3

      In School and in the students restaurant it was always three courses minimum. My kids in school had a starter, main course, dessert and cheese.

  • @maraeni
    @maraeni Год назад +397

    if you have five courses.. those will be tiny portions

    • @keithlow3056
      @keithlow3056 Год назад +26

      And they will be rich tasting

    • @themissakura599
      @themissakura599 Год назад +29

      And the meal will last, like up to several hours.

    • @Dabluekitten
      @Dabluekitten Год назад +9

      Dude must be talking about Italy or Greece 😸👍
      Ordered tapas for two ppl in Greece once… ooof never do that 😬

    • @PiersDJackson
      @PiersDJackson Год назад +5

      To expand.... where the "mains" plate is 12" across and piled high in the US, in Europe it's 8" across (or only cover that area) and be seen as an American kids meal portion. However if you have a bowl of soup (1 cup), an entree, salad, mains and a dessert. All adding up to probably ⅚ of an American meal.

    • @ninasm
      @ninasm Год назад +2

      Exactly

  • @hansmarheim7620
    @hansmarheim7620 6 месяцев назад +12

    In Norway we tip. In Sweden the tips are very very small. I got a very clear message from a bartender in China 15 years ago: can you please stop that? We do not take tips. We get our salary. In France the receipt will often have the "20 percent tips included"

    • @scrappedlives
      @scrappedlives Месяц назад +2

      Not in the restaurants in France where I go to.

    • @IRACEMABABU
      @IRACEMABABU Месяц назад +5

      French speaking here. No, in France the waiter's salary is included in the price , as are all the taxes. Prices in France are surpriseless. If you liked the service in a restaurant you can tip, but it's up to you and no mandatory at all, and it's generally much less than 20% . 5% is more the norm when tipping.

  • @defender4004
    @defender4004 Год назад +267

    Fun fact about big cars:
    In Germany we simply don’t have enough space for big cars. I‘ve had two customers already returning their Bentley and Rolls-Royce respectively because the cars were too big to get through the small inner city streets and too big for most parking spaces.

    • @lizroberts1569
      @lizroberts1569 Год назад +18

      The lane I live on in the UK is so narrow a big car wouldn’t fit down it, and parking spaces are small.

    • @MrOiram46
      @MrOiram46 Год назад +16

      @@lizroberts1569 I saw a video of someone driving a Ram 1500 in UK streets and that thing looked massive there, but the funny thing is, it’s an average-sized pickup in the states

    • @faithlesshound5621
      @faithlesshound5621 Год назад +10

      You really need to defer buying a Rolls-Royce until you can afford to have a chauffeur to take it away to a distant parking place and come back when you need him later.

    • @moniabolletta8923
      @moniabolletta8923 Год назад +10

      The vast majority of roads in Europe have existed since people still went around on foot, on horseback or at most in a carriage (also because often there is literally no physical space to widen them); that's why even our SUVs are as big as small cars in the US

    • @alexanderblume5377
      @alexanderblume5377 11 месяцев назад

      Bentley and Rolls-Royce are germans brands (buyed out by VW)

  • @AFFoC
    @AFFoC Год назад +202

    Fun fact, British dental hygiene has passed the US quite a few years ago at this point.
    (Am not British, but I remember reading about it)

    • @sodapop83
      @sodapop83 Год назад +2

      in prices, certainly

    • @Khorsman87
      @Khorsman87 Год назад +14

      @@sodapop83 You can't really say america is cheaper when so many people there are in medical debt. This is not even a thing in the Netherlands and I doubt it's a thing in britain.

    • @robopecha
      @robopecha Год назад +22

      obviously that remark in the video was just rude. whitening your teeth is never healthy. it is destroying them.

    • @okbutthenagain.9402
      @okbutthenagain.9402 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@sodapop83 Nonsense. The US has some of the highest dental charges going.

    • @okbutthenagain.9402
      @okbutthenagain.9402 11 месяцев назад

      @@Khorsman87 Its not. But as is the norm these days Americans react outof "we are the best"attitude instead of opening their minds. Should add, some Americans not all.

  • @marycarver1542
    @marycarver1542 Год назад +16

    Britis teeth are healthy, w hite etc. but we dont all look as if we are wearing falsies, as Americans do!
    We dont fret over the occasional not quite straight tooth, but our teeth ARE clean, mostly white and healthy !

    • @Bergtrolfer
      @Bergtrolfer 6 дней назад

      Norway here, ..british smile is a widely used expression all over Scandinavia 😅
      But I see your point. Europe got better dental standards than the US.

  • @corvidkusnos
    @corvidkusnos Год назад +381

    The "paying with card" one saying Europeans aren't used to it is laughable because we've been using contactless card payments as the norm for YEARS, and seemingly longer than the US according to the many US friends I talk to. I don't know many people at all who bother carrying cash, and, at least in the UK, we usually recommend tourists not to bother bringing cash and to just make sure their card will work internationally instead.

    • @noname31214
      @noname31214 Год назад +33

      _Cries German tears_

    • @Draugheim
      @Draugheim Год назад +36

      Theres a lot of wrong things in this video but Yeah, that one got my attention too. It might be different in some eastern european countries but at least in the North and West its actually the opposite. The U.S is behind on that front. I havent used cash in many, many years here in Norway.

    • @benktlofgren4710
      @benktlofgren4710 11 месяцев назад +15

      Carbon copies on card purchases disappeared even from Sweden almost 30 years ago :) I am 47 and never wrote a check in my whole life.

    • @lenasoderberg2583
      @lenasoderberg2583 11 месяцев назад +13

      im from Sweden i have seen the new money we have but i cant tell you what is what. I only use card

    • @dpunktgehpunkt5876
      @dpunktgehpunkt5876 11 месяцев назад +19

      the cash culture is obviously almost only a german thing (and representative put over all europe out of a lac of knewledge..) maybe because sometimes france, germany or UK become counted as an example for whole europe which is in fact totally worse because in some cases these countries are QUITE DIFFERENT in many things)
      even here cash dying out more and more in germany. (at least after COVID the cashless payment in for example restaurants raised from about 10-30% in average before COVID to around 30-70% since then.)
      im german. worked as a waiter for a long time. speak out of experiences :)

  • @marinernx619
    @marinernx619 Год назад +112

    As a French person I can say we don't eat five courses at our meals, it's only on rare occasions like for christmas or a wedding or if we go to a really fancy gourmet restaurant like a Michelin star restaurant. Usually when we go to the restaurant we'll have an entrée and a main dish or a main dish and a dessert/cheese plate. Sometimes people who have a larger appetite will have entrée, main dish and dessert/cheese plate but no more then that. Also, if you do go to a fancy gourmet restaurant and have a menu with five or six courses, the portions are much smaller than in regular restaurants otherwise nobody would be able to finish the whole menu. And even in regular restaurants, the portions are still much smaller then in the US, even in fast-foods.

    • @aleet71
      @aleet71 8 месяцев назад +6

      @marinerenoux619 haha... maintenant tu comprends ce que signifie avoir des stéréotypes idiots ?? On dit de nous les Italiens que nous mangeons toujours des pâtes et de la pizza, un apéritif, un deuxième dessert et du café, en réalité un sandwich pour le déjeuner parce que nous travaillons et léger pour le dîner parce que nous nous couchons, ok en vacances c'est vrai pour nous aussi.🤣🤣

    • @etienne8110
      @etienne8110 8 месяцев назад +1

      Hmmm agree to disagree.
      Entree, plat, fromage, dessert et une mignardise pour la route.
      That s five in my book and like my weekday diner. 😅
      Sundays even include an apéritif first on family lunch.
      More often than not we can easily reach five. And stay at the table for an hour and more... 😅

    • @marinernx619
      @marinernx619 8 месяцев назад +3

      @@etienne8110 ​ I guess every family is different. Personally, I rarely eat five-course meals, even with my family 🙃

    • @TheSuperappelflap
      @TheSuperappelflap 7 месяцев назад +2

      The only time I eat a 4 or 5 course meal is at Christmas which is celebrated at home with family. We discuss a theme and then everyone makes 1 dish that adds nicely together.
      For example last Christmas I made a fish spread with trout as an appetizer, with bruschetta, then someone else made a shrimp cocktail as entree, we had a main dish of rabbit stew with some vegetables and potatoes on the side, and then chocolate cake for dessert.
      So we have some fish, some meat, some bread, some potatoes, and everyone can choose what they want to eat a lot of, or only a little bit.
      Going out to restaurants these days they really overcharge for the entrees and desserts. You get a big main course meal for 15-20 euro but the entrees are 10-12 euro for something small and the desserts are similar price. I can eat ice cream at home. Usually I just get a main course and a coffee after.
      I only get a three course meal if everyone at the table wants to, and then we get the weekly menu which at most places has 2 items to choose from for each course and is more reasonably priced.

  • @1414141x
    @1414141x 11 месяцев назад +17

    French Fries, Chips and Crisps are three separate things in the UK. Chips are usually 'home made' - that is made at home or made in the fish and chip shop. Potatoes are peeled and cut into 8mm-12mm thick chip shapes and cooked in hot oil. French Fries are similar but a lot thinner and are usually bought pre - cut and in large packs, usually frozen. They are sometimes partially cooked. Crisps are thin slices of potato, deep fried with numerous tasty spicy powders added in the cooking process to give extra flavour. Crisps are sold in small snack packets usually. Pringles are another form of crisp which I believe is made from reconstituted potato, pressed in a round mold and deep fried..

  • @cilajoao1
    @cilajoao1 Год назад +295

    Portuguese here. Our love of good food is legendary, It's not about quantity, but quality. We love to eat well, not to gorge like animals.

    • @deutschegeschichte4972
      @deutschegeschichte4972 Год назад

      Same in the America, we desire quality over quantity. I don't know why everyone believes all of us are brainless fat humans with no self control.

    • @zokilauda
      @zokilauda Год назад +1

      And another country that I think is even better than America in that respect.

    • @Tulipaau
      @Tulipaau Год назад +9

      the only time Im eating like an animal is when my grandma puts a bunch of delicious food on the table and desserts like arroz doce (aka the best dessert prove me wrong) and cakes

    • @matiascecchi1638
      @matiascecchi1638 Год назад +4

      @@Tulipaauhave you tried a good Italian ice cream? If it is not better, at least it is close to arroz doce

    • @matiascecchi1638
      @matiascecchi1638 Год назад +1

      Same in italy

  • @pepita2437
    @pepita2437 Год назад +348

    Once my mom followed an American Thanksgiving turkey recipe. We had to throw it out, it was so sweet, and sugary. We definitely eat less sugar. Also, we can drink legally at 18 at least in Romania, and in Hungary, not at 16.

    • @oliheg9230
      @oliheg9230 Год назад +15

      you eat turkeys? Too much hair...

    • @angelito2144
      @angelito2144 Год назад +36

      I think the love of sugar is not exclusive to the United States but to the whole American continent. I'm Spanish and I work everyday with Central an South America food products and customers, and we often talk about the different between Spanish cakes, sweets, drinks, etc and theirs (Colombian, Ecuatorian, Bolivian, etc.), which are much sweeter than ours. When they want to sell a product to Spaniards, they know they must use less sugar. It's a fun fact, but when you observe from outside, South and North America have more things in common than expected.
      By the way, there are quite a lot Romanian food shops here in Madrid. I once bought a Bulgarian rose jam and it was delicious 😋

    • @annikamyren3026
      @annikamyren3026 Год назад +2

      ​@@oliheg9230😂😂😂😂

    • @BananLord
      @BananLord Год назад +11

      As a Romanian, I'll never eat turkey. Chicken, pork and beef are the best meats.

    • @supermaximglitchy1
      @supermaximglitchy1 Год назад +15

      Belgium and Germany have their drinking age at 16

  • @isaultra3405
    @isaultra3405 10 месяцев назад +15

    As a German I'm happy we don't look like american plastic dolls with 24/7 make-up and permanent Joker smile, are satisfied with smaller things, wear gym clothes only for sports (or during injury), don't wear guns and don't excessively praise god or our flag. We don't use credit cards for everything so we have no massive debt problems like America.
    I think we are much happier than the average American who just can't get enough of everything

  • @Tacko14
    @Tacko14 Год назад +318

    On the news. I’d expect a newsprogram to be factual and completely unbiased. No room for opinion, just facts. If it isn’t that, it’s not journalism but editorial. But that bit of the journalistic code of conduct has been lost to mankind.
    It used to be that way. Once newsreaders were like accountants proclaiming a balance sheet. As boring as cardboard but trustworthy, and proud of it

    • @ArnoldEsoRimmer
      @ArnoldEsoRimmer Год назад +1

      Well. Not free. Small amount is deducted from salary and its mandatory in every employment ❤

    • @matthewjamison
      @matthewjamison Год назад

      The media in Britain are nothing but Whitehall mouthpiece stenographer's. The 💩 they spewed out over covid & now Ukraine is excruciating when you know the truth. Just earlier tonight I heard ITN tea time news calling the Russian population gullible because they support their president. Or even the way they phase the war crimes against the Palestinians. Under international law they're literally war crimes being committed against them daily. But they'll call it "clashes" when Israel bulldozes their homes for Eastern European or American Jews to build houses on & kids throw stones at them & get shot dead. And media personnel & medics get shot too. But they'll completely ignore it.

    • @JeroenJA
      @JeroenJA Год назад +1

      Room for opinions has to be stated, here is what x of this lobby has to contribute to the argument.

    • @JeroenJA
      @JeroenJA Год назад +3

      And i feel most eu public network television do that, while coloring in on commercial stays limited not to overly be clear in contrast to the public channel. In flanders the commercial one mostly tends to include more sensation news items too, sadly both channels waste a huge part of the news blabbling on about sports, especially on sundays and mondays..

    • @matthewjamison
      @matthewjamison Год назад +1

      @@JeroenJA At least with sports, you know they can't lie.

  • @LMGLUDA
    @LMGLUDA Год назад +103

    If you look around drinking age (16-18) they will ID you, of course. But if you look clearly 25 or more nobody is asking anything, it's obvious you are over age.

    • @hgu123454321
      @hgu123454321 Год назад +5

      In San Francisco my father had to show his ID in a bar. My father, at that time, was 76 years old, and is frequently mistaken for father Christmas (he has a long beard). Hilariously he misunderstood the word "ID" as "idea", and not being familiar with this practice, he proceeded to present ideas on various topics 😆

    • @CupcakeCottage
      @CupcakeCottage Год назад +2

      @@hgu123454321😂just think how smart we would all be if everyone shared ideas after a meal. More value than a tip, I’d say.

    • @anonniemouse8042
      @anonniemouse8042 Год назад

      I was 26 in 1990 and was asked for ID in a pub in Kent. I was rather chuffed I looked so young.

  • @zoefschildpad
    @zoefschildpad Год назад +26

    I'm from The Netherlands and we can pay by card pretty much everywhere. That's not what's strange about how American money works. What is insane is the fact that you still use paper checks. I'm in my thirties and the only checks I've seen in in my life time were traveller's checks my parents brought on holiday when I was a kid just in case and rarely, if ever, used; those giant novelty checks you see on TV that aren't actually payable; and a check sent to my work late last year from an American company as payment for our product that we now have hanging on the wall so we can point and laugh at it. Apparently, my boss went to the bank with it and nobody there could figure out what to do with it.

    • @naadi2000nr1
      @naadi2000nr1 3 месяца назад +3

      Nou precies dit en zij doen alles met een creditcard en geen pinpas, dat vind ik zo raar! Zij hebben ook geen internetbankieren

  • @hurtigheinz3790
    @hurtigheinz3790 Год назад +296

    Little fun facts: In Germany "french fries" or "chips" are called "Pommes frites" or short "Pommes". It's because the French word for potatoe is "pomme de terre", which literally means "apple of the earth". Potatoe in German is "Kartoffel" but another word for it is "Erdapfel", which literally means "earth apple".

    • @markschattefor6997
      @markschattefor6997 Год назад

      Just forget it , muricans have such clean "brains" you can't help them anymore.

    • @gluteusmaximus1657
      @gluteusmaximus1657 Год назад +7

      In Nürnberg wie call them Bodaggn.

    • @RealConstructor
      @RealConstructor Год назад +14

      In The Netherlands we also say earth apple (aardappel), but fries are called patat (the Belgium word for potato) or friet (from the French frites)

    • @unanec
      @unanec Год назад +2

      But in english french fries qre called like this because they are frenched and then fried

    • @mats7492
      @mats7492 Год назад +10

      @@gluteusmaximus1657 Gesundheit!

  • @jentam92
    @jentam92 Год назад +109

    Referring to ID-ing
    I once went grocery shopping with our daughter (she was around 2 or 3 at the time and i was around 24-25 😅) and my husband asked me to bring some cigarettes for him - i don’t smoke 🚭 💁‍♀️ - and the cashier asked me for my ID 😂
    I pointed at my daughter and she said „you don’t need to be 18 to have a kid“
    Well, she’s right 😂

    • @alexanderwiles2003
      @alexanderwiles2003 10 месяцев назад +3

      yeah well the typical rule of thumb is if you look under 25 your ID should be checked (it wont always happen but thats the usual rule)

    • @stevenvanhulle7242
      @stevenvanhulle7242 10 месяцев назад +2

      It wasn't a strange question: IIRC the US have (together with the UK) the highest number of teen pregnancies in the western world.

  • @sallyomahony1108
    @sallyomahony1108 Месяц назад +5

    I’ll never forget the American news reader who was reporting on a missing two year old. Her body had just been found. He was so excited I thought he was going to climax.

  • @afiiik1
    @afiiik1 Год назад +107

    There's a huge Czech flag in front of one of the houses in our street and I find that creepy. I'm Czech.

    • @peet6101
      @peet6101 Год назад

      Hi. Czech here. Are they people who moved to the US recently or are they like second generation living in US?

    • @afiiik1
      @afiiik1 Год назад +7

      @@peet6101 I live in Czechia. Moravian Silesian region... 🙄

    • @DNA350ppm
      @DNA350ppm Год назад +12

      Swede here, if I see a huge Swedish flag hoisted out of the modest but strict norms, I think they might be "new-Swedes" happy to have gotten asylum here, or some creepy spies who hope to be incognito and melt in!!! 😀 If they let the flag hang outside like rag to dry after 9 o'clock PM or after sundown, then you know for sure they are not native Swedes in that house. Other mistakes are like chosing the wrong color or fabric (cheap Chinese stuff) or the wrong size in regard to the pole. A Swedish spy novel could start with such observations. How about Czech flag rules?

    • @afiiik1
      @afiiik1 Год назад +2

      @@DNA350ppm there aren't many, only that when displayed alongside other national flags, it should be in the more prominent position... 🤔 But I wish they didn't just leave it hanging there in all kinds of weather😕

    • @DNA350ppm
      @DNA350ppm Год назад +2

      @@afiiik1 Yeah, it is much too beautiful and valuable as a symbol to do that, hope it will change!

  • @tonybmw5785
    @tonybmw5785 Год назад +230

    The whole teeth thing always makes me laugh because having riden a hire bike across the US a couple of times I saw more people lacking teeth than I'd seen over here in years. The truth is the UK actually comes above the USA in the dental health lists (got to love the NHS) and we don't have the shiny white perfect teeth because most of us just want good teeth rather than the work of a cosmetic dentist in our mouths. The urban myth comes like many US beliefs from what the UK was like during world war 2 (before the NHS) and has lingered.

    • @drakulkacz6489
      @drakulkacz6489 Год назад +7

      Yes. The more tooth enamel, the more yelow and healthier.

    • @guido69x
      @guido69x Год назад

      And the Americans that have their teeth,look like they all have the same exact smile,Americans teeth are copy paste literally!!

    • @tonybmw5785
      @tonybmw5785 Год назад +14

      @@drakulkacz6489 Still does not hide the fact that the US in general has worse teeth according to the DMFT index (Decayed, Missing due to caries, and Filled Teeth) than the UK.

    • @RevStickleback
      @RevStickleback Год назад +40

      The US seems to be kind of Hollywood smile, or gums, with not much in between. America does tend to go for the 'perfectly straight' and whitened teeth look, which does look odd to outsiders, as it looks like old people's dentures - just very unnatural.

    • @g-man4297
      @g-man4297 Год назад

      Unless your hanging out with Junkies most people I come across in the UK have perfectly good teeth, but as anywhere there are exceptions.

  • @LaJokanan
    @LaJokanan Месяц назад +3

    Well, we might not have the best teeth in the UK, but I've had 2 cancers which needed full radio and chemotherapy followed by years of surgery, and right now I'm being treated for a brain tumour that put me in intensive care 3 times last year, and none of it has cost me a penny. It doesn't really matter how nice your teeth are if you have to sell your house when someone sideswipes you at an intersection.

  • @RealConstructor
    @RealConstructor Год назад +123

    You can pay anything with a plastic card, but the plastic is mostly a debit card and not a credit card. Even at a hotdog stand, ice-cream stand or other street vendors. You’ll have to search to find a shop or supermarket in my country where you can pay with a credit card. Unless it is in a touristy place. I have a credit card, but not in my wallet, it is at home in case I go abroad.

    • @lennert1nevejans
      @lennert1nevejans Год назад +6

      Or when you have to buy something online like a plain ticket

    •  Год назад +9

      That one was really bad even for the Infographics Show.
      It's not as true nowadays, but between roughly the early nineties and mid-to-late tens, if you wanted to know what new way of paying will revolutionise American life in three-to-five years, all you had to do was look at how Europeans were paying today.

    • @nerysvanbeurden8434
      @nerysvanbeurden8434 Год назад +8

      Even better I can just pay with my phone :D

    • @bakersmileyface
      @bakersmileyface Год назад +23

      I was surprised when I saw that considering that my experience of the US was that they had outdated card readers everywhere. I actually at to swipe my card and sign a piece of paper in osme places with some places not even accepting cards. Whereas in Europe I'm paying for a bus ticket, electric scooters and car parking with my phone or just by tapping my card on a screen. A shop without contactless payment is extremely rare.

    • @bjornh4664
      @bjornh4664 Год назад +9

      In Sweden, you can go for weeks - even months - without using cash.

  • @esaholmberg
    @esaholmberg Год назад +43

    "In America, you can pay with plastic just about anywhere", which is exactly what we have been doing in (at least northern) Europe for years.

    • @mgparis
      @mgparis Год назад +3

      Same in France

    • @lethfuil
      @lethfuil 9 месяцев назад +7

      At this point it's more like decades.
      Meanwhile, in the US, some still use cheques for utility bills. ^^'

    • @martin7473
      @martin7473 7 месяцев назад +2

      Everybody pay with plastic card in russia

    • @terecornet9464
      @terecornet9464 7 месяцев назад +2

      In Spain we pay everywhere with a credit card, even at flea markets.

    • @paulavitoria1798
      @paulavitoria1798 7 месяцев назад +1

      @esaholmberg Also in southern Europe. We aren't as backward as you may think...

  • @JohnResalb
    @JohnResalb 10 месяцев назад +7

    The BBC is not supposed to be biased - in reality, they have a hard job pleasing everyone who constantly phone in to complain if they're seen to be slightly over the "red" or "blue" line, favouring one side or the other.

    • @peterjackson4763
      @peterjackson4763 Месяц назад +1

      A few BBC presenters have stepped well over the red line in recent years, but generally they seem to have a yellow bias.

  • @Notd0not
    @Notd0not Год назад +167

    Dude, you should honestly go to europe and see this stuff for yourself. You already reacted to so many videos about the differences and based on your reactions, i think you would like it here!

    • @zokilauda
      @zokilauda Год назад +6

      That's exactly how I think about it too.

    • @imaginekudryavka9485
      @imaginekudryavka9485 Год назад +13

      I hope his channel grows enough that he gets the funds to go. England would be a logical place to start but the possibilities are endless. He could do some street interviews of his own and test the things he has seen on the videos he's watched.

    • @SteffieWeffy1
      @SteffieWeffy1 Год назад +3

      Does he ever reply to comments....?

    • @matiascecchi1638
      @matiascecchi1638 Год назад +4

      Also Italy would be a good place to go to try out the tight streets.

    • @flitsertheo
      @flitsertheo Месяц назад +1

      @@imaginekudryavka9485 Maybe the funding isn't really the problem but the number of holidays you get in the USA. Could be zero.

  • @natasamladenovic1765
    @natasamladenovic1765 Год назад +19

    As an European, i find it weird when your beds are against the window! They should be on a solid wall.

    • @sarajane5306
      @sarajane5306 7 месяцев назад

      Yeah in UK we would end up with mould behind the bed. Outside walls need breathing room

  • @OldieBugger
    @OldieBugger 8 месяцев назад +8

    My son was on a school trip to Rome, and he told me that while they sell wine to everyone who shops there, but the local kids usually don't it unless they are asked to by their parents to get something (they forgot when shopping). They don't buy alcoholic beverages for themselves.

  • @frankmitchell3594
    @frankmitchell3594 Год назад +87

    In the UK the law refers to buying alcohol rather than drinking it. You can't buy alcohol under 18 but you can drink it with a meal and with an adult in a pub or restaurant at 16. In your own home the age is 5 I believe (it's pretty low anyway).

    • @dicknr1
      @dicknr1 Год назад

      UK = not part of europe, or european values or the EU union.
      UK = cancer to europe we dont want you to compare your pathetic nations to our success.

    • @amandag5072
      @amandag5072 2 месяца назад

      I thought you could drink alcohol with a meal if accompnaied by an adult at 14.

  • @ingelaperry2253
    @ingelaperry2253 Год назад +30

    In Sweden big pharma are not allowed to have commercials on any media.

    • @bjornh4664
      @bjornh4664 Год назад +2

      Not the prescription stuff, but over the counter meds like painkillers are advertised.

    • @SempfgurkeXP
      @SempfgurkeXP Год назад +2

      Another example why sweden is just the best country

    • @pragmatix1777
      @pragmatix1777 Год назад +2

      A lot of these stereotypes in the video don't apply in Sweden

  • @Liggliluff
    @Liggliluff Месяц назад +7

    (8:15) EU only permits 12 minutes of commercials within an hour to hour block (so you can technically have 24 minutes non-stop commercials from :48 to :12, but that must be lead up by 48 minutes of non-commercial and preceded by 48 minutes of non-commercial). Then on national TV in some countries like Sweden, commercials aren't allowed. Programs shown in full without any breaks. This is great for example at Eurovision, while other countries show ads, there's never ads in Sweden and the whole show is shown in full.

  • @rozemarijndegreeuw7528
    @rozemarijndegreeuw7528 Год назад +112

    It is really hard to say how things work for Europeans. Every country is so different in their culture. Same thing for paying with cash or card for example. In Germany they prefer cash and you can't always pay by card I believe. In The Netherlands you barely ever use cash and some places don't even take anything besides card.

    • @Gittas-tube
      @Gittas-tube Год назад +6

      Hello there! Same in Finland. The covid pandemic speeded up the change from cash to card and even payment by phone here in Finland. For reasons of hygiene, many places only accepted card payments, and today you'd be hard pressed to find even the smallest shop accepting nothing but cash.

    • @etherealicer
      @etherealicer Год назад +2

      Just returned from the Netherlands (Amsterdam and Winterswijk)... they still quite happily take cash and in many places it works better.

    • @benktlofgren4710
      @benktlofgren4710 11 месяцев назад

      @@Gittas-tube cash is filthy

    • @paulinemundt438
      @paulinemundt438 11 месяцев назад +1

      In Canada, we mostly use cards and we just have to tap the card, not insert them into the machine. We have been doing that for years. I am not sure if the US has caught up yet. I know that Walmart Canada was pressured into getting the updated terminals, so we could tap our cards.

    • @lethfuil
      @lethfuil 9 месяцев назад

      Hi, Bavarian here (that's close enough to Germany). I've never been to a place here where you can't (and usually do) pay with card.
      In extremely, extremely small and rural stores/bars MAYBE but that's rare.

  • @AlbandAquino
    @AlbandAquino Год назад +238

    I'm a Frenchman and I stopped watching TV almost 10 years ago because of ads (also the lack of interesting content). They were nowhere near the level of ads displayed on American TV, but still, annoying AF. The level of ads displayed in US TV shows is just absurd... On par with ads displayed on RUclips BTW...

    • @xxwookey
      @xxwookey Год назад +6

      But at least you can just disable them on youtube. The only option for the telly is never watch any of it live so you or your mythTV box can skip/delete them.

    • @technocracynow9339
      @technocracynow9339 Год назад +4

      Ads on RUclips? You should think about your IT Security! When i use my VPN (own not NordVPN) it will blocks ads, in my local network their is a pihole that block ads if some ads or other malicioius things get through they will get blocked by uBlock, CanvasBlocker or a cracked Premium App or sometimes i pay for the service to support it and get some adfree features. But this way you probably won't even need an Antivirus to keep you safe from the internet if you don't open something you downloaded manually.
      You should also take care of your Privacy, i know you have nothing to hide but you still close the door when you go to the toilet and the internet will know a lot about you when you don't close your doors.

    • @nicot9078
      @nicot9078 Год назад +1

      same

    • @jaysimoes3705
      @jaysimoes3705 Год назад +4

      I ma Dutch. I pay for internet 800 channels. I needed to put in a password for the TV. We tried to it did not work and we are now with three channels (NL1, 2 and 3) and we do not feel we miss out a lot if anything. And no, we have no netflix etc. Just as boring.

    • @bramharms72
      @bramharms72 Год назад +3

      I'm from the Netherlands and the handful of things on TV I've watched was always with the finger on the mute button. I literally (literally literally) get nauseous hearing ads. Firstly they're to loud and secondly that wheedling, manipulative tone feels like fingers rummaging through my brain.
      The funny thing is that the few American ads I've seen (in Incognito Windows in my browser) feel less invasive somehow. Maybe because they're way to long they feel like badly(er) acted sitcoms and they're never for anything I know of as a product so it feels less personal.

  • @kai_plays_khomus
    @kai_plays_khomus 8 месяцев назад +5

    Yes, these fluffy american pizza are very different from what italians would serve in europe. The dough is what keeps the topings together, not the main part of your pizza.

    • @Max86dt
      @Max86dt 53 минуты назад

      I consider that KD dinner is a dessert. The amount of sugar in that "dish" is crazy.

  • @myeramimclerie7869
    @myeramimclerie7869 Год назад +68

    It's very weird if the news narrators ask each other's opinions and refer to each other by first name. I came to watch objective facts, get your opinion off the screen, safe it for the talk show.

    • @commiebastard3633
      @commiebastard3633 Год назад

      Agree, but here in the UK, I've never seen a news or current affairs programme that doesn't heavily favour the establishment and their party. It's just that if it's said in a posh or rp accent people don't question anything.

  • @RobinSoup
    @RobinSoup Год назад +93

    The ID thing: As you work as a cashier in Europe (The Netherlands for me), and you don't know if someone is of drinking age, you ask for their ID to be sure, but if you can see it's a grown adult, you don't ask for the ID, since it's clear. But if you just don't know/hestitate about their age, you can ask for their ID to check. And in some stores, there's a little picture/board that says 'No Alcohol under 18, keep your ID ready' (18 is the legal drinking age in The Netherlands) So if you're a little above 18/just turned 18, you have your ID ready if they ask for it.

    • @sunnyshai8275
      @sunnyshai8275 Год назад

      Yeah a couple of these things don't really count for the Netherlands. (maybe a couple of other countries as well). The banking system is also incredibly well done in the Netherlands.

    • @mrki4937
      @mrki4937 9 месяцев назад +3

      I was a little bit proud, when they asked me for my ID, when buying beer, while I was 23 already, and in Germany, you had to be 16 (it was in the 00s) to buy beer and wine (18 for liqueur).

    • @deNevoa
      @deNevoa 8 месяцев назад

      I'm czech, here is smoking/drinking age 18. When i was 11 in the UK they didn't even let me eat in classic restaurant/pub because they also server alkohol and i was only allowed to go to mc Donalds or BK fór the lunch menu... (Before 2000)

    • @TheSuperappelflap
      @TheSuperappelflap 7 месяцев назад +2

      Last time I got asked for my ID I was 27. So I started laughing and said, oh yeah I just shaved, and then showed the cashier my ID. She was very embarrassed and started blushing lol. Since then she doesnt dare to talk to me.

    • @natk1105
      @natk1105 7 месяцев назад +3

      I'm not in Europe, but in New Zealand liquor stores will mostly only ask for ID if you look quite young (in my experience anyway). But the supermarkets are insane. I'm 34 and I STILL get carded when buying a bottle of wine. They have signs up saying they will card you if you look under 25 (actual drinking age is 18) but I think they err VERY heavily on the side of caution. I notice I get carded less if I have my child with me. Apparently being a mum automatically makes me look older? Lol

  • @mrs.ragnixindr1911
    @mrs.ragnixindr1911 Год назад +1

    Ehm, ehm. An italian complete meal has 9 courses: Aperitif, appetizer, first course, second course, side dish, fruit, coffee, dessert, coffee killer.

  • @brightdarkness420
    @brightdarkness420 Год назад +67

    I think all the strict rules around drinking in the us just makes it more interesting for kids to try it

    • @deutschegeschichte4972
      @deutschegeschichte4972 Год назад +3

      Yeah. I was born in America, but I had my first beer at 14 when I went on vacation to Germany. It was disgusting lol. But taste is a matter of opinion.

    • @Wolfarior
      @Wolfarior Год назад +2

      Partially for sure, but I don't know how bad is it in US. For comparison, where I am from, drinking till you fall under the table is... not uncommon for younger generations. Also at rural festivities, if there is no police present (why would there be?) age of 9 would be most likely be enough to get you a beer and I am not even talking about drinking at home. I think I had my first sip of beer at the age of (possibly) 4. XD
      You can most likely guess which country I am from, based on these informations. XD

  • @Capyrate
    @Capyrate Год назад +61

    tbh, about streets being narrow in Europe, a lot, and I mean A LOT of cities come directly from the middle ages, if not before that even. I live in southern France, near Perpignan, and the city has been around since century X. There were no cars back then, only carts pulled by horses, and they weren't that wide. Main street were bigger, to allow for traffic, but even now you can still see places -like my town- that have basically little to no sidewalks in the historic part, because there was no need for it back then, but adding one now would make the street to narrow to allow cars. A solution to it is to turn this part of the town into a no cars zone, where only pedestrians can go, so it is much safer for everyone.
    In comparison, the US are a younger country and with the amount of available space, I imagine it was much more easier to plan wide cities, roads, highways, without the hindrance of historical cities and whatnot when industrial revolution happened.
    And the same thing applies to the living space. You can find houses that are centuries old, (in the town next to mine you can find one that was built in 1765!) and back then people didn't have global heating or anything, so they built practical, without waste of space that would lead to waste of heat during winter. Only rich landowners and noblemen had big, fancy houses, mansions, with excess of rooms and living space. Commoners lived practical and dealt with much less wealth, much less space, much smaller houses. And that's what you see nowadays, the houses may no longer be here, but newer houses are built where the old ones used to be, so they remain modest in size.

    • @TheSuperappelflap
      @TheSuperappelflap 7 месяцев назад +5

      Some cities in south of France like Marseille date back to the Roman period. It was called Massilia. Even the name barely changed in 2000 years.
      Shame its such a shithole now.

    • @Bramfly
      @Bramfly Месяц назад +3

      True, I live in a city from the year 50 AD Utrecht in the Netherlands, same here

  • @angelahempel3127
    @angelahempel3127 Месяц назад +2

    Funny, Americans have no problem with tipping 20-25% (because service personal depend on it), but have a problem with paying
    for water in place where service personal actually earns a living wage.

  • @charlestaylor3027
    @charlestaylor3027 Год назад +33

    My goddaughter lives in Seattle at the moment and she reckons American fashion is about 2 years behind Europe.

    • @aamanda8814
      @aamanda8814 Год назад +2

      Elegance, styles and quality in clothing are always at the forefront of Europe.

  • @markusolofzon
    @markusolofzon Год назад +47

    “Opinion news segments” are a very American thing. In Sweden we have don’t have them at all. It’s more common to have special programming concerning a hot topic where people debate. That’s probably the closest we have

  • @Dutch3DMaster
    @Dutch3DMaster 10 месяцев назад +18

    As for the remark about Vatican City: The Pope is the head of the Catholic Church, not the Christian :) . Didn't see this mentioned a lot so decided to add this. So you were right when you wondered if that counts: it doesn't :P .

    • @AussieFossil
      @AussieFossil 19 дней назад

      Actually, the person universally called The Pope has the official and ceremonial title of The Bishop of Rome. The Pope(Il papa) is simply an affectionate title given to the head of the diocese.

  • @claudiograssi1037
    @claudiograssi1037 Год назад +38

    It makes me laugh a little when it comes to free refills. But do we really think that it is the restaurant owner who offers the refill for free, or has the cost of the refill already been calculated into the bill? I guess the second option.

  • @ESCLuciaSlovakia
    @ESCLuciaSlovakia Год назад +88

    We have a saying: "Only a fool (meant as insane or stupid) smiles without a reason." It is considered as respectful to be serious or neutral, a serious face is a trustful face. We are coconuts, hard on the outside, hiding lot of our feelings inside. Not everyone gets to see your inside. You can be generally happy, having a good day, and still don't show it on your face. A gentle, polite smile is for strangers, and a sincere, big smile, when your eyes are smiling too, is for the moments of real happines and for your close ones. Not speaking for everyone though! People are different and some are very smiley naturally.

    • @TheChill001
      @TheChill001 Год назад +13

      I think in europe it's more about intuition, if the people themselves act happy and chipper, it's more or less normal for the cashiers to get a bit happy too, but also avoid smiling when someone obviously looks annoyed or angry. So yeah, I think europeans simply have a better "feel" for things.

    • @SoUmThisIsMe
      @SoUmThisIsMe Год назад +11

      lmao I can almost hear my teachers say: "you're laughing without a reason? That's pretty serious, don't you think?" (btw I'm from Slovakia as well)

    • @Judith_Remkes
      @Judith_Remkes Год назад +10

      I actually have a sign on my wall (yes, cheesy, I know!) that says: "Smile, it confuses people!" and that is very true here in the Netherlands...

    • @mademoiselledusfonctionell1609
      @mademoiselledusfonctionell1609 Год назад +9

      Europeans smile.
      Americans grin.
      (If a person that is generally neutral smiles,
      you know it is a genuine smile.
      You can never replace a smile with grins.)

    • @Khorsman87
      @Khorsman87 Год назад +9

      @@Judith_Remkes I just think the american smile is fake and I don't like it. It feels manipulative. When someone smiles at me in the Netherlands I know it's a genuine smile and I like that a lot more.

  • @MrCrayEgg
    @MrCrayEgg 9 месяцев назад +3

    Irish here. Tipping in Europe is optional and no, people dont get insulted (at least I dont). Ive been tipped a few times but always try to give it back and then customer runs off leaving me with the tip 😂😂

  • @DerryK67
    @DerryK67 Год назад +34

    It’s not just your dinners are bigger, it’s breakfast, lunch and dinner!!!! Portion sizes in the states are crazy, and the population are the size they are as a result. Plus it seems to be much cheaper to buy junk food than to buy healthy food in the supermarket which again is crazy

    • @annasofiehjelm6332
      @annasofiehjelm6332 7 месяцев назад +5

      A Swedish RUclipsr once did some silly test where he was to pick diff foods in Disneyland (located in the US, not the one in France). Anyway, it was breakfast and drinks and snacks and lunch and drinks and snacks and dinner and dessert and even more drinks and snacks. And all of it skyrocketing in fat and sugar, cholesterol and carbohydrates, and not a vegetable as far as the eye could see. Not even something called salad, even remotely similar to a salad.
      After watching that, I promised myself that if I ever feel like visiting the "happiest place on Earth", I'll go for the French one, that's for sure!

  • @Northerner-NotADoctor
    @Northerner-NotADoctor Год назад +99

    We in Europe don't call "frenchfries" as "chips" or "crisps"... I mean only around 10% of Europeans do so, remaining 90% of Europeans doesn't use English and so they call them:
    - картофель фри / kartofel fri - Russian, Ukrainian,
    - Pommes frites - French, German Spanish, Italian, Serbo-Croatian,
    - frytki - Polish.

    • @filipkozak7754
      @filipkozak7754 Год назад +10

      Hranolky - Czech

    • @amyloriley
      @amyloriley Год назад +17

      Frietjes - Flemish Belgians
      Fritten - Flemish Belgians
      Frieten - Flemish Belgians
      Friet - Flemish Belgians
      Patat - Dutch people from above the rivers

    • @SimasLabai
      @SimasLabai Год назад +2

      картопля фрі in Ukranian.

    • @izimsi
      @izimsi Год назад

      @@filipkozak7754 smażeny syr a hranolki to nadjedzenie

    • @giuliaorati4724
      @giuliaorati4724 Год назад +8

      In Italian is actually "patatine fritte", which means "little fried potatoes". If someone calls them just "patatine" (little potatoes) they mean instead the ones in the bag like in supermarkets/vending machines (of cours one can call them just patatine if the context is clear, like if they are in a restaurant)

  • @Liggliluff
    @Liggliluff Месяц назад +2

    (9:00) For petrol, self-service pumps are open 24/7 in Sweden (pay by card, don't need to enter the store itself). This is true in other countries too. Some countries don't have this and are only open set hours. Then there's even places where you have self-service during the night but requires you to enter the store during the day to pay.

  • @johnp8131
    @johnp8131 Год назад +70

    It's the "Infographics show"! Poorly researched by the ignorant. But it's popular because it's in cartoon form!

    • @GdzieJestNemo
      @GdzieJestNemo Год назад +2

      most of it is true though

    • @Runegrem
      @Runegrem Год назад +20

      Yeah. A lot of it seems more like "what the US thinks EU thinks about the US."

    • @stevebagnall1553
      @stevebagnall1553 Год назад +1

      Exactly

    • @JeroenJA
      @JeroenJA Год назад +1

      I think they just took a small sample from less then 10 Europeans that went to the states? Gives some idea, but i suspect totally different things would be weird in NYC, the mid-west, California, texas or the southern Christian belt. So did they just randomly pick what they felt covered mostly the usa all over? :-)

    • @bjornh4664
      @bjornh4664 Год назад +2

      @@GdzieJestNemo Or true-ish. "Europeans" are a diverse lot - views and attitudes can differ greatly.

  • @Daph909
    @Daph909 Год назад +108

    I realise that a bunch of European countries are still catching up on digital and card payments, but in the Netherlands our banking systems are way more advanced than those in North-America. When I opened up a bank account in Canada, it felt like travelling 10 years back in time.

    • @Fr-ron
      @Fr-ron Год назад +9

      But seriously. Everyrhing i buy i can just put my phone against a machine and within 2 seconds i payed for it. America only have credit cards cuz they make money on. People with not enough money buying stuff with, 5 months later they still dont have enough money and than gotta pay rents over the stuff they bought than. Making the creditcard makes rich

    • @i_want_to_be_sunshine
      @i_want_to_be_sunshine Год назад +11

      Same in Czechia, you can use it almost everywhere, even small stalls. Plus I use my phone most of the time.

    • @TheChill001
      @TheChill001 Год назад +31

      yeah, but here in europe the majority of stuff is bought with debit rather than credit. The whole european system is much safer than the US system, considering we pay with what we have, not with what we can pay off in the next twenty years

    • @NikolaBulj
      @NikolaBulj Год назад +4

      In my country there are stores that don't accept cards. When I visited Netherlands I saw for the first time ever that there are stores that don't accept cash.

    • @BresciGaetano
      @BresciGaetano Год назад

      True in fact nederlands have the highes social disparity in all the world.
      Happy to be and Italian slaker

  • @Liggliluff
    @Liggliluff Месяц назад +2

    (5:15) In Sweden you can almost always pay digitally, even between private individuals through instant and free transfers by phone.

  • @Tacko14
    @Tacko14 Год назад +56

    Commercials are the reason I don’t even have tv anymore. Even the EU amount of ads made me turn the thing off.
    But it was always fun to watch a US program here and guess where the adbreaks had been. My god. Over there I’d lose the plot of any movie

    • @JeroenJA
      @JeroenJA Год назад +2

      Usa documentaries are the worst! Half the program is an add, so extremely "teasing" over and over about the "shocking" truth, that when it finally comes it just feels disappointed ALWAYS cause they did not allow one bit for the really special thing to speak for itself..
      They shouldmzje summaries of those, about 1 3th of the original lenght is probably all you could need, but just add some quiet second in between :-). To give thing some time to sink in..

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Год назад +5

      @@JeroenJA And then I find some british documentary and it's just relaxing and informative.

  • @SiqueScarface
    @SiqueScarface Год назад +109

    The most complexing thing about French Fries is that they aren't French. They originated in Belgium, where they are called pommes frites (fried potatos (o.k., literally fried apples, but potatos are called pommes de terre, apples of the earth in French)). In many other European countries, pommes frites or short pommes or frites is thus the standard word for French fries.

    • @marvinmaubert350
      @marvinmaubert350 Год назад +8

      The "French fries are Belgian" is a hoax that became viral in the 90s.. Pommes-Frites (the original name) where already consumed in Paris during french revolution and there are way older recipe books that explain how to cook fries the Parisian way. In other terms, almost a century before the creation of Belgium, pommes-frites where already popular in France. All of this has been documented so it may be time to end this hoax, no?

    • @SiqueScarface
      @SiqueScarface Год назад +11

      @@marvinmaubert350 It is not that easy. Most recipes dating back to the 18th century do not describe what we would understand today as French Fries or Pommes frites. Rather they are various types of fried potatos. The potatos in those recipes are not cut to sticks, rather than slices, or rolled into balls (like Swiss Roesti) and they are normally fried, and not put in a bath of boiling oil. The first known actual seller of what we would today call French Fries was a guy nicknamed Monsieur Fritz selling them around 1838 in Liege, Belgium.

    • @toivoa119
      @toivoa119 Год назад +5

      In Germany they are still called „Pommes frites“ or „Pomfritz“ 😂 or even shorter „Pom-ass“. 😅

    • @onomatopoetisk
      @onomatopoetisk Год назад +8

      Yes, no one in Europe says French fries. Pommes frites it is. At least here in Sweden. 👍

    • @Capyrate
      @Capyrate Год назад +2

      Yup, in french they are... Frites! Or frites de pommes de terre, to make the distinction with vegetables fries, if both are available.

  • @Maxime_K-G
    @Maxime_K-G 7 месяцев назад +5

    Sadly grocery chain Colruyt in Belgium stopped offering unsupervised wine tastings at the entrance of their stores just a few months ago because they say "It is no longer appropriate in the modern world", whatever that means. Such a shame! But that's something I feel would never fly in America. 😅

    • @marlyd
      @marlyd Месяц назад +1

      I knew someone who was in the throws of alcoholism and would go there every day for free booze, I get why they got rod of it 😅

  • @OccasusRaven
    @OccasusRaven Год назад +41

    4:06 The drinking age in Europe generally leans towards 18 years old, but there are some European countries which have set the minimum drinking age at 16 years old, like Belgium, Luxembourg, and Switzerland for example. Finland its 18

    • @louiseerbslisbjerg7854
      @louiseerbslisbjerg7854 Год назад +2

      In Denmark people can buy beer and low volume wines at 16, but everything else, like high volume specialty brews and hard liqeur, you have to be 18.

    • @aamanda8814
      @aamanda8814 Год назад +1

      Although people drink at an early age in Belgium, I have never seen drunken riots like you see in the US. I think they learn early but in moderation.

    • @camelopardalis84
      @camelopardalis84 Год назад +1

      Only beer and wine at age 16 in Switzerland. (Plus maybe other stuff that I don't even know exists with as little alcohol in it as beer.)

    • @yamanakoyama8682
      @yamanakoyama8682 Год назад

      in Belgium you can drink beer at 16, but everything else is 18 :)

    • @McGhinch
      @McGhinch Год назад

      Compared to the USA Europe has a very loose relationship to alcohol. Since everybody drinks and nobody gets drunk this provides a good example for the next generation. O.k., everybody and nobody is a little exaggerated, but generally its true. Most kids never see their parents drunk, most will get drunk in their youth, but many will not like that feeling so much that it is worth repeating too often. Alcohol is sold freely in most of Europe, it can be consumed freely in most of Europe, that is one of our freedoms US Americans only can dream of. -- Maybe the Swedes are a bit out of proportion here, but that shows that they must get drunk anytime they enter another country. A German does not get drunk because he or she crosses the border to e.g., France.

  • @cookie856
    @cookie856 Год назад +57

    So, in Europe (at least in Belgium), only the police can force you to show your ID, so most of the time it's only taken out if you look younger and someone refused to sold you something.

    • @Capyrate
      @Capyrate Год назад +2

      I think it's the same in France, with the exceptions of cashiers, because it's explicitly stated that selling alcohol, tobacco and gambling games to anyone under 18 is strictly forbidden. So if you're a child, teen, or look young, you'll be asked to show your ID to make sure you're legal.
      Now, I don't know if they do this EVERY TIME, but technically they should. It's kind of recent too, it's been really made a thing when I was in my late teen years, so roughly 10-12 years ago. I remember being like 20 and having the cashier ask for my ID because I went to purchase a bottle of alcohol.

    • @reindeer7752
      @reindeer7752 Год назад +2

      No one can "force" you to show your ID except the police in the USA. You just won't be able to buy the cigarettes or alcohol.

    • @okbutthenagain.9402
      @okbutthenagain.9402 11 месяцев назад +1

      Not so. European legislation requires countries to ask for ID to comply with the Alcoholic sales. Even if you look 22 or more.

    • @lethfuil
      @lethfuil 9 месяцев назад +1

      For clarification: No, someone you want to buy alcohol from can't force you to show your ID!
      You can absolutely reject that. They simply won't sell you the alcohol then, but they can't see your ID without your consent.

    • @NepzBabe
      @NepzBabe 7 месяцев назад +1

      There is no problem showing your ID if you intend to buy something +18
      In fact, it is mandatory otherwise the person will not be able to buy if they cannot prove that they are +18 and I think that's good, this prevents the person from losing their job and prevents irresponsibility
      (Based in Portugal)

  • @ramadaxl
    @ramadaxl Месяц назад +1

    I nearly died laughing when I was in a local store and decided I NEEDED a 6 pack of cold beer ( don't judge...it was summer, and hot ( by UK standards )....and I was asked for ID...I was 65 years old !

  • @marycarver1542
    @marycarver1542 Год назад +18

    In most Europen countries, including the UK. cash is rare ! Most places just require a light touch with a card, job done !

    • @lesleyhawes6895
      @lesleyhawes6895 Год назад +1

      True of cities, but not in rural areas. There are places where you can ONLY pat with a card, but in most places you have the choice still.

  • @RyanRyzzo
    @RyanRyzzo Год назад +120

    I as an Yooropian find it weird that an American makes a video about how Europe is actually mostly France and the UK :D
    Greetings from Edinburgh, Estonia... :D Omelette baguette!

    • @clementwymiens7955
      @clementwymiens7955 Год назад +20

      To be fair, even western Europeans know very little about eastern countries! I would love for him to react to stuff specific to these regions ❤️
      Camembert, frites !

    • @user-fn2pb2ux9t
      @user-fn2pb2ux9t Год назад +4

      @@clementwymiens7955 sausage with mayonaise ;)

    • @clementwymiens7955
      @clementwymiens7955 Год назад +4

      @@user-fn2pb2ux9t EEEEEW! NO, THAT'S GROSS 🤣😘

    • @Tvashk
      @Tvashk Год назад +7

      As a Brit. I totally agree with you. Europe is much more than just us in the UK. and those odd Snail sippers (Jk). its so diverse and amazing and all of it deserves love (Even the French ;P ) and to be seen for the vast cultural differences within. :). much love from the uk

    • @ushiefreebird7470
      @ushiefreebird7470 Год назад +8

      @@Tvashk I live in France for 14 years and never sipped a snail. Whenever I come to England (my daughter lives there), the only thing eatable is foreign. Magnificent Indian food in London. British food is like British weather.........boring. That said, I love this strange island on the other side of the channel.

  • @ilanitw405
    @ilanitw405 Месяц назад +1

    I'm from germany, my Kids are allowed to drink and buy Beer at the age of 16. But it's not allowed for them to drink and buy the hard stuff like Wodka. As I visited the US I hardly missed some good bread for breakfast. What I really finding weird ist the obsession about religion.

  • @GabeCoolwater
    @GabeCoolwater Год назад +33

    I'm from Portugal. Here, your ID might be requested in some situations. I was asked ONCE to watch a +18 movie at the theater. It's funny because I was 23 and none of my friends were asked to show their ID, but me... because of my "baby face". 😑 They all laughed.

    • @kelvinth117
      @kelvinth117 Год назад

      same problem especially after i have shaved and i am 36 but after shaving i look like 21, and same for ID in some cases you get asked for an ID, from the Netherlands btw

  • @johnfrancismaglinchey4192
    @johnfrancismaglinchey4192 Год назад +20

    No ,,,,our food comes on a plate ,,,,, in AMERICA it comes on a Bin Lid

  • @yvl7412
    @yvl7412 Год назад +3

    In the Netherlands (drinking age 18) you usually get asked for ID till you around 25. Also my geography teacher always jokes about how in America you can buy a gun before you can buy alcohol or cigarettes.

  • @dedeegal
    @dedeegal Год назад +63

    I was in Rochester (near Minneapolis) on a Sunday in a supermarket and had a six-pack of Heineken (

    • @JeroenJA
      @JeroenJA Год назад +5

      The dutch are genius marketeers since they manage to sell off Heineken as one of the best beers 😂. Really a 2% version exist? I remember as child on camping in spain reading by coincidence on lemonade we bought at supermarket that it contained 1,2% 😂. So a 2% beer that doesn't taste sweet to be to easy to drink for young, euhm, why bother checking id? Can you even get drunk from that? 😂😂

    • @dedeegal
      @dedeegal Год назад +7

      @@JeroenJA I actually don't remember how many "revolutions" the beer had .... but it was definitely "under 2%". That's precisely why it was so ridiculous.
      Funnily enough, across the street from the huge supermarket parking lot was a store (called "Joe's Liquers") where I could buy "normal German beer with ~5%" for only $2 on weekdays. And without ever having to show my ID. So I was able to survive my stay in the USA.
      But this "disposable throwaway culture", which I had to get to know in the hotel and in the canteen of my employer, was a shock for me. Simply shameful and despicable.

    • @vanesag.9863
      @vanesag.9863 Год назад +4

      @@JeroenJA You probably bought a "clara". It's a summer mix: lemonade with beer. By the way my father calls Heineken "the beer with less alcohol than water"

    • @dedeegal
      @dedeegal Год назад +2

      @@vanesag.9863 Doesn't all beer contain far more water than alcohol? I don't know any beer that contains more than 50% alcohol. Otherwise, that would be rather real hard stuff. Still far above Gin. With Vodka or Whisky this may be more common.
      At least the stuff only burns when it contains more than 50% alcohol. You can drink it - but you don't have to.
      I like to limit myself to beer. No matter how much I drink: no headaches, no puking, no memory lapses, no embarrassment, no drunken stupor.
      People who drink alcohol to lose their senses have real problems. Even if they only "get high" once a week or month. But if "temporary oblivion" is the reason, a doctor should be consulted urgently.

    • @vanesag.9863
      @vanesag.9863 Год назад +4

      @@dedeegal 🤭 English is not my first language and probably expresed it wrong. I wanted to say that my father thinks Heineken is like water because it has a low % of alcohol and it's too "soft" to be considered a beer.

  • @HappyBeezerStudios
    @HappyBeezerStudios Год назад +21

    The whole "tips are insulting" is more of a japanese thing. It's pretty much an obligation and honor to offer good service. Over here it's an optional thing. There is no expectation to tip, but people do it. Often as a sign of good service, basically a bonus along the lines of "you did a great job, here get something extra"

    • @TheChill001
      @TheChill001 Год назад +11

      there's also the fact we actually PAY our service staff in europe, rather than forcing customers to basically pay for both the food and the service twice

    • @hell_ohh
      @hell_ohh Год назад

      Not just Japanese

    • @Xayidee
      @Xayidee Год назад +3

      I actually tip more if the servers leave me alone 😅 little to no service (other than bringing me the food) is good service in my book.

    • @EgoundderRest
      @EgoundderRest 11 месяцев назад +1

      Genau so handhabe ich es mit dem Trinkgeld. Keine Zwangsabgabe sondern ehrliche Anerkennung und verdienter Respekt gegenüber dem Servicepersonal, das seine Tätigkeit freundlich und kompetent erledigt.

    • @TestGearJunkie.
      @TestGearJunkie. 8 месяцев назад

      I refuse to tip on principle. It just encourages businesses to pay low wages.

  • @pawekubicki4022
    @pawekubicki4022 2 месяца назад +2

    In most European countries, the age limit for the sale and consumption of alcohol is set at 18 years, in Lithuania it is 21 years and in Germany , Austria, Belgium, France, Hungary and Switzerland it is 16 years.

    • @quencre
      @quencre Месяц назад +1

      In France it's 18

    • @dorinam2921
      @dorinam2921 Месяц назад

      In Hungary also 18

  • @sebastiankausl2802
    @sebastiankausl2802 Год назад +45

    Hi Ryan. Here in Germany it happens more often with "younger" people that they are asked for the identity card if they want to buy alcohol or tobacco. There are even signs at the cash registers which apologize for the fact that you are asked for the ID card because you look a little too young :-) Thanks for your entertaining videos. Keep it up! P.S. In the show "realer irrsinn" you have found the best German show in my opinion. Bureaucracy meets sarcasm.....simply delicious to watch.

    • @michakaikarsten7331
      @michakaikarsten7331 Год назад +2

      Except when you've just turned 16 and walk up there all proud with your ID and are just waiting for them to ask you for it. They never do it on that day :(

    • @sandraankenbrand
      @sandraankenbrand 6 месяцев назад

      This guy at the end is the Head of the Wagner Group who fought for Russia in Ukraine and efmg Africa, who has been killed by Putin last yr...

  • @TheDoctormadness
    @TheDoctormadness Год назад +23

    Drinking age is 18 in France.
    5 dishes meals in France are not dinners, these are lunches. And this is happening rarely, in not all families. But as I already survived this, I think I'm allowed to talk about this habit.
    My family was located in a rural, poor area. Sharing this huge meal, usually once or twice a year, was a way for everyone to share, socialize, and for the less fortunate, eat enough to have the required strength for work in the fields.

    • @Kazeira
      @Kazeira Год назад +3

      Not 100% correct, it's buying alcohol age which is 18.
      Drinking before 16 is legal only if your are with your parents or guardians.
      Drinking as a minor is legal as long as you are not drunk, otherwise it falls on the person who supplied the alcohol.

  • @VoiceOfVoorhees
    @VoiceOfVoorhees Год назад +2

    While we did have lots of guns in serbia, nobody was carrying them around, guns are strictly regulated, so that's kind of false. besides, we disarmed the country a few months ago after an incident, and now gun laws are even stricter

  • @nickwalters5380
    @nickwalters5380 Год назад +70

    I've only ever been stopped by the police twice in my life, both in LA, same thing both times. Was staying with a friend in LA, nearest shop was a mile away, every time I walked there, didn't have a car, I'd get pulled by an LA cop. Apparently walking to he shops isn't done. The cops were nice btw, probably helped that I was English and had my passport with me...

    • @stephenlee5929
      @stephenlee5929 Год назад +22

      Amazing, In the land of the Free?

    • @tonybmw5785
      @tonybmw5785 Год назад +4

      I got pulled on the I40 doing a shade under the ton and the cop was great especially once he took his hand off his gun when he heard my accent and noticed the Union flag I had tied to the back of the bike.

    • @andrewsims4123
      @andrewsims4123 Год назад +16

      My sister was stopped too while pushing a buggy with her one year old in it. She told the cops what she thought of his country caught a flight back home as soon as she could. It was the land of the free provided you drove everywhere. The USA is a country where you are not allowed to walk apparently!

    • @g-man4297
      @g-man4297 Год назад +17

      @@stephenlee5929 The land of the free, where nothing is free, and usually more expensive than anywhere in Europe.

    • @sopcannon
      @sopcannon Год назад +2

      I got warned by a cop for Jay walking in Canada, thanks to my English accent that i didn't get a ticket.

  • @mattieclan8957
    @mattieclan8957 Год назад +47

    When my husband and I visited the USA, the humongous meals put both my husband and I off after a while. We started to crave for small, simple meals. My husband is not small in size and can eat, but even for him, it was just too much in The USA.

    • @thorstenjaspert9394
      @thorstenjaspert9394 Год назад

      I would loose my appetite if if see such mountains of food on my plate. American stomachs must be total overstretched.

  • @alisonbailey-c8u
    @alisonbailey-c8u Месяц назад +2

    These aren’t things that would surprise many Europeans and seem very outdated

  • @nasstroms
    @nasstroms Год назад +25

    In Sweden paying with plastic (with the card directly or google/apple pay) is the standard. A lot of places doesn't even accept cash anymore. There are even parts of the central bank/government that are looking at how and when to remove all coins and bills from the market.

    • @znail4675
      @znail4675 Год назад +7

      Sweden is way more cash less then USA, so this video is kind of strange.

    • @Zizywa
      @Zizywa Год назад +6

      Exactly this. I don't even know how today's cash looks anymore since it was years since I used it. I always pay with a card or "Swish". (A phone app that transfers money directly from your bank account to the vendor).

    • @ardentynekent2099
      @ardentynekent2099 Год назад

      Lucky those girls in the terrifying video weren’t behind the counter. They’d still be trying to figure out what a dime is.That. said, Ryan you crack me up! Stuck abed with a cracked knee cap, and I thank you for the work you put into choosing content. A pleasure to watch, albeit a little testy awaiting surgery.

    • @djlads
      @djlads Год назад +1

      Same in the UK even street acts have card machines now, and I've seen homeless people in London with card machines for people to tap, think they get them from a charity. And many place here across the UK are 0 cash.

    • @Hitsugix
      @Hitsugix Год назад

      and hopefully the removal of cash will never happen.

  • @Kris1964
    @Kris1964 Год назад +10

    Most European TV stations show commercials only between two programmes and not in the middle of the programmes

  • @pete9958
    @pete9958 11 месяцев назад +2

    In the UK a lot of our Garages (As we call them - your gas stations) do supply fuel 24 hours but are not maned they are on auto pumps paid by credit/debit card, the one snag is you need to have around £100.00 - ($120.00) credit in your account before you can use the pump -

  • @karlissulcs3822
    @karlissulcs3822 Год назад +19

    Mate, you should see the UK roads. I'm from Eastern Europe and even from my perspective they're tiny. My sister's husband's grandma, 95 years old, driving her good ol' car 60 mph on those seemed like a blockbuster car chase scene, lmao.

    • @shininglightphotos1044
      @shininglightphotos1044 Год назад +1

      When we went to Maui in '92 the locals were telling us we must try driving on the infamous Hana Road. They said it is really scary. We drove along it, and thought it was just like many roads in the UK we've been on, without giving them a second thought.

    • @Sofasurfa
      @Sofasurfa Год назад

      Small country, small roads😊

    • @ashleyftcash
      @ashleyftcash Год назад

      Love it ❤

    • @okbutthenagain.9402
      @okbutthenagain.9402 11 месяцев назад

      @karlissulcs3822. Which is why the UK has some of the lowest deaths or injuries per population.
      Eastern European countries have some of the highest death and injury rates per million inhabitents. The EU even states that Eastern European countries are driving up the death and injury rates within Europe as a whole.
      I have the feeling the UK driver are the ones laughing their A**** off not you at the increasing death rates within Europe while theirs continues to fall.

    • @karlissulcs3822
      @karlissulcs3822 11 месяцев назад

      @@okbutthenagain.9402 That was literally a humorous comment that showed 0 disrespect to the UK. Who hurt you?

  • @Northerner-NotADoctor
    @Northerner-NotADoctor Год назад +14

    10:42 No European would fly the EU flag.
    We fly our national flags (in Western Europe nation = state, in Eastern Europe nation = ethnicity).

    • @s1351-null
      @s1351-null Год назад +3

      Wish we'd fly the EU flag more tbh, it's a good looking flag
      Maybe we should get like an EU wide holiday where we can fly this flag or something

  • @Ju-lb2dz
    @Ju-lb2dz Год назад +7

    The drinking age is actualy 18yo in most european countries
    But there's lot of tricks to obtain alcohol before that age (like there's places where it's known they don't check IDs, or to ask an older person to buy for you, etc)

  • @sangfroidian5451
    @sangfroidian5451 Год назад +18

    I'm 53 and have been refused a coke in a bar in the US without producing ID. I told the barman he was probably one of the most stupid people on the planet and left, leaving my ID in my wallet. I will never reward businesses with my custom that train their staff to be morons.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Год назад

      They are just extra cautious. Sure, at that age nobody would think you're under 21, but the bar might just have it as a basic rule that everyone has to be checked.
      Still stupid

    • @Katt-._.7.
      @Katt-._.7. Год назад +2

      For a coke? Without alcohol? Why??

    • @sangfroidian5451
      @sangfroidian5451 Год назад +3

      @@Katt-._.7. Some bars have a 'No service without ID' policy. Unfortunately, it's drawn up by overly conservative lawyers/bureaucrats to protect the company in ALL circumstances regardless of the legal requirements or the poor customer experience.

    • @Katt-._.7.
      @Katt-._.7. Год назад +3

      @@sangfroidian5451 oh no, that’s ridiculous! 🙈 how annoying!

    • @vanesag.9863
      @vanesag.9863 Год назад

      I went with a group of people (the oldest 78 years old lady and the youngest 35) to a bar in Nashville and we were asked for an ID to buy a beer. The 78 y/o was sooooo happy. She said it was the first time anybody asked her for an ID because in Spain it's legal for a 16 y/o to buy one. You have to be 18 for a higher alcoholic drink. She felt young and wild. 🤣 I felt surprised: didn't have eyes that man? He was younger than the younger one of my group.