Brit Reacts to 4 Ways British and American Houses Are Very Different

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  • Опубликовано: 24 дек 2024

Комментарии • 1,8 тыс.

  • @AlystraKriss
    @AlystraKriss Год назад +590

    For me, the best part of having a separate washer and dryer is that once you transfer the washed clothes to the dryer you can start another load of wash while the first loads dries. So its faster to finish the laundry.

    • @mschigyrl5625
      @mschigyrl5625 Год назад +36

      exactly. i’m running a laundry assembly line. I almost considered a combo unit but then it would take twice as long to do laundry

    • @bobbiejojackson9448
      @bobbiejojackson9448 Год назад +36

      Yup. The separate washer and dryer cycles aren't just faster. I've used combo units while on vacation in rentals and the washing cycle takes a wee bit longer, but the dryer is where you see the biggest difference. You can dry a load of laundry in half the time. The interior of the combos are also considerably smaller, so you can only fit about half of the clothing, bedding etc. in each load. Overall, I much prefer having two separate units. It's well worth having to switch out my laundry.

    • @jice7074
      @jice7074 Год назад +19

      @@mschigyrl5625 and most houses are set up to have them side by side. I even keep a spare fridge in my laundry room since it's close to the kitchen.

    • @DJVIIIMan
      @DJVIIIMan Год назад +18

      I have 2 dryers and 1 washing machine because the wash always finishes before the first load has dried. I've also got 2 young kids that produce an ungodly amount of dirty clothes.

    • @kageekao5524
      @kageekao5524 Год назад +2

      I feel like it's just that buying a washer and a dryer is more expensive than one thing, so it makes more money

  • @annepryor9169
    @annepryor9169 Год назад +99

    If you are judging the house sizes by the movies, most people don’t live in houses like that. I grew up in a very small ranch house with very small bedrooms, a medium sized living room, and a small kitchen. No family room, one bathroom, no dining room. We weren’t poor, but we’re definitely working class.

    • @kendra9688
      @kendra9688 Год назад +4

      Same

    • @momstermom2939
      @momstermom2939 Год назад +2

      Ditto

    • @shinichi6235
      @shinichi6235 Год назад

      A ranch is actually nice asab nigga what as long as u got a huge one ur livin

    • @Harley_Girl68
      @Harley_Girl68 Год назад +2

      All the same except we had a room that was once a screen porch so we had a den because of that.

    • @lorettatayor5840
      @lorettatayor5840 Год назад +4

      yep same hear. my house i grew up in in Nashville, was built in 1949. three bedrooms but smallish-except the "front bedroom facing the street- that was the largest, and my sister slept in there, my mom and dad shared a hide a way bed in the living room, and me and my brother had our own room. small bathroom, living room and kitchen. probably maybe 1000 square feet maybe total. although, people were smaller{?} back then, & the closets were small too. it was fine to grow up in!!! plenty of yard front and back, on a end of the street lot. good times!!

  • @amyblanton3044
    @amyblanton3044 Год назад +348

    As far as outlets go, we teach babies not to touch outlets as soon as they can crawl. Some do test the rule, but the feeling of the shock deters them from doing it again. We also have covers for the outlets while we are teaching the kids.

    • @TangentOmega
      @TangentOmega Год назад +50

      UK elec is 230v
      US elec is 120v (only about half the kick if you get zapped)

    • @misslora3896
      @misslora3896 Год назад +30

      ​​​@@TangentOmegaYes. The jolt of 120v hurts, but it's FAR less likely to kill someone.

    • @jaycooper2812
      @jaycooper2812 Год назад +18

      You need to take the fact that Lawrence left the U.K. over 15 years ago and a lot of the new buildings now have single taps for water there. The washer and dryer in the United States are separate machines but they do a much better job of washing and drying your clothes. The combined machines use less space but they don't remove as much water so it takes much longer to dry your clothes.

    • @marydavis5234
      @marydavis5234 Год назад +19

      @@jaycooper2812we actually do have washing machine/ dyer combination unit , you can buy in the US, no one buys them as they are very small and would take too long to do laundry.

    • @chriswampler1
      @chriswampler1 Год назад +7

      When I was a kid I put a paper clip into both sides.

  • @kimberlywaits6189
    @kimberlywaits6189 Год назад +76

    I was already grateful for my home but your videos about UK housing really really reinforces my thankfulness. My husband & I live in the country on 1.5 acres of land with a 4bdrm 2 bath house kitchen living room dining room and built in garage, which is average size. About 2000 sq foot. We have city water but also our own water well, 2 pecan trees, a chicken house and we're about to build a green house. The best part is that it's paid for already. We bought it about 13 years ago when the housing market had taken a downswing. We paid a whooping 81K for the house AND the land and it's beautiful!

  • @gmunden1
    @gmunden1 Год назад +82

    There are socket covers to prevent children from "poking" fingers or objects in the holes. Parents typically childproof their homes before babies are born, so the children are protected.

    • @LiveFreeOrDieDH
      @LiveFreeOrDieDH Год назад +3

      For most new construction, Tamper Resistant outlets are now required. They have little internal shutters that prevent a metal object from being pushed inside.

    • @lynnw7155
      @lynnw7155 7 месяцев назад

      Plus GFI.

    • @Morna777
      @Morna777 3 месяца назад

      ​@@LiveFreeOrDieDHIf you get wiring redone they'll put those in. You have to slide the cover to the side in order to plug something in. It's enough of a problem to deter a toddler.

  • @laurawing4756
    @laurawing4756 10 месяцев назад +12

    The biggest difference in housing vocabulary that i keep hearing from europeans is the word garden. We use the word yard to refer to the external portion of our property. A garden is an intentional area of plants, such as a vegetable or flower garden. We don't typically play in a garden. We have public gardens in parks and zoos sometimes. A yard is where you go out in play, send the kids out to run, or place your pets to do their business.

  • @Blondie42
    @Blondie42 Год назад +139

    Strange that Laurence didn't show any US style Victorian houses. They're some of the most beautiful ones out there.
    To child proof electric sockets parents buy plastic plugs to insert into the sockets. Little kids aren't likely to pry them off

    • @nanetteharris3456
      @nanetteharris3456 Год назад +2

      I love the old Craftsman houses.

    • @angelajohnson5728
      @angelajohnson5728 Год назад +5

      The beautiful "Painted Ladies" of San Francisco. All Victorian.

    • @Blondie42
      @Blondie42 Год назад +1

      @@angelajohnson5728 Yes, indeed.
      Though I never knew they were called that, thanks 😊

    • @lynnw7155
      @lynnw7155 7 месяцев назад

      He also didn't show farm houses. At least in the east, Farm-style houses, built 1880s-1930s are VERY common.

  • @VicEclectica
    @VicEclectica Год назад +27

    To be clear about water faucets: Many, many homes have a faucet with two separate handles for hot and cold, but one tap. There are other, also many, homes with faucets that have one handle for hot and cold, which turns left and right to get the temperature you want. We've pretty much done away with two handles/two taps, but you will occasionally see it, particularly in restoration homes which try to stay true to the era the home was built in.

  • @elijahperez6506
    @elijahperez6506 Год назад +150

    Ranch houses are absolutely amazing! They’re spread out and you have plenty of privacy. You can have your own space and see your family at your own discretion.

    • @PhxVanguard
      @PhxVanguard Год назад +9

      Yup, when I bought mine I went for a midcentury ranch. Solid construction, classic "atomic age" style and because they sprawl in the center, if you have company over for a party or whatever you have room for days. I had walls taken out so the center of mine is a 1,000 square foot flex space for entertaining with the bedrooms, a den and bathrooms on the periphery. I host about 20 or so parties/dinners/bbqs at my house a year though. So I need it.

    • @elijahperez6506
      @elijahperez6506 Год назад +1

      @@PhxVanguard yeah my good buddy has one and the damn spot!!!

    • @selfcarewithstephanie3519
      @selfcarewithstephanie3519 Год назад +9

      His stats are a bit off. They include apartments and condos. A single family detached home averages over 2500 sqft. I HATE garbage disposals. They can smell, tear up things that accidentally fall in and block your pipes after a while. I can't imagine living in a home without closets. All of our bedroom closets except 1 are at least 100sqft. That is not included in the size of the house. Americans love our storage. I do have an electric kettle. I have tea at night before bed. My kids use them for ramen and hot chocolate. The teapots on the stove are usually decorative.

    • @PhxVanguard
      @PhxVanguard Год назад +3

      @@selfcarewithstephanie3519 good catch! I thought 1600 sqft seemed really small. Lol

    • @ronclark9724
      @ronclark9724 Год назад +2

      @@PhxVanguard While in the Midwest many low middle class ranch homes with one garage and three bedrooms with one bathroom run around 1000 to 1200 square feet built more than 50 years ago. Recently built homes are significantly larger...

  • @falovepa
    @falovepa Год назад +10

    About 4 years ago, I bought my mother's house that she built custom in 1985. It's a modest 2 bedroom (2600sf) with partial ocean views. We don't turn on the AC because of the ocean breezes. But what she did with the setup was super cool. In the main part of the house, all rooms are open, with vaulted ceilings with skylights; the only walls are from the plant-filled glass atrium in the middle of the house. So you can see the family room, living room, dining room and kitchen all in the same place. She hand-picked all the saltillo tiles because she was looking for tiles with cat and chicken prints on them that happened in the drying process. I love this house because I see my mom's touches and quirkiness on every corner I turn. I was in high school when she built it and was able to give input on certain things.

  • @ESUSAMEX
    @ESUSAMEX Год назад +174

    If an American ever were to say he was moving house, he would mean that he is actually picking up the house and moving it to another spot. Companies here can pick up you house and move to almost anywhere for the right amount of money.

    • @Aboz
      @Aboz Год назад +11

      My parents did this in the late 60s. Sold the old farm house, and it was moved to the buyer's property, and our new ranch house was built at a lumber yard and moved to our place. Both houses had to travel about 50 miles.

    • @NannerBrams
      @NannerBrams Год назад +8

      Also with the prevalence of mobile and manufactured homes here, it's very common that people would think you were moving one of those if you used that terminology

    • @PhxVanguard
      @PhxVanguard Год назад +4

      ​@JenBramAR I think mobiles are equally prevalent in the UK. They just call them "caravans" and they've become very popular on the continent too.

    • @NannerBrams
      @NannerBrams Год назад +1

      @@PhxVanguardReally? All the numbers I've seen shows it less than 0.4% there. In my county, we have like a 35% mobile home rate

    • @PhxVanguard
      @PhxVanguard Год назад +5

      @@NannerBrams a single county isn't representative of the country. If I used Newport County in Rhode Island as an example of the average American lifestyle it would give the impression that everyone lived in beach mansions. Less than 18 million Americans out of 340 million live in mobile homes.

  • @5Gburn
    @5Gburn Год назад +3

    Separate washers and dryers are good for a couple of reasons: one is the size; ours are huge. The other is, you can put one load in the dryer and start a new load while the dryer's going. Easy, peasy.

  • @Out-Of-Service
    @Out-Of-Service Год назад +94

    Here is the difference with outlets. In the US almost all of our outlets are 110 volts. You'll feel it if you stick something in there but you'll be okay. The UK outlets are around double the voltage, think it's 220 or 240 volts. That can kill you so it's safer to have a switch on the outlet.
    Also, my house has a built in vacuum system. There are round spots on the baseboards all over the house. You plug your vacuum hose into them and turn on the big vacuum in the garage. You can sweep all your floors without having to drag or push around a big hoover. It's Florida so it makes it easy to get rid of the sand. All tile floors in most houses here because of all the sand.

    • @andimproud
      @andimproud Год назад +10

      My nephew stuck a bobby pin in there and screamed to high heaven. Decent shock but he was ok. Scared the shit out of auntie, though.

    • @KarenCatMom2
      @KarenCatMom2 Год назад +5

      At the time Laurence made this video I don't think he'd ever spent much time in the south. There are plenty of all brick houses in the South because the material needed to make bricks was available here. Birmingham Alabama was a big Center of brick-making for many decades and it was shipped all over the southeast.
      In the past few decades it's become more popular on middle-class housing to have a combination of brick and some kind of wood siding because brick is so expensive, but the majority of the nicer homes in my city, Nashville Tennessee, are all brick with maybe some slate or other stine added as decoration There's lots of limestone here, which makes it easier to get the material and less expensive because it doesn't have to be transported here from a distance.
      My mom always said she wanted to brick house because they were more safe during storms. I'm not sure if that holds up if you're talkin about a major tornado but it made her feel better.
      The downside of having so much limestone very close to the topsoil is that in order to build a basement you have to blow with dynamite all that limestone out from under your building site and that's very expensive so the only people that have basements in my area are those whose houses are built on a hill. My house sits on a very level lot, so no basement. But it is made completely of bricks.
      In New England or parts of the Midwest or areas that are highly forested you might see more houses made from wood products.

    • @jonadabtheunsightly
      @jonadabtheunsightly Год назад +2

      @@andimproud Yeah. With sufficient levels of creative idiocy, there are numerous ways to kill yourself with 110V; but they all involve somehow bypassing or compromising the electrical resistance that the skin normally provides. Whereas, 220V is enough to just overpower the resistance and burn right through the skin.
      110V will give you an alarmingly unpleasant tingle right through the skin, mind you. It does not feel nice. But it is considerably less dangerous than 220V.
      (Of course the amount of current also very much matters, but the important difference between the systems on each side of the pond, in this context, is the voltage. The frequency is also different, but that difference is less important to the human body, though older electronics that didn't have switchmode power supplies used to care very deeply about it.)

    • @daricetaylor737
      @daricetaylor737 Год назад

      My daughter, when she was about 3 years old, took a bobby pin, opened it up and stuck one of each of the ends in both of the sockets......needless to say she got zapped, and other than being stunned, she was totally fine! That kid of mine, I swear, I still to this day have no idea how she thought of doing that!

    • @GrammaNay
      @GrammaNay Год назад

      ​@daricetaylor737 sounds like my daughter...and granddaughter! (My sons daughter)

  • @duphasdan
    @duphasdan Год назад +20

    While wood houses are common in America, brick houses are fairly common in the state of Georgia. Georgia is well known and famous for the brilliant red bricks made there due to the plentiful clay deposits. Those red bricks have been used for a long time to make factories around the country as well, and were exceptionally paramount in helping the Industrial Revolution fair well in America. The bricks are not only a nice red color that never fades, they are also very strong and very easy to make. Just plop some clay in a mold and bake.
    As for boiling water, some could do it on the stove. Though most just use a microwave to heat up water. Some people have espresso machines that do that as well, but most still just use a microwave.

    • @daniel_sc1024
      @daniel_sc1024 Год назад +5

      Beginning in the 20th century, the majority of "brick" houses in America are actually wood-framed houses with brick veneer on the outside.

    • @bettyir4302
      @bettyir4302 Год назад +2

      There's also log homes (yeah, wood but not wood planks), stucco, adobe, metal and cinderblock. Some use recycled materials like old tires, glass bottles or haybales. There's all sorts of material.

    • @jacobcotton6614
      @jacobcotton6614 11 месяцев назад

      I think electric kettles are an American invention

  • @conniehom6798
    @conniehom6798 Год назад +23

    We do use electric tea kettles. I use it to make tea, hand drip coffee, and for cooking if I need to add hot filtered water in my pot or pan.

    • @RogCBrand
      @RogCBrand Год назад +3

      Yes, I'm a tea drinker, not coffee, and I've had an electric kettles for decades. They seem to not realize most Americans are NOT tea drinkers, so THAT is why electric kettles aren't common. But, what's really so hard about using a stove top kettle? My grandma had one and you just turn on the stove and heat up the water... which is what an electric kettle does.
      Or, I've seen them freak out about using a microwave to heat a cup of water- I can't remember who it was, but they thought that was not sanitary!!! So, the device that is made to heat food, is not sanitary when heating a cup of water???
      I really can't understand some of these things, and wonder if Lawrence is just trying to be funny, or if he really believes this stuff, like our "wood houses" having gaps that allow the wind and insects to freely come in...

    • @user-mg5mv2tn8q
      @user-mg5mv2tn8q Год назад +3

      When I want tea, I put cold water in a cup and put the cup in the microwave.

  • @beckymcdonald8040
    @beckymcdonald8040 Год назад +3

    We have separate washers and dryers for 1 main reason... You wash a load, and put it in the dryer, then start the next load washing, while the first is drying, and so on, until all your laundry is done. It takes you twice as long to do your laundry. The single units are available here now, but not popular.

  • @kenziedayne4234
    @kenziedayne4234 Год назад +61

    Houses here can be wood, brick, stone, or even adobe (mud brick) if you're in the Southwest. Yes, washers and dryers are separate here. No idea why, just the way it is. But I think it comes in handy. I usually do a couple loads of laundry every day so clothes can be drying while I wash a second load. We do have electric kettles and have had them for decades. Maybe they aren't used as much as a kettle on the stove, guess it depends on the person. We have a lot of choices here in the US for how to do things.

    • @seattleredhead8811
      @seattleredhead8811 Год назад

      I was born and raised in Arizona, and, for whatever reason, stucco exteriors are extremely popular on houses. And when writing this, I realized that I actually don't really know what stucco is, so I looked it up: "Stucco or render is a construction material made of aggregates, a binder, and water." Leave it to us Americans to make up new building materials to put on top of the actual building materials. LOL!

    • @GothicDragonX
      @GothicDragonX Год назад

      Depends on where you live in the US? In NY (Up State), I have a Washer & Dryer combo (One unit. Maybe having two units for older homes? Then again, having separate units is nice for maintenance and less complex regarding repairs.

    • @seattleredhead8811
      @seattleredhead8811 Год назад +3

      @@GothicDragonX When he says "one unit" in the U.K., what he means is, the washer and dryer are combined into one unit. You put your clothes in, and then it washes and dries your clothes. They have these in their kitchens. I have never seen or used an all-in-one washer/dryer, but I've had it described to me as "a jack of all trades, and a master of none". Meaning, in that person's opinion, it gets the job done, but separate washer and dryer, whether stacked on top of each other or side by side, do a better job because the machine only has to wash and only has to dry, and not both combined.

    • @tomhalla426
      @tomhalla426 Год назад +4

      My aunt had a combined washer/dryer, the only one I have ever seen. It did not work all that well. Stacked separate washers and dryers are now more the norm for cramped applications.

    • @marydavis5234
      @marydavis5234 Год назад +1

      I have seen a washing machine/ dyer unit when I was visiting family in North Carolina.

  • @howtomaketoast8
    @howtomaketoast8 Год назад +6

    We live on 3 acres but we have a veggie garden, fruit trees, chickens, and pigs. We are called homesteaders, and our land size is quite small for what we're doing, but it works. I watch your channel because I love learning cultural differences, your slang included.

  • @jacqueline1099
    @jacqueline1099 Год назад +47

    I’ll take a ranch style house any day… older people do not do tons of stairs!!

    • @lindiharris-axon8167
      @lindiharris-axon8167 Год назад

      I have come to the conclusion that it might be better for this old person if I did have steps.

    • @TT-rk7pw
      @TT-rk7pw Год назад

      I’m in my 20s, but I’m for ranch just because a 65° basement in August is unbeatable & 2nd stories are insufferable even with AC blasting.

  • @kae-li
    @kae-li Год назад +9

    I love how positive you are! Thank you for making wonderful, clean content ~

  • @AlystraKriss
    @AlystraKriss Год назад +115

    I know a ton of people, myself included, that prefer the electric kettle. First thing to remember in America is we have choices and tons of options here, so don’t think one choice is the only option 😜

    • @enigma___
      @enigma___ Год назад +10

      Yeah...I have an electric kettle. I like it. It's quick, and and time saving. And it's just cute with that skinny spout.

    • @captaincooool
      @captaincooool Год назад +4

      was introduced to them when my wife moved in with me, I just like the fact I dont have to worry about leaving a burner on. Sound petty but it's been known to happen.

    • @TranslunarJezebel
      @TranslunarJezebel Год назад +2

      I have 2 electric kettles. The first electric kettle I had, my sister came over and melted it on the stove, because she'd never had one. I actually cried. But now I have 2, 1 modern one and mid century vintage one.

    • @susanmurray7654
      @susanmurray7654 Год назад +2

      I nuke the water. Brew the coffee.

    • @JJfromPhilly67
      @JJfromPhilly67 Год назад +2

      Just finally got the electric kettle (gift from my niece) and I love it. As an American, I like ice tea (Earl Grey or English Breakfast) and it makes so much easier.

  • @markmayfield2228
    @markmayfield2228 Год назад +2

    Down south, a lot of us make sun tea. Gallon size glass container with a spigot. Fill with water, and tea bags. Put on the lid and place outside in the sun. In less than an hour in the heat, you have the smoothest tea. Luzianne is smoother than Lipton.

  • @gaslighthotel
    @gaslighthotel Год назад +36

    Not sure if Laurence is aware of another particular style, but it is one that was VERY VERY prominent around the turn of the 20th century and that was the Craftsman/Arts and Crafts style. You will see a lot of that style element incorporated into newer houses these days

    • @lorrainemiller688
      @lorrainemiller688 Год назад +3

      A personal favorite!

    • @AbbieLewisCorrea
      @AbbieLewisCorrea Год назад +2

      I love craftsman

    • @lynnw7155
      @lynnw7155 10 месяцев назад

      And the slightly earlier farmhouse style. They are everywhere in rural areas.

    • @Morna777
      @Morna777 3 месяца назад

      The older part of my hometown is almost entirely craftsman architecture. I didn't know what it was called until recently but it makes sense that it would be its own distinct style.

  • @GentleRain21
    @GentleRain21 Год назад +8

    There is a house in North Carolina called Biltmore (Estate). The house has four acres of floor space and 250 rooms , including 35 bedrooms, 43 bathrooms, 65 fireplaces, and three kitchens. Definitely one of a kind for this country. I have the idea from watching British dramas that there are a lot of country houses in England that might compete with the opulence of Biltmore. Today Biltmore is a tourist attraction but still runs a winery. Are there estates like that dotting the countryside of England?

    • @Dusk1962
      @Dusk1962 Год назад

      Members of the family still live at Biltmore.

    • @karenwhaley8635
      @karenwhaley8635 Год назад +1

      One of the finest homes in the country I ever toured was Hearst Castle. Private outdoor zoo where animals roam free. Zebras, Giraffe among many, indoor Roman pool with 22k gold in every tile think that's pool used in Lady Gagas GUY video?!?, indoor theater, 6 ceilings from the Renaissance, private air landing field, complete view of San Simeon Bay and Pacific Ocean, 43 bedrooms, 61 bathrooms, Gothic study, Library, 127 acres of gardens Egyptian sculpture from 1500 bce. Olympic size outdoor pool with huge marble statues and fountains. There was even an elephant house. There's three guests houses and one was almost 5900 sq. ft. Think it's 250,000 acres land. Gorgeous!! All the big celebrities from 40s and 50s stayed there.

    • @thecontentiousasshole
      @thecontentiousasshole Год назад

      I’ve been there years ago, it’s beautiful.

    • @KJones-qs7ju
      @KJones-qs7ju 11 месяцев назад

      Yes who do you think they were emulating when they built that place? The country estates of the nobility in Britain.

  • @PhxVanguard
    @PhxVanguard Год назад +18

    So the difference between American and British laundry machines (washer/dryers) is the American version is larger and usually in their own room. We have the machines separated for convenience. Back in the 50s and 60s housewives would find it easier to do the laundry on one day of the week for efficiency. So the "drums" were made larger and with the advent of the dryer you could do two loads of wash in the time the first would be done drying and separate out hang dry, machine dry, etc. It turned a task that took several hours over multiple days for an average household of four to a two or three hour task at once, with space in between to load your dishwasher and vacuum the floors or polish the wood block.

  • @ChristaFree
    @ChristaFree Год назад +3

    Y'all run 220 and we run 110 electric in our houses. We have separate washers and dryers so we can wash another load while the first one is drying. When you have kids you'll understand. Lol
    We have little plastic inserts for the sockets and we teach the babies not to touch them.
    I have a little house in the middle of 50 acres. It's only 1200 square feet. I have a couple other little 3 room cabins on the land too for family and friends when they visit if they don't want to stay in the house. A getaway. I'll take land over house size every single day.

  • @Hello_I_am_Jeff
    @Hello_I_am_Jeff Год назад +79

    For what it's worth, garbage disposals are really only meant to catch bits of waste. You should still be scraping the food into the trash. All the disposal does is to prevent the pipes to become clogged over time with large scraps of food build up.

    • @jlpack62
      @jlpack62 Год назад +14

      Not true. I have had garbage disposals in my houses since I was a kid and my family has put most food items down them for decades. Some things that don't go down the disposal are chicken bones, pasta, thick rinds, corn cobs and fibrous things likes stalks of celery. It's also not recommended to put coffee grounds down them.
      That said, my family and I have put large quantities of food down them on a regular basis.

    • @Hello_I_am_Jeff
      @Hello_I_am_Jeff Год назад +5

      @@jlpack62 that’sthat’s kinda fucking disgusting dawg.

    • @Brirend
      @Brirend Год назад +2

      To be honest, the garbage disposal was not designed for use on a municipal sewer system. They were designed for septic systems because the bacteria in septic systems would decompose the food and most houses with garbage disposals had a separate septic tank (known as a grease trap) that was just for the kitchen sink. As long as it was properly sized, it would take the food waste and basically compost it and disperse it into the ground.
      The companies that manufactured the disposals pushed hard to have cities remove laws that forbade food scraps from being put down the drain so they could start selling disposals to city dwellers. (it took them until 1997 to get New York City to allow it)

    • @tammierandall864
      @tammierandall864 Год назад +7

      Had a plumber tell me that garbage disposals cause a lot of problems to the sewer system because people dump their food down them. He said they are only for the little bit of food that might go down after you scrape your dishes. He hated garbage disposals. I don't like them either.

    • @Brirend
      @Brirend Год назад +2

      @@tammierandall864 For city sewer systems that is true because the water has to travel to the water treatment facility and there are lots of places for the food to pile up and clog plumbing. In a septic system with a grease trap on the kitchen sink, the food particles go directly into a septic tank where it gets broken down and eventually distributed into the ground via the drain field. Basically, it gets composted into fertilizer.

  • @yayakelley7771
    @yayakelley7771 Год назад +2

    As a hairstylist I learned really fast to use the word “fringe” as opposed to “bangs” when I had a British client in my chair!😂

  • @crystallynnesmilezz7682
    @crystallynnesmilezz7682 Год назад +39

    I have one washer dryer combo on my lower floor and we have the normal 2 separate units. What I’ve learned is you can wash and dry so much more laundry in the separate units! We have 6 kids, we are getting rid of the one unit and putting our extra set down stairs 😂

  • @Hengebobs
    @Hengebobs 10 месяцев назад +1

    Kitchen/bathroom outlets for post mid 80s construction usually have GFCIs (ground fault circuit interuptors) and while they CAN be used as a "switch" it's a mini circuit breaker intended to stop a short if water gets in it. Usually there is a "light switch" by the door in a room that is wired to ONE outlet in a room.

  • @ellenaparicio6416
    @ellenaparicio6416 Год назад +67

    The first house my husband and I bought had the master bedroom on the first floor. The first couple of nights, I had the windows open, they had screens. Our bed was pretty close to the window and in the middle of the night, I heard a lion roar. I turned over to see a bobcat looking through the window.

    • @Wyomingchief
      @Wyomingchief Год назад +14

      Bobcats don't Roar😂

    • @lisamarieva3514
      @lisamarieva3514 Год назад +1

      @@Wyomingchief lol, RIGHT?

    • @mschigyrl5625
      @mschigyrl5625 Год назад +2

      @@Wyomingchief its usually more of a loud meowish hiss than a roar lol

    • @cspat1
      @cspat1 Год назад +2

      Holey sheets !

    • @thatonegirlelaine
      @thatonegirlelaine Год назад +3

      If you have a septic system you can't have a garbage disposal. That's the one thing I miss now that I'm living in the country.

  • @Milewskige
    @Milewskige Год назад +3

    17:10 Also so you could be drying the 1st load while washing the 2nd. Saves time.

  • @faithinjesus7817
    @faithinjesus7817 Год назад +20

    We have all kettles even the electric.

  • @The_Crucible714
    @The_Crucible714 10 месяцев назад +2

    “I’ve seen a few houses I’ve had my eye on.”
    Dude is definitely an American.

  • @dangray
    @dangray Год назад +28

    I, an ugly American, bought a condo in Poland and immediately added AC. They thought I was crazy.

    • @MegaMagicdog
      @MegaMagicdog Год назад +5

      Never! There's always at least one or two days a year in which the temperatures just soar above normal and people are wishing they had it! SF has that issue too sometimes.

    • @ronclark9724
      @ronclark9724 Год назад +5

      You can't survive the summer without air conditioning in Texas. In fact many cities have laws forcing landlords to fix their air conditioning within a day or two with many rental properties... Far too many suffer heat stroke during the summer months without the air conditioning...

  • @Itsme60804
    @Itsme60804 Год назад +6

    We do have electric kettles here in America. A lot of people like their extra countertop kitchen appliances, so I’m sure a lot of people have them. Also I live in a 1000 sq ft 2 bedroom, 2 bathroom apartment and and still feel so cramped. My boyfriend and I have a baby on the way and are looking into moving. Anything under 1000 square feet seems tiny to me.

  • @lovemyscotsman
    @lovemyscotsman Год назад +34

    I live in the country and own 10 acres. Our house is 2000 sq. ft. I would hate not having a separate washer and dryer. It'd take all day to do laundry. Plus we have large laundry rooms for that purpose. Plus we have 2 large refrigerator/freezers.

  • @kristinetaulbut4975
    @kristinetaulbut4975 Год назад +1

    Old houses in America don’t have many closets. I don’t understand the clothes washers in the kitchen. We do have electric kettles.

  • @bradparker9147
    @bradparker9147 Год назад +24

    We have a thing called instant hot water. This is basically is a built tea pot which is ready to go on demand. It has a separate faucet for your sink and heats the water to 200 degrees Fahrenheit.

    • @rebeccahull2480
      @rebeccahull2480 Год назад

      You mean hot water? Lol. I must be misunderstanding something? Do they have an actual tea spigot hook up or something? That's cool. 😊

    • @LaurenD-ew3lt
      @LaurenD-ew3lt Год назад +3

      Yeah- I have one! It’s a separate small faucet that just dispenses extra hot water from a tank under your sink. Love it! Dispense into a mug and drop a tea bag in it!

    • @rebeccahull2480
      @rebeccahull2480 Год назад +1

      @@LaurenD-ew3lt wow I want one. We are renovating gonna look into it. That's awesome.

  • @landonharris734
    @landonharris734 Год назад +1

    In the U.S. if a child sticks metal in an electrical socket, they are gonna learn the hard way not to do it. However, if you are not a cool parent, there are rubber/plastic plugs you can put in or over a socket

  • @vstraylight
    @vstraylight Год назад +62

    On the electrical sockets, the reason y'all have a switch and are so nervous about the outlet is because you put 240v to every outlet. That can seriously hurt you. A English friend told me about being over at a friend's house as a kid. There was a fireplace with a bare wire in the back to light the logs. His friend was using a poker and touched it to that wire. He went flying across the room and had a badly burnt hand. We have 120v outlets which are less dangerous on the whole. I've touched live 120v wires many times in my life by accident. It's uncomfortable and unpleasant but it doesn't burn you or send you flying.

    • @pegatheetoo1437
      @pegatheetoo1437 Год назад +1

      I was living in CA and I plugged in a lamp that apparently had a frayed cord. It singed all the hair on my arm and threw me across the floor.

    • @thenecrolept
      @thenecrolept Год назад +5

      singed hairs is wild - I've zapped myself a few times on a normal 120v outlet and all it did was buzz my arm and feel real weird

    • @pegatheetoo1437
      @pegatheetoo1437 Год назад +1

      My girls were of high school age at the time & came running in and asked if I was okay. I said, "Well, I can hear you & if you can hear me, I'm okay!" 😂 My arm was black for quite a while, until new hair grew in.

    • @jimreilly917
      @jimreilly917 Год назад +2

      Amperage actually kills…not voltage. About 1.5 amps will unalive you regardless of voltage, especially if YOU are the ground.

    • @rich7447
      @rich7447 Год назад +3

      @@jimreilly917 You can't drive 1.5 amps without sufficient voltage. Ohms law.

  • @tzarinaruths.2610
    @tzarinaruths.2610 10 месяцев назад +1

    Oh each State has its own style in housing due to the weather you experience. That's what determines the type of house you get. Then you get the design our own homes. Not alot of brick homes in Cali but a butt load in the South-withstands the tornados better than a stick house, but those are all over also with mobile homes etc...tornado shelters are your best friend in the South...always know where the public shelters are in case you're out & about.

  • @lindasmith1370
    @lindasmith1370 Год назад +16

    I live in Texas. Today the heat index is 114F so, yes, I have central air conditioning and heat. My house is one story brick, 2,100 sq Ft, 2 car garage. I have an electric kettle because different teas require water at different temperatures. I have separate washer and dryer. It allows me to get more washing done. I don’t have to wait for one load to finish drying before starting to wash another load. I lived in England several years ago. I loved it there so don’t miss it’s fine points.

  • @loganmaximus2160
    @loganmaximus2160 Год назад +1

    What I really love about your videos is that you are so genuine and humble. Great characteristics for a person. When you have enough information about a topic, you have great insights and I love your honesty. It is really refreshing in a world full of ego and competition.

  • @Loki_Trickster
    @Loki_Trickster Год назад +8

    Washer-Dryer combos, like most things America is optional. They are more common in appartment living. but for homeownership Its just common to get them separate as they have larger capacity (2-3x larger), repair cost are cheaper for individual units, and replacement is cheaper if you need to replace just one unit rather then a Combo Unit.

  • @GizmoJunk
    @GizmoJunk Год назад

    @17:11
    One feature of having a separate washer and dryer is the option to wash a load of clothes while the previous load is drying.

  • @nrrork
    @nrrork Год назад +10

    The brick houses are _here_ are really cute. But they're nestled under tall trees and have nice little yards around them.
    I don't think it's the brick houses that look ugly, it's just they're not surrounded by anything pretty.
    Hell, look up the brick row houses in places like New York, Boston, Philadelphia.
    The neighborhoods have been cleaned up and those old houses look really nice now.

  • @Xassaw
    @Xassaw Год назад +1

    🤣🤣🤣 Don’t say Hot & Bothered, it means you’re IN. THE MOOD FOR “LOVE” 🤣🤣🤣

  • @Hello_I_am_Jeff
    @Hello_I_am_Jeff Год назад +19

    Most average middle class houses are more like 2000-2500sq ft. Most 2 bedroom apartments would be 1100-1400 sq ft. (on average.) Keep in mind that housing prices are not what they used to be.

  • @Annie_Annie__
    @Annie_Annie__ Год назад +2

    In addition to row houses in the US, we also have townhouses.
    The only difference is that row houses all look basically the same, done in the same brick color and are basically just carbon copies of one another all the way down the street.
    Townhouses are attached on either side, but each house looks different, has a different layout, is a different color, and might even be different heights to one another.
    You might also hear “brownstone”, which is a specific kind of row house that has a façade made of brownstone, which is a red-brown sandstone.
    They’re widely associated with NYC, so you might hear them referenced in movies or shows that take place there.

  • @onee-sama3984
    @onee-sama3984 Год назад +19

    When you forget to do laundry It's pretty nice having a load of laundry in the washer with another load in the dryer lol

    • @susandickerson2663
      @susandickerson2663 Год назад +2

      It's my understanding that the dryers in the combo washer/dryer unit take much longer to dry clothes. Someone needs to confirm as I have never owned one.

    • @PhxVanguard
      @PhxVanguard Год назад +1

      ​@@susandickerson2663they do and the machines are more prone to mildew smell, too. 😢

  • @CC-wy3tp
    @CC-wy3tp Год назад +2

    A couple of notes/corrections ...here in the states, our sockets should ideally be like Brits for safety yes, but they do sell those little plastic plugs you can insert to prevent little ones from sticking fingers & things into them. Also, the washer/dryer combo ...ours are separate which is nice you can do more than one load quicker that way & ours are not in the kitchen like in England, but typically in their own little "laundry room". Most homes have closets throughout, bedroom clothing closets, the front entry coat closet, back entry mudroom (usually next to your laundry room), linens closets in bathrooms & hallways, storage closets ...with modern homes having massive walk-in closets in the bedrooms.
    Oh yes & we do actually have electric kettles here as well.

    • @Cricket2731
      @Cricket2731 Год назад

      Some folks with large families have multiple washers & dryers to handle all the laundry.

  • @joehackney1376
    @joehackney1376 Год назад +13

    The problem with Condos or Condominiums is that they have a HOA or Home Owners Association, which charges an annual or monthly fee for property tax, insurance, garbage pickup, etc.

    • @chnalvr
      @chnalvr Год назад +1

      I have lived in U.S. condos since 1994 and they can be pretty great if you don't want to do yard work and upkeep on the structure of your house. The HOA does everything for you from the monthly fee.

    • @joehackney1376
      @joehackney1376 Год назад

      Then you must have an unusually good HOA. Most are not. South Florida just had a group of about 40 condo associations that had several million stolen by a group that contracted to help run the associations. That is more the norm!@@chnalvr

  • @tina6277
    @tina6277 Год назад +2

    The farm house can be quite different. Regions of the USA have different style homes along with the more common homes.Here in Wisconsin you will find german styles, swiss styles, dutch colonial , Norwegian and Swedish styles. You might have a sears catalogue home . You could buy the plans and everything you need to build that home . My great grandmother had one of these homes cerca 1916 it still stands and is lived in but the owner took off parts of it and got it sided with vinal siding. So it lost its character. It originally looked like a gingerbread house. Lots of scroll work. 3 season porch. Now it looks very plain.

  • @phoenixcaladrius3538
    @phoenixcaladrius3538 Год назад +12

    Dude, I'm not sure what "hot and bothered" means in the UK - but it seems VERY different from what it means here in the US! It's an old school term that's used very specifically to mean physically "turned on" here. It was awesome hearing you keep saying you were all hot and bothered! 🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂

    • @superstarcat7654
      @superstarcat7654 Год назад +1

      I think it depends on the region you live in. Hot and bothered means really mad at you. Want to fight you.

    • @marysellers2806
      @marysellers2806 Год назад +2

      ​@@superstarcat7654 we call that hot under the collar in the South ❤

    • @marysellers2806
      @marysellers2806 Год назад +1

      I came here just to say that 😂

  • @LadyChaos1992
    @LadyChaos1992 Год назад +1

    we do have switches on our outlets, but usually only near the kitchen sink, and the switch(es) are usually only for the garbage disposal, or the light above the kitchen sink.

  • @yugioht42
    @yugioht42 Год назад +70

    Condo is basically an apartment but you actually buy it outright instead of renting it.

    • @glennrobinson2014
      @glennrobinson2014 Год назад +7

      Yes, it's an apartment "con dominium" -- "with ownership."

    • @jlpack62
      @jlpack62 Год назад +3

      I'm literally replying to you from my condo!

    • @Cino-Cin
      @Cino-Cin Год назад

      Your face looks like a condo

    • @amywells8609
      @amywells8609 Год назад +2

      You are mistaken, you can rent a condo and buy an apartment.

    • @amorky8391
      @amorky8391 Год назад

      ​@amywells8609 in some parts of the US you can only rent either. Where I live there may be condos you can buy but there are no apartments you can buy. And I've never actually seen a condo you can buy into, just rent.

  • @frogsnack7072
    @frogsnack7072 Год назад

    13:13 That's the reason for the narrowness of the outlet shape, fork tines cannot fit for example. Outlets within 6' of water in the home have to have an auto-switch that will shut off in the presence of water and are able to be reset (he didn't picture those).

  • @lindsayruiz3789
    @lindsayruiz3789 Год назад +8

    I just purchased 8.5 acres of land just south of Niagara Falls in New York. It has a little creek and a pond on it and I plan on building a little (little by American standards, about 1,400 square feet) cottage on it to spend my summers. It's just too hot during the summer where I currently live in Cape Coral Florida. The Florida winters and Spring is beautiful, but the cool summers in the Appalachian mountains are amazing and the colorful Fall makes New England states perfect in the Summer and Fall.. so those are the two places i like to live, and will be living... of the places you mentioned, I would've mind living in Canada either, but I would live in Alberta or Bristish Columbia.. the only problem with Canada is the lack of freedom, but those two provinces are Gorgeous!!

    • @raygover7458
      @raygover7458 Год назад +2

      I love Canada. What lack of freedom are you referring to?

    • @lindsayruiz3789
      @lindsayruiz3789 Год назад

      The freedoms the Canadian Convoy Truck protesters were fighting for. Freedoms that Pastors and Priest were getting jailed fighting for. Lots of examples out there... Read what the government did in retaliation against the convoy. The Canadian people are getting their freedoms taken away from them. It's sad....

    • @annepryor9169
      @annepryor9169 Год назад

      My father-in-law lived in Orlando. We lived in Illinois. The coldest I have ever been was one Christmas in Florida. The low temp was just 32, and it sometimes get well below zero here. Everything was wet. The sheets were wet, and that thing that’s supposed to be a furnace didn’t help at all. Come to think of it we should have bought my father-in-law a dehumidifier for Christmas.

  • @pinkonesie
    @pinkonesie Год назад

    I had a Brit once call a garbage disposal "that horrifying sink blender thing." Absolutely perfect.

  • @tinahairston6383
    @tinahairston6383 Год назад +4

    While I know the term "row house" I've never heard anyone using the term. More likely you'll hear them called townhouses or brownstones depending on where they're located. It's not like we can't buy an electric kettle but if someone has a kettle at all, it's probably one used on the stove. Needing hot water like that isn't really necessary when you can just as easily heat a cup of water in the microwave which is what I will do if I want a cup of tea instead of breaking out the stove-top kettle, lol.
    It's also not like we can't have a two-in-one washer and dryer but it's convenient when you have several loads to wash and dry so you're not stuck waiting with one appliance. Your second load can be washing while your first load is drying so while it may not save on energy, it's a time saver. One thing I hated about having to go to a laundromat to do my laundry when I live in an apartment that had washer/dryer hook up but couldn't afford to buy those was the inconvenience of packing up my laundry in the car and transporting it back and forth. The best thing was with using multiple washers and dryers, I could wash my different loads at the same time and dry them at the same time so there was even less waiting. I
    I've noticed that if anyone here has a two-in-one washer it's more that they don't have the space for the two separate appliances and/or they're trying to be more energy efficient.

  • @JanineCeleste
    @JanineCeleste Год назад +1

    Separate washer and dryers offer more space than a combo unit and you can get the laundry done faster because while the first load is drying, I can start washing the next load. I had a combo unit in our 5th wheel trailer and didn't like it very much, but that's because it took forever to wash and dry a single load.

  • @10thcharacter36
    @10thcharacter36 Год назад +8

    You said: "We're just doing it wrong". Not really, your infrastructure is several hundred years (if not a thousand) older than ours. We have newer houses going up in new developments all the time and the sellers always put the latest gadgets in those new houses to sell them faster! If you know or knew someone living in a newer neighborhood they probably have those gadgets as well. I once knew a couple who lived in a house (they were kind of tiny too) that was a couple of hundred years old. I couldn't believe the size of the doorways! Anyway thanks for making us happy with what we do have. I always enjoy your videos and enthusiasm.

  • @lorag4664
    @lorag4664 Год назад +5

    American building is still in it's infancy, compared to Europe. But we were able to steal all the knowledge AND stretch out a bit. I love the history I see in European architecture! PS. I just subscribed, I love your curiosity and genuine enthusiasm.

    • @kevinprzy4539
      @kevinprzy4539 Год назад +1

      I like the build of European brick homes (stability and such) but I can't stand the look, they just look grimy and old.

  • @tomhalla426
    @tomhalla426 Год назад +37

    Masonry houses in much of the US are unsafe, due to either earthquakes or hurricanes. Unreinforced masonry has very little side strength, so high winds or an earthquake will yield a used brick pile.

    • @darkstar2480
      @darkstar2480 Год назад +3

      Most homes in FL are reinforced concrete blocks because of the hurricanes.

    • @TexasbyStorm
      @TexasbyStorm Год назад +3

      We get discounts on insurance because our brick home offers more protection.

    • @SherryFord-t7e
      @SherryFord-t7e Год назад +1

      Oh yeah. That happens every day.

    • @tomhalla426
      @tomhalla426 Год назад +5

      @@TexasbyStormIf it was built post WWII, it is almost certainly brick veneer, over a structural wood frame. If your walls are not about a foot thick, the brick is not structural.

    • @wryter93
      @wryter93 Год назад +2

      Um.. I beg to differ. My house is brick, foot deep walls, and has withstood 50 yrs of SC hurricanes. And we're less than 3 miles from the ocean. My previous house was enforced cinder on a military base, a mile closer to the water & has been there since the 1940s. I'm surrounded by wood and mobile homes that have shattered many times and rebuilt. My home is often the refuge for others then

  • @johnandrews2167
    @johnandrews2167 Год назад +2

    Back in the day, the hot and cold water was separate in the USA. In my younger days (I'm 55) I had used many sinks in restrooms that had separate taps, which were in older buildings. My grandparents farmhouse was like that. But in these modern days, they are combined, of course.

  • @Kleineganz
    @Kleineganz Год назад +4

    I've been watching Laurence for a few years now, and the RUclips algorithm brought me to your reactions. I was born and raised in Chicago and not all the houses are enormous. The house I grew up in was a converted single-family home that was turned into two apartments. The landlady's father built the house in 1890 and she was born in 1900.
    For four people, our apartment was quite small, with only 2 bedrooms, a kitchen, living, and dining room and a miniscule bathroom. The house was close enough to our neighbors that even as a little kid I could touch both houses at the same time in the gangway between them. The only reason we had a back yard was because our landlady never owned a car, so she never had a garage built.
    Also, get this, 82% of Americans live in big cities and urban areas, where smaller houses are far more common than in rural or suburban areas. Also, 36% of all Americans are renting apartments.

  • @ArchimGregorios
    @ArchimGregorios 6 месяцев назад +1

    I understand that most homes in the UK don't have central AC. However, why can't you purchase a relatively inexpensive portable AC unit? I live in Florida. My central AC broke, and I can't afford to replace it. I went to Amazon, purchased two portable units, and all is right with the world. Don't be jealous - just fix it!

  • @ixchelskyfeather2513
    @ixchelskyfeather2513 Год назад +3

    A lot of our outlets are connected to a switch. But it's on the wall and usually used for the lights plugged into the outlet. But they can be used as a safety feature as well. Also, as another commenter mentioned, we teach our babies as soon as they crawl not to touch those. Also, we have those covers that are difficult for some adults (me 🙋‍♀) to take off.

    • @karlbmiles
      @karlbmiles Год назад

      It's common for the farthest outlet to be controlled by a switch that is intended for a lamp. Older houses had ceiling lights controlled by that switch.

  • @Melinda09985
    @Melinda09985 11 месяцев назад +1

    Also, “hot and bothered” means…ummm…something ELSE in America! Lmao

  • @ajwinberg
    @ajwinberg Год назад +5

    The house I grew up in was built by my grandfather's grandfather. He came to America from England. The house was a lot more like British houses as it had no closets and we had to put our clothes in Wardrobes or dressers. I currently live in a wood house. But there are a lot of red and Grey brick houses here. My next door neighbor has a stucco house. The house I grew up in was made of Adobe and slate. Also, the house I currently live in is tiny and cramped. There are three of us living in said house, and it is hard to be alone anywhere. The house in Harry Potter is bigger than my house.

    • @Cricket2731
      @Cricket2731 Год назад

      Some houses have no closets because there used to be a tax on closet doors.

  • @MarcMercier1971
    @MarcMercier1971 Год назад +1

    I love the pavers used in the driveways in the UK as well as the "back gardens". Very eye appealing. We have either gravel, stone or tar(mac) driveways for the most part in the US.

  • @TheUselessbuthappy
    @TheUselessbuthappy Год назад +6

    So I was already incredibly grateful for our home since i grew up really poor (we live on a military post and our house is nice) but watching this makes me feel even more grateful for even the "normal' american things.

    • @ladybee883
      @ladybee883 Год назад

      Many years ago when my husband and I were still in the military, we were stationed in Germany. We lived off-post in an apartment, but we're able to requisition American appliances from base. I could understand why when I realized that the normal refrigerator wasn't even the size of a dishwasher, and a pizza pan wouldn't even fit in the oven. We ended up getting a refrigerator, stove, and a washing machine. At least it had a hook-up for a washer in the bathroom. No shower, but the landlord had installed the hand-held things, so we managed. We had to have transformers for all of the appliances and our Christmas lights.

  • @Musicchick60
    @Musicchick60 Год назад

    1) My house is a brick Cape Cod. My favorite is Craftsman style (lots of wood, lots of built-in custom cabinetry). It was built in 1938. I love old houses, 100 years old or more. My only complaint is that the kitchens are minuscule.
    2) Our max temperature this summer where I live in Kentucky
    3) Brown recluse spiders prefer cool, dark places.
    4) I’ve had both a whistling kettle and an electric kettle. The advantage to the one you put on the stove is that you’re not giving up counter space to your electric kettle.

  • @upmperthay
    @upmperthay Год назад +10

    You'd be surprised at how much better than you expect that modern modular & even doublewide & singlewide mobile homes are.

    • @Dusk1962
      @Dusk1962 Год назад

      I don’t advise buying them depreciation rate is bad.

  • @sonicplushadventures287
    @sonicplushadventures287 Год назад +2

    I’m American and lived in England for 4 years. I loved the houses in the UK. Yes, most are small and don’t have the convenience of a home from the US but still beautiful.

  • @dawnmoore4329
    @dawnmoore4329 Год назад +9

    Our house isn't anything special in our area, but we have a 1200 sq ft footprint with a full basement, so 2400 sq ft of living space. And we're sitting on 9 acres of land, with a 3 car garage, a carport and a 24x40 barn. I definitely feel very lucky to have the ability to have all of this, which we built ourselves ( yes, 2x6 wood stud framing and all!).

  • @rwwilson21
    @rwwilson21 Год назад

    7:23 my mom grew up in that type of house and my grandparents lived in until they died and their house has a living room, a kitchen, a dinning room, a sitting room, three bedroom, one bathroom. It also had a basement that was like its own operate house: it had a living room, a bedroom and a bathroom.

  • @Sandra-zb1bm
    @Sandra-zb1bm Год назад +6

    😂 you are so much fun to watch. Your enthusiasm for America is awesome. Hope you make it here some day.

  • @karlsenula9495
    @karlsenula9495 Год назад +1

    Size of the house and land also depends on where you are here in America - and of course your wealth.

  • @SmittenKitten.
    @SmittenKitten. Год назад +5

    We don't drink tea due to the fallout from the Revolution, so there's very little need for electric kettles. We tend to drink ridiculous amounts of coffee instead. You're very, very kind when comparing the two countries. Both have their amazing upsides and terrible downsides. Thanks for being so awesome. :)

    • @Windyroller
      @Windyroller Год назад

      We don’t drink tea *as much* or in the same way. Tea is very much a staple in the Southern states- albeit it’s served cold and is more like tea-flavored super-sweet juice. I keep an electric kettle for my hot tisanes/herbal teas or if I want my pasta water to boil in a shorter amount of time. (It boils faster than having the range eye on high.)

    • @outrageousaistories
      @outrageousaistories Год назад

      Huh? We drink tons of tea. It may not be as popular as coffee, but we drink tons of tea. I'm from NYC and I drink tea nearly every day. I have 10 different types of tea in my cabinet right now.

    • @SmittenKitten.
      @SmittenKitten. Год назад

      @@outrageousaistories That's really nice, but we don't drink anywhere close to the same amount as the Brits do.
      They consume around 4.25 lbs/capita to our measly 0.5 lbs/capita. That's about 8.5 times more! :O
      I can't post the link to the source (YT frowns at that), but if you want to find it, it's on Statistica under consumer goods & FMCG, then non-alcoholic beverages.

    • @SmittenKitten.
      @SmittenKitten. Год назад

      @@Windyroller Yes, I love me a good southern sweet tea! Growing up in Texas, my mom used to make sun tea!

  • @KiwiDragon15
    @KiwiDragon15 11 месяцев назад

    0:43 OMG is that common in the UK? I moved into a new house a few years ago (still in the US I’ve lived here my whole life) and one of my sockets has a switch for it and I thought it was SO weird. 17:17 I have a different washer and dryer, it’s convenient in the summer when it’s hot and you can hang your clothes up outside to dry. If you do that then it saves money on the dryer.

  • @denisng174
    @denisng174 Год назад +1

    I just came up to this video about the differences of British and American homes. Your last comment about where I would like to live, is here in the United States. I have seen lots of places and lived all around the United States. Now, I personally like the warmer states over the colder states to live in. I live in Georgia now just south of Atlanta about 40 miles south of the largest Airport. Your show was fun and informative to the differences we have between us. Nice thing is if you own your own place you can make changes no matter where you live. We Americans like to improve our homes with modern fixtures and colors and furniture. Plus we have so many choices. But, with Amazon and Wayfair to go to you could buy some stuff that you would like to have online. I don't know if Wayfair and Amazon goes to the UK and other European countries but it is great to see the pictures and buy. I hope you have an oppurtunity to come to the United States to visit. We are generally friendly and helpful to others. I hear we smile more than most people in the world. And everything is bigger including our food portions.(Might be the reason we have a lot of Big people.) I have met some people from other Countries who now live here. The one comment I hear the most is we Americans don't appreciate what we have here. I know I do but must admit there are too many that don't.

  • @shirlw6075
    @shirlw6075 Год назад

    Hey I love the way you people talk.....I am 5th generation Texan and you can definitely tell by the way I sound and the words I use! I love your gardens.....they are so quaint and have flowers.....our "yards," are usually huge and takes a few hours of work and have more greenery than flowers.....also when we say garden in TX it usually refers to space where we grow herbs or edible plants, like veggies.

  • @Greywolf74
    @Greywolf74 10 месяцев назад +1

    I have to admit I like the idea of being able to turn the wall socket off, but I've also never seen or heard of anyone I know getting electrocuted by sticking something in a socket either. Also, the 2 prong outlets hardly exist any more unless you have a really old house.
    Almost every house in America has a garbage disposal in the kitchen sink, and yes, they are wonderful! :)
    I would ask why your washer and dryer is all one unit, lol. I'm not sure how that even works :)
    I love British English :)
    A condo is basically 2 houses that are technically the same structure but the yard, driveway, porch, entryway, etc. are separate. So it's like owning a house, but It's got a bit of an apartment vibe also. Also, condos usually have some sort of community rules that you have to follow in order to live there also.

  • @toddm149
    @toddm149 10 месяцев назад

    We have an all in one washer dryer and it takes a lot longer to wash and dry a load than having them seperate. It may be the unit we have and certain fabrics like fleece take forever in the all in one it may be because it's not vented. With that said the downside of larger houses is that it's easy to collect stuff or never get rid of stuff because you have the room. It really becomes a huge job for the kids to clean out the parent's house when either they pass or have to go into assisted living.

  • @ldavanzo44
    @ldavanzo44 11 месяцев назад +1

    Wait you have a washer/dryer in one? Sounds good space saver but dosent it take forever to do tons of laundry loads? Idk

  • @elizabethrose3667
    @elizabethrose3667 Год назад

    I watch Midsomer murders very British who dunnit. I also watched the queens of cleans. I have had to look up terms Brit’s use. Boot a trunk , 7:08 Welles are a boots, a Gardner is a landscaper. Your roads are small. Row houses are houses connected. Your washer and dryer are small and usually in the kitchen. We have a laundry room. I like your villages and gardens they are beautiful.

  • @MaxxiBoy
    @MaxxiBoy Год назад

    you have plastic protectors that you can put in it and it covers all the metal, also newer outlets have on and off switches. There is only electricity running through the outlet when you stick a conductive item in the outlet like a plug or piece of metal.

  • @jakemiester45
    @jakemiester45 11 месяцев назад

    Over here, for a few decades we used coffee makers, just didn't put coffee gounds in and it's a hot water maker. For the last three years, I have had a Kureg, and that gives all the options for my hot water use.

  • @charlotterenee5151
    @charlotterenee5151 9 месяцев назад

    Electrician here. So our outlets are tamper resistant, or at least modern day ones usually are. Besides that we have special covers for "baby proofing" them too. Also you guys seem to run a 240volt system, here we run 120volts in a house. Only larger equipment like electrical ranges or dryers run at 240. It's interesting to see what y'all have going on there! Also, some people do have switched receptacles here, but they are literally controlled by a switch on the wall like a light would be! I love to see the differences!!

  • @carolwaite4343
    @carolwaite4343 Год назад

    The reason we have what seems a larger house is because we have open concept. I've been watching videos of new builds in the UK and there are so many doors. Every room can be closed off from another. We have what's called central air, that means heat & air conditioning. We have screens on our windows to keep bugs out. Lol, a garbage disposal in the sink, however no bones. Sometimes the silverware falls down it & then you have a problem. My gram was from Liverpool, my mom born in Glasglow. I remember when my grams sister came to visit & was excited over the vertical bath meaning shower. She also took a ton of cake mixes & pudding mixes home.

  • @redshed2020
    @redshed2020 Год назад

    We have the combo washer dryer option but most have separate machines. I think because you can be washing one while the prior load is drying. So you get more done at the same time.

  • @XenQ7
    @XenQ7 Год назад

    Our place was built in the 50s and there's brick in the kitchen which houses an oven that, if it ever dies, cannot be replaced because its dimensions are so kitchy-50s. Appreciate the vids on these slow days, man.

  • @soicetea
    @soicetea Год назад

    Laurence lives in the mid-west region of the US. Housing differs greatly depending on the part of the country you live in. I live in California and most newer homes here are two story and 2000+ sq ft. Homes here have a wooden frame, but the outside of the home is stucco. Most newer homes here don't have the large lots that older homes have. Also you commented on the separate clothes washer and dryer. It is much more convenient to have them separate when doing multiple loads of laundry. While a second load is washing the first is in the dryer. In our homes there is a separate area for the washer and dryer. Sometimes in the garage or sometimes in a separate laundry room. We don't have them in the kitchen except in some very old homes.
    One last thing, as Laurence mentioned our outlets don't have a switch. In homes with small children who might stick things in them, there are plastic covers available so that doesn't happen.
    I love watching and learning about the differences between our two countries. Have a great day!

  • @debbers
    @debbers 6 месяцев назад +1

    My home is 940 square feet, so I'm below the average as are most of the people I know!
    My son got knocked across the room when he stuck something in the socket when he was just a toddler! after that the doctor gave me plugs to put in them, this was back in the 1970's!

  • @lindiharris-axon8167
    @lindiharris-axon8167 Год назад

    On washers/dryers - much better if you do much laundy. In fact, many American have one "laundry day" per week. Separate units get laundry done more quickly because you can be drying in one and washing in another. Also, most houses since the 70s have special utility rooms for washers/dryers. Before that, washers were almost always either in basements (horrible because you have to carry it up and down), garages or enclosed back porches. Growing up, I saw one house with the two units in the kitchen but they were larger and not 1 in 2 like in the UK. I'm old and grew up in the 50s and 60s. My mom had a ringer washer when I was young and hung clothes outside on a line (or sometimes in the basement in bad weather). Starting in the 1960s, the automatic washers and dryers took over.

  • @AdmiralKakarot
    @AdmiralKakarot Год назад

    To explain the electric shock hazard on the power outlets, we have something called GFI outlets. A GFI outlet is a power outlet with it's on breaker switch and usually has other outlets connected to it. A sort of master outlet if you will. If a power short or surge is detected in the circuit connection to the GFI outlet, the breaker will trip and cut power to the master and all outlets on that circuit. Those are the two buttons on the American-style outlet.
    And we do, in fact, have all-in-one or dual purpose washer/dryer units. They just are not very efficient and use up more power, not only that but they are generally small. See them mostly in studio apartments and RV's (you call them caravans, however the one I have is not a driveable one as it is a trailer and is 40ft long. Need a 1 ton pickup to tow that.)

  • @jannibal9273
    @jannibal9273 Год назад

    Separate washer and dryer pair - makes laundering, especially for a family with lots of kids, much faster because you wash a load, take it out of the washer when the cycle is finished, shake it out and toss it into the separate dryer, set the level of heat to dry that you want and press the button to go. You can then wash a second load in the washer while the first load is drying in the separate dryer. When the dryer is done with its cycle most of them have a BEEP sound to let you know it's finished and you can empty the dryer, wipe out the lint trap, load in the washed clothes from the second load and start it up. Meanwhile, you have load #3 of laundry going in the washer.

  • @JOYFULLYME
    @JOYFULLYME 10 месяцев назад

    i live in a ranch style house, its so nice. very roomy and spacious and there is wide open spaces from one room to the next. not alot of doors. Cheaper to have a one story house for heat/cooling to not have the second floor.