In Brazil public universities are considered to be of higher quality than private ones. You have to study a lot to get accepted into a public university, so their standards are higher, while in private ones all you have to do to get in is pay.
I Do Preffer Private Ones...Public Unis on Brazil are contaminated by stupid political radical groups that do nothig to Brasil get better and they are from Upper Class,stealing poor people s oportunities.I Pay online Universities course to avoid a headache dealing with it political bullies and annoying"Veterans",thanks Brasil to do Online Courses too.
And it’s very, very hard to get into a public university in Brazil. Sometimes even people from poorer backgrounds prefer to take out loans to attend private universities instead of trying for a public one because getting in is extremely difficult. The competition is intense-there are nearly 70 candidates for each spot in medical school, for example, in the state where I live. So when you get accepted into a public university in Brazil, you might even feel like putting up a billboard to announce it to everyone because it’s such a significant achievement... I’m joking... but not entirely. 😅
"Public" college are considered higher quality than the pletora of crappy private ones which were created just to take the money from PROUNI program. Established private colleges are much better. Unicamp is considered one of the best public ones and they don't even have toilet paper; all their prestige come because they recieve tax funds for research that private colleges have to gather on their own.
Lara (the lady from Germany) is adorable in every video. She seems both reserved, but outspoken at the same time. She is big in participation and cool to listen to. Fun channel.
@@Altrantis Nahhh it's REALLY a German thing. And also in Nordic European countries! They are veryyyyy reserved, very quiet and.... What's the expression "private space defenders"?!? Yeah... You can't be a stranger, approach them and give them a hug or a kiss. Nonononono, that's too personal and close for them. Unless they're Swedish 😂 Those are the "Left" of Nordic countries. They veryyyy open, veryyyy friendly, very progressive, can give hugs, always ready to give a hand, etcetcetc. And yo... I'm not saying it's worse or better... It's actually a FASCINATING mindset which I've been trying and learning. And I'm understanding where it's coming from.... It's because you can't trust people basically and it's superrrrr important to have a degree of trust and honesty in a relationship. As opposed to the South of Europe where we trust everyone and everythinggggg.... It has it's cons and pros! It plays in that domain of "Abundant mindset" vs "Scarce mindset".... Abundant mindset is fun and everything but it doesn't have the Value or Specialty in the end. While the Scarce mindset is not fun but it has EXTREME Value and Specialty in the end. Things are more precious let's say it like that. For me is SUPER sexy a person with the Scarce mindset... They have this aura of power and freedom, it's superrrrrr cool. Germans get a very bad rep idk why.... I think they sh*t on themselves for fun or "ego check".... But they are very friendly, very humble, very respectful, very loyal, they're INSANE workers and sometimes INSANE geniuses too. Yeahhhh they're not the best at demonstrating feelings... But do you want a parrot that can fly a way or a cat that stays with you?? It's something like that 😆
The german lady said the truth about fashion, France and Italy are probably the most fashionable countries in the world, many fashion brands and beautiful clothes
True, as a portuguese I always seen french and italian people as the most fashionable in Europe, I worked with italians in the past and most of them had a pretty good sense of fashion
i'm french and i don't think so, honestly people in the street in france aren't that well-dressed. we just have famous luxury brands but except maybe in a few areas in paris, no one wears them in every-day life
0:40 - And it's not only in Brazil, they do it everywhere. Whenever I see someone wearing flip-flops that's not Asian, it's a brazilian 100% of the time.
I do think in fashion, Brazil is a gap between europe and the US. Brazil is in America, so warm places culture in Brazil are very similar to warm places like Florida or California, very close to a surfer vibe. Its not that common in europe. But still, brazilian has a more natural sense of whats goin on in the fashion world.
8:46 bc of the coblestones, most portuguese ppl wear comfortable shoes or trendy white sneakers when we walk around. It would be a pain to walk in heels here🫠
Brazilians are open to fashion but is different from USA. It feels like brazilians still care what his image is gonna be faced by the others while americans don’t really care if is gonna be fashionable or not
Verdade kkkkkkk já fui em um congresso internacional na minha cidade e uns dias antes, estive preocupada com a roupa que eu ia usar. Durante o congresso, 95% dos estrangeiros estavam vestidos de forma bem simples, bermuda, sandália ou tênis, camisa de botão, boné... Enquanto que as pessoas nativas (incluindo eu) estavam super bem vestidas kkkkk
7:28 Well in Germany we do have University merch and there is definitely rivalries e.g. RWTH Aachen vs TU München.... She might not be that well-traveled within Germany, since in another video she also said that Mett is something that is only eaten in the North.
the comment I was looking for haha😄👍🏼 Yes, we‘ve got also sweaters and other merch here in Hesse…. but I think, most of the time students buy sweaters but do not wear them 😅🤷🏻♀️
Well, here in NRW I had the opportunity to go to one of three different big universities without having to move, and I never experienced any kind of rivalry between them. And I never saw merch of any of them 😂. interessing that it's different for other universities
@@AnniJ15 It's funny-my girlfriend studies at the University of Münster (NRW), and they also have sweaters, cups, and bags. However, as @jessis4297 mentioned, you don't really see people wearing them. It was the same when I was at RWTH(NRW); it was mostly the exchange students who would occasionally wear those kinds of sweaters.
One of the coolest curiosities about Brazil is the many descendants from various countries around the world who are spreading around here, especially the Japanese. It would be worth a video dedicated to this curiosity, about people with different descents and ancestries.
Well, here in germany baseball-caps are not too common but seen here and there, but if you wear it backwards, some people might think, you should also wear your jacket backwards (and with very long arms...)
I was a little sad someone from the Netherlands wasn't in the video. In the NL it's really a mixed bag when it comes to fashion. Fashion here is simple, relaxed, casual, but also chic. Lots of denim and people like to incorporate layers into their outfits. The weather here changes throughout the day, so people have to be ready for rain, cold, or heat.
Hi, about the Fanny Packs in Germany. Here they are more like belt packs, Nierentaschen (kidney packs). As little packs for little stuff. I used them at motorbiking, you dont need a bigger back pack for nececary stuff like mobile phone, some papers, keys and something to clean your nose (im not a smoker).
i feel like people are unfair with germany, i have german friends who are really fashionable and i recently went to germany and saw that people have a great sense of fashion there (especially in berlin but overall it's similar in france, people in big cities are better dressed)
I mean, here in São Paulo (Brazil) i don't see many old people or 40+ wearing fashionable clothes, but it is a thing in the teenagers, like 15+, they do care about their appearance, people usually say that black and white is the way to look prettier but i think if you match the colors right, you can make a nice outfit. 😁 When i think of Europe style the first thing that comes to my mind is that coat and legging and a boot 😂😂😂
Fashion is a cyclical thing. Many ways of dressing come back into fashion after some time. When I was young, cargo paints were super cool, now they're coming back again. I've always liked using it because it's comfortable. I don't follow fashion at all.
The baseball cap backwards it's called a dunce cap in Germany and wearing a hat inside at all is seen as rude. Honestly for me cargo shorts, sandals and socks are an US-American tourist thing in Germany, not a German thing. You could see older German guys about 30years ago in that outfit on holidays, but not today. I guess that heels are not worn so much in Europe is because many people walk and heels are not made for walking. In the USA people drive even for a 2min ride. And there is the problem that in older cities the cobble streets are not really good with heels.
When I think of people wearing socks with sandals, I mostly associate that stereotype with the 🇬🇧 Brits (Jeremy Clarkson said in some programme once) and the 🇫🇮 Finns instead. Even I did that as a child during our autumn holidays in the 🇪🇸🇮🇨 Canaries. 😅 As for the university sweatshirts, I don't know if it was common, but our major's association (Spanish) organized a purchase of our university's sweatshirts. More common, I'd say, it's to buy the student overalls of your major's association and to wear them during the Labour Day Eve and Labour Day (April 31st and May 1st). I wore a fanny pack all the time during my two Erasmus exchanges in Granada and Madrid in order to protect my valuables from pickpockets, and I even locked my backpack with locks. 😆 Unlike my friends (regardless of gender), I returned 🇫🇮 home with my phone. 🤓
About the university sweatshirts in France, I have to add that even though it's true that you don't really have a sense of community or belonging in a university in France, it's just a place you go to study. The size of a university, the number of students, the variety of specialities and the fact that they are public and not really expensive makes it not really a thing. The sense of community in the studying years is usually built on smaller circles I'd guess. HOWEVER when it comes to engineering or business schools (or prépa before getting there), they are a whole other world. the prépas are a 2-year public program where you are basically studying 24/7 maths and physics to prepare competitive exams in order to enter engineering or business schools depending on your specialty (I'd argue there are far more engineering prépas than business prépas). And some prépas are a lot about reputation and prestige, some are very competitive etc... so there you have more of a sense of belonging to something, because it's smaller than a university, because you have to be really dedicated, because you basically spend 40 hours a week during 2 years with the same class etc. In engineering schools you also have this sense of belonging but more because it's (again) far smaller than a university, it has a lot of school-wide associations and activities and nearly everyone is involved in some way, and the schools themselves want the students to play into the identity of the school because some schools are very specialized OR very prestigious so people know something about you when you name the school you went to, either what you studied exactly or the fact that you are really smart for getting to this specific school (some more than others). All of this to get to this : yes, in this little bubble, people do make school sweatshirts.
In U.S., people wear college sweatshirts not because of school ranking, but more for sports. College sports (NCAA) is huge in U.S. people go to games wearing their school wear, school color. This is the major reason why college wear is so popular in U.S., not only among college students, but among alumni, student family members as well. If you ever watch a college football game, you will understand 😊
University gear has nothing to do with rankings, but with sports and the fact that many Americans move out of their parents’ house to live in a college town that revolves around the university. Thus it becomes a thing. Many places in the US and Europe are significantly more casual than Brazil. US and Brazil are big countries so it varies a lot between states. In Brazil you don’t go to a fancy French restaurant wearing shorts, baseball hat and a beat up t-shirt . However, you do see it in the US. People used to dress up to go to the bank in Brazil. With that said, in the US you also see young women in full makeup first thing in the morning going to class at their university. Although in Brazil you don’t remove your hat to enter buildings, you are expected to remove it at the table for eating. Or at least you were, but things are constantly changing. Khakis and cargo pants are not the same. Cargo pants have side leg pockets. Khakis are just chinos that happen to be khaki in color. It is worn in Brazil as it is Spain and I’ve also seen it worn by locals in Lisbon. Not everyone is a sneaker head in the US. There are sneaker heads that are into that sort of thing and their trends. There was an ugly dad sneaker trend going on, which I think was what one of the girls was referring to. Per capital, I think Barcelona surpasses most American cities in terms of hyped up sneakers. Even older generations are wearing Jordan’s, Dunks, Sambas, and NMDs. Older women pushing their market carts in the metro wearing some form of Adidas boost sneakers.
* A couple US things: Flip flops are at times, referred to as sandals, not slippers; slippers are "house shoes", not meant for outdoor use. Next, people wearing ball caps backwards are commonly seen as immature (this trend is changing, somewhat), but still "kids" turn their caps around backwards more often than a more wise & mature person who realizes that the bill was meant to be to the front of the hat to block the sun from your eyes. Also, in the US, people will wear university tops, even though they don't or didn't go to the school, to support their children who are going to that college, or to support the sports teams of that university.
All good things then you come in my small italian town and we are dressed like the people that take dresses at Caritas an organization to help poor people in Italy
American casual fashion is something on its own. It‘s fairly easy to spot Americans in European streets. I sometimes watch GRWM videos on YT for fun and I can’t stop thinking that we don’t have the same definition of being ’’classy’’.
When I was in Prague last month, I exclusively wore polo shirts (apart from one day where I wore a plain gray t-shirt) and trousers. No hats or gym-related clothes. Needless to say I felt pretty good when I was on the grounds of Prague Castle and a guy came up to me, I presume asking for directions or something, in a different language. Not saying the outfit choice was entirely European coded or anything, but just that someone didn’t assume I was American.
@@fabricio4794 the most attractive thing women can wear imo is a casual knee-length dress I’ve only been to Miami of those two places though, the furthest west I’ve been in the US is southeastern Utah
I spent 3 weeks in NW France this summer, and the stripey shirt and beret fashion was strong in every shop and in all the streets. Maybe Lille and Rouen are weird, but I was also in Paris for a bit, and it was all over there as well. This was before the Olympics, so...
Here in Catalonia is really typical to do a school trip at the end of high school and most of those tend to be in Italy, so we tend to wear jumpers/hoodies that says Università and the name of the city. And we wear funny packs but crossed over
It's not true that Portuguese people don't wear hot pants or mini shorts. They would even wear them with thighs under them in the winter. And since Portugal is a hot country in the summer, they wear them. Also with fitness being a (good) trend this day, I have seen people even wearing short fitness leggings everywhere
It's definitely bad manners in the U.S to wear a hat inside, but I'm sure it just depends on where you were raised. I learned not to do that even before joining the Army.
As a German it's hard for me to understand why Americans are so fashionable. I would be afraid of when I went to America with my clothes that people might look weird at me. I'm so unfashionable that I literally just wear what's the most comfortable. I don't even wear jeans ever, I literally just wear jogging pants all the time.
Pochete é útil e mt legal mas geralmente as mulheres acham brega ou cafona...quando usava o que eu mais ouvia era: vc vai mesmo com isso? Ou: tire isso!!!
🇧🇷 you have to be smart to pass the admission exam to a public college... your daddy money can do nothing for you to enter it so of course we are proud to prove we can outsmart a rich kid 😂😂
Yeah you have to be smart but it sure help to have money and go to a good school and have the best professors, like I'm poor but I did go to a good private school (scholarship) and it was miles ahead of the school my sister went(public shcool), all the professors had phd, one even went to a NASA program back in the 00's. The dad's money can do alot.
@@ThePaulodash money always helps on my experience on several public and private brazilian institutions, private is way better for elementary and middle school and public is way better for colege... for real and for status too
Hot pants and super short skirts were also worn in Germany 20 years ago. That was normal. Nowadays it has become dangerous because of the many immigrants from the Middle East and North Africa. Many young women even wear long baggy clothes in the summer heat so that they don't get harassed. Germany has changed a lot, but unfortunately for the worse.
UK: Bakcwards hats yes, take them off indoors? Yes. Good shoes where appropriate because you want to look after them and look good too. We call fanny packs bum bags and they are mocked mostly for the name (women's genitals are a fanny) but it's largely unfashionable until the recent move to wear them crossed over. Linen clothes where possible for me and because I'm from Northumberland....shorts almost always cos we're 'ard!
When I lived in Italy the locals would target American girls for sex because they were considered easy. The way an American dresses really stands out abroad.
Fanny packs were really a thing in Brazil back in the 80s and 90s (99% women). But in the 2000s it became a horrible thing to wear. Everybody would ridiculize you for wearing it, specially if you were a guy. It also started to carry a derogatory meaning that only woman that likes woman wore them. As for cargo jeans, they were a huge trend in the 2000s, every guy would have one. Lots of pockets to stuff things, lol. Ana is wrong about the caps. You are expected to remove it when you enter a restaurant or a commercial building, for example. Nobody is going to tell you to take it off, of couse, but they will look at you sideways.
Today i went in socks and flip flops into school and my friend asked me: "going like Czech today?😂" well i'm from Slovakia🇸🇰 and Czechia is our neighbourhood country so we're the closest from all the Slavs
Maybe for women you can wear generally what you want in North America fashion wise, but for men it's different. "Gay or european" is a thing I've heard when Americans see well dressed men xD
I'm wearing baseball cap backward because it's never will be blown with the wind on the bike and rest of the time because it's habit to wear it backward :)
My brother has a men clothing store. He dressed nicely. I tried but I felt like a hobo in Spain, France and Italy. On Barcelona though we got robbed because they thought we were rich lol But truth be told, most people were just wearing overcoats and scarfs. If its all that takes to be well dressed...well, I'll continue to look like a hobo because its too hot for Brazil except maybe winter.
The who fashio trends thing makes no sense to me because the style ypu look down upon becomes trendy later and dies off and then becomes trendy again. It's like a malaria fever
First. I love this channel and all the girls on this channel, leave the public in absolute peace and always allow the freedom of truth to flow on the channel and on RUclips, always without any restrictions, the video was beautiful, everyone was friendly kisses and hugs to all the girls To the entire cast, good energy and love to all of us. 💎💎💎💎💙💙💙💙💙🥂🥂🥂🥂🥂🥂🥂🥂🥂🥂
How has the german girl never seen fanny packs, they are talahon Zubehör number 1, also, where i am from no one will judge you for wearing short pants or skirts especially when its hot(like the weather)
People wear baseball caps in Portugal...and it's not even weird to wear them indoors, such as at the mall or grocery store..no one will bat an eye. It's considered rude to wear a hat to church tho, or at the dinner table
Stay Serene, this video was never about austronesian nations as Philippines, Malaysia or Singapore. Calm your mind, they will do again for future videos about austronesians cultures.
Hot pants and super short skirts were also worn in Germany 20 years ago. That was normal. Nowadays it has become dangerous because of the many immigrants from the Middle East and North Africa. Many young women even wear long baggy clothes in the summer heat so that they don't get harassed. Germany has changed a lot, but unfortunately for the worse.
@@inotoni6148 hallo, hot pants und Mini Röcke waren aber vor langer Zeit Mode oder wie man hier sagte waren in. Das war aber schon in den 60er bis 70er wo die Mädels das trugen. Mode kommt allerdings immer wieder wenn auch ein wenig anders.
If someone studies at a private school in Brazil, that person can also study at a public university. Yes, students at a private school can do that! I don't think Ana knows that.
@hompseanit8942 se a pessoa teve condicoes de bancar escola particular tbm tem condiçoes de bancar faculdade particular e nao tirar a vaga de pessoas que nao tem condiçoes
@@TypoMornings sou de Vila Velha Espírito Santo, saio pouco de chinelo porque parece que estou desarrumado. Muitos homens usam tênis por aqui , me sinto mal em usar chinelo .
Interesting how the beautiful Ana said the United States and not America when she referred to the United States, as the american said and another subject she spoke about is education in Brazil, because unfortunately here public education is very bad and public college is very well, something that doesn't make any sense, regarding fashion, as Brazil is a tropical country, people wear more light and comfortable clothes in spring and summer, unlike Europe, which is made up of countries with colder climates, they wear more heavy clothes, I think that's why the fashion of Italy and especially France is a reference, as well as being the most respected on the planet.
In Brazil public universities are considered to be of higher quality than private ones. You have to study a lot to get accepted into a public university, so their standards are higher, while in private ones all you have to do to get in is pay.
It's the same in Portugal.
I Do Preffer Private Ones...Public Unis on Brazil are contaminated by stupid political radical groups that do nothig to Brasil get better and they are from Upper Class,stealing poor people s oportunities.I Pay online Universities course to avoid a headache dealing with it political bullies and annoying"Veterans",thanks Brasil to do Online Courses too.
And it’s very, very hard to get into a public university in Brazil. Sometimes even people from poorer backgrounds prefer to take out loans to attend private universities instead of trying for a public one because getting in is extremely difficult. The competition is intense-there are nearly 70 candidates for each spot in medical school, for example, in the state where I live. So when you get accepted into a public university in Brazil, you might even feel like putting up a billboard to announce it to everyone because it’s such a significant achievement... I’m joking... but not entirely. 😅
"Public" college are considered higher quality than the pletora of crappy private ones which were created just to take the money from PROUNI program. Established private colleges are much better. Unicamp is considered one of the best public ones and they don't even have toilet paper; all their prestige come because they recieve tax funds for research that private colleges have to gather on their own.
In my opinion it's not about quality but prestige and honor because it's hard to get into a public university.
we don't take this seriously in Brazil any more, but as a kid I was taught not to wear caps indoors. it was considered disrespectful.
Still is, its just that brazilians decended further into animalism and don't respect anything anymore, losing all sense of good behavior and shame.
Lara (the lady from Germany) is adorable in every video. She seems both reserved, but outspoken at the same time. She is big in participation and cool to listen to. Fun channel.
Reserved but outspoken is an European hallmark.
@@Altrantis Nahhh it's REALLY a German thing. And also in Nordic European countries! They are veryyyyy reserved, very quiet and.... What's the expression "private space defenders"?!? Yeah... You can't be a stranger, approach them and give them a hug or a kiss. Nonononono, that's too personal and close for them. Unless they're Swedish 😂 Those are the "Left" of Nordic countries. They veryyyy open, veryyyy friendly, very progressive, can give hugs, always ready to give a hand, etcetcetc. And yo... I'm not saying it's worse or better... It's actually a FASCINATING mindset which I've been trying and learning. And I'm understanding where it's coming from.... It's because you can't trust people basically and it's superrrrr important to have a degree of trust and honesty in a relationship. As opposed to the South of Europe where we trust everyone and everythinggggg.... It has it's cons and pros! It plays in that domain of "Abundant mindset" vs "Scarce mindset".... Abundant mindset is fun and everything but it doesn't have the Value or Specialty in the end. While the Scarce mindset is not fun but it has EXTREME Value and Specialty in the end. Things are more precious let's say it like that.
For me is SUPER sexy a person with the Scarce mindset... They have this aura of power and freedom, it's superrrrrr cool.
Germans get a very bad rep idk why.... I think they sh*t on themselves for fun or "ego check".... But they are very friendly, very humble, very respectful, very loyal, they're INSANE workers and sometimes INSANE geniuses too. Yeahhhh they're not the best at demonstrating feelings... But do you want a parrot that can fly a way or a cat that stays with you?? It's something like that 😆
The german lady said the truth about fashion, France and Italy are probably the most fashionable countries in the world, many fashion brands and beautiful clothes
True, as a portuguese I always seen french and italian people as the most fashionable in Europe, I worked with italians in the past and most of them had a pretty good sense of fashion
Indeed.
Yeah but You can put also Denmark and Sweden in that list.
i'm french and i don't think so, honestly people in the street in france aren't that well-dressed. we just have famous luxury brands but except maybe in a few areas in paris, no one wears them in every-day life
Oh sure, if you say so 😂
0:40 - And it's not only in Brazil, they do it everywhere. Whenever I see someone wearing flip-flops that's not Asian, it's a brazilian 100% of the time.
As a Brazilian I confirm, we love to wear slippers always 😅
Australian do that frequently too
Could be Monkey D Luffy
I do think in fashion, Brazil is a gap between europe and the US. Brazil is in America, so warm places culture in Brazil are very similar to warm places like Florida or California, very close to a surfer vibe. Its not that common in europe. But still, brazilian has a more natural sense of whats goin on in the fashion world.
Really good episode. Love seeing how things work in different countries.
It's funny, Ana from Brazil's English sounds more "typical US" than Lauren from US/Hawaii.
Ana must have spent time in the US Midwest.
Ana grew up in Switzerland.
8:46 bc of the coblestones, most portuguese ppl wear comfortable shoes or trendy white sneakers when we walk around.
It would be a pain to walk in heels here🫠
Dangerous, too. Easy for heel to get caught in the cobblestone and cause someone to trip!
Brazilians are open to fashion but is different from USA. It feels like brazilians still care what his image is gonna be faced by the others while americans don’t really care if is gonna be fashionable or not
Yes! Brazilian women are definitely more worried about their appearance
Def not true lol I live in atl. Everyone dressed “fashionable”
Verdade kkkkkkk já fui em um congresso internacional na minha cidade e uns dias antes, estive preocupada com a roupa que eu ia usar. Durante o congresso, 95% dos estrangeiros estavam vestidos de forma bem simples, bermuda, sandália ou tênis, camisa de botão, boné... Enquanto que as pessoas nativas (incluindo eu) estavam super bem vestidas kkkkk
Very true Ana ! I went to a free university in the US does not have the same effecf than in Brazil 😂😅
7:28 Well in Germany we do have University merch and there is definitely rivalries e.g. RWTH Aachen vs TU München.... She might not be that well-traveled within Germany, since in another video she also said that Mett is something that is only eaten in the North.
the comment I was looking for haha😄👍🏼 Yes, we‘ve got also sweaters and other merch here in Hesse…. but I think, most of the time students buy sweaters but do not wear them 😅🤷🏻♀️
Well, here in NRW I had the opportunity to go to one of three different big universities without having to move, and I never experienced any kind of rivalry between them. And I never saw merch of any of them 😂. interessing that it's different for other universities
@@AnniJ15 It's funny-my girlfriend studies at the University of Münster (NRW), and they also have sweaters, cups, and bags. However, as @jessis4297 mentioned, you don't really see people wearing them. It was the same when I was at RWTH(NRW); it was mostly the exchange students who would occasionally wear those kinds of sweaters.
One of the coolest curiosities about Brazil is the many descendants from various countries around the world who are spreading around here, especially the Japanese. It would be worth a video dedicated to this curiosity, about people with different descents and ancestries.
Well, here in germany baseball-caps are not too common but seen here and there, but if you wear it backwards, some people might think, you should also wear your jacket backwards (and with very long arms...)
This German girl is so resamble to Rohirrim princess from The Lord of the Rings 2nd movie
I was a little sad someone from the Netherlands wasn't in the video. In the NL it's really a mixed bag when it comes to fashion. Fashion here is simple, relaxed, casual, but also chic. Lots of denim and people like to incorporate layers into their outfits. The weather here changes throughout the day, so people have to be ready for rain, cold, or heat.
Hi, about the Fanny Packs in Germany. Here they are more like belt packs, Nierentaschen (kidney packs). As little packs for little stuff. I used them at motorbiking, you dont need a bigger back pack for nececary stuff like mobile phone, some papers, keys and something to clean your nose (im not a smoker).
i feel like people are unfair with germany, i have german friends who are really fashionable and i recently went to germany and saw that people have a great sense of fashion there (especially in berlin but overall it's similar in france, people in big cities are better dressed)
I mean, here in São Paulo (Brazil) i don't see many old people or 40+ wearing fashionable clothes, but it is a thing in the teenagers, like 15+, they do care about their appearance, people usually say that black and white is the way to look prettier but i think if you match the colors right, you can make a nice outfit. 😁 When i think of Europe style the first thing that comes to my mind is that coat and legging and a boot 😂😂😂
Fashion is a cyclical thing. Many ways of dressing come back into fashion after some time. When I was young, cargo paints were super cool, now they're coming back again. I've always liked using it because it's comfortable. I don't follow fashion at all.
The baseball cap backwards it's called a dunce cap in Germany and wearing a hat inside at all is seen as rude.
Honestly for me cargo shorts, sandals and socks are an US-American tourist thing in Germany, not a German thing. You could see older German guys about 30years ago in that outfit on holidays, but not today.
I guess that heels are not worn so much in Europe is because many people walk and heels are not made for walking. In the USA people drive even for a 2min ride. And there is the problem that in older cities the cobble streets are not really good with heels.
When I think of people wearing socks with sandals, I mostly associate that stereotype with the 🇬🇧 Brits (Jeremy Clarkson said in some programme once) and the 🇫🇮 Finns instead. Even I did that as a child during our autumn holidays in the 🇪🇸🇮🇨 Canaries. 😅
As for the university sweatshirts, I don't know if it was common, but our major's association (Spanish) organized a purchase of our university's sweatshirts. More common, I'd say, it's to buy the student overalls of your major's association and to wear them during the Labour Day Eve and Labour Day (April 31st and May 1st).
I wore a fanny pack all the time during my two Erasmus exchanges in Granada and Madrid in order to protect my valuables from pickpockets, and I even locked my backpack with locks. 😆 Unlike my friends (regardless of gender), I returned 🇫🇮 home with my phone. 🤓
About the university sweatshirts in France, I have to add that even though it's true that you don't really have a sense of community or belonging in a university in France, it's just a place you go to study. The size of a university, the number of students, the variety of specialities and the fact that they are public and not really expensive makes it not really a thing. The sense of community in the studying years is usually built on smaller circles I'd guess.
HOWEVER when it comes to engineering or business schools (or prépa before getting there), they are a whole other world. the prépas are a 2-year public program where you are basically studying 24/7 maths and physics to prepare competitive exams in order to enter engineering or business schools depending on your specialty (I'd argue there are far more engineering prépas than business prépas). And some prépas are a lot about reputation and prestige, some are very competitive etc... so there you have more of a sense of belonging to something, because it's smaller than a university, because you have to be really dedicated, because you basically spend 40 hours a week during 2 years with the same class etc.
In engineering schools you also have this sense of belonging but more because it's (again) far smaller than a university, it has a lot of school-wide associations and activities and nearly everyone is involved in some way, and the schools themselves want the students to play into the identity of the school because some schools are very specialized OR very prestigious so people know something about you when you name the school you went to, either what you studied exactly or the fact that you are really smart for getting to this specific school (some more than others).
All of this to get to this : yes, in this little bubble, people do make school sweatshirts.
In U.S., people wear college sweatshirts not because of school ranking, but more for sports. College sports (NCAA) is huge in U.S. people go to games wearing their school wear, school color. This is the major reason why college wear is so popular in U.S., not only among college students, but among alumni, student family members as well. If you ever watch a college football game, you will understand 😊
University gear has nothing to do with rankings, but with sports and the fact that many Americans move out of their parents’ house to live in a college town that revolves around the university. Thus it becomes a thing.
Many places in the US and Europe are significantly more casual than Brazil. US and Brazil are big countries so it varies a lot between states. In Brazil you don’t go to a fancy French restaurant wearing shorts, baseball hat and a beat up t-shirt . However, you do see it in the US. People used to dress up to go to the bank in Brazil. With that said, in the US you also see young women in full makeup first thing in the morning going to class at their university.
Although in Brazil you don’t remove your hat to enter buildings, you are expected to remove it at the table for eating. Or at least you were, but things are constantly changing.
Khakis and cargo pants are not the same. Cargo pants have side leg pockets. Khakis are just chinos that happen to be khaki in color. It is worn in Brazil as it is Spain and I’ve also seen it worn by locals in Lisbon.
Not everyone is a sneaker head in the US. There are sneaker heads that are into that sort of thing and their trends. There was an ugly dad sneaker trend going on, which I think was what one of the girls was referring to. Per capital, I think Barcelona surpasses most American cities in terms of hyped up sneakers. Even older generations are wearing Jordan’s, Dunks, Sambas, and NMDs. Older women pushing their market carts in the metro wearing some form of Adidas boost sneakers.
* A couple US things: Flip flops are at times, referred to as sandals, not slippers; slippers are "house shoes", not meant for outdoor use. Next, people wearing ball caps backwards are commonly seen as immature (this trend is changing, somewhat), but still "kids" turn their caps around backwards more often than a more wise & mature person who realizes that the bill was meant to be to the front of the hat to block the sun from your eyes.
Also, in the US, people will wear university tops, even though they don't or didn't go to the school, to support their children who are going to that college, or to support the sports teams of that university.
Flip flops not but HAVAIANAS haha
Havaianas are flip flops or sandals.
@@joaoaugustolandim  i know but it's just the way i called lol
@@lisandrasilva3084 They are unique, indeed.
I use hawaianas everywhere 😂
6:57 “Bordeaux 3 Michel de Montaigne 2012“ 😂
All good things then you come in my small italian town and we are dressed like the people that take dresses at Caritas an organization to help poor people in Italy
American casual fashion is something on its own.
It‘s fairly easy to spot Americans in European streets.
I sometimes watch GRWM videos on YT for fun and I can’t stop thinking that we don’t have the same definition of being ’’classy’’.
you talking about USA or America as a continent?
@@savike.9225 Sorry, I was talking about the USA.
Most people call US citizens ’’Americans’’ in my country.
When I was in Prague last month, I exclusively wore polo shirts (apart from one day where I wore a plain gray t-shirt) and trousers. No hats or gym-related clothes.
Needless to say I felt pretty good when I was on the grounds of Prague Castle and a guy came up to me, I presume asking for directions or something, in a different language. Not saying the outfit choice was entirely European coded or anything, but just that someone didn’t assume I was American.
I love the Way the American Women chose their wear specialy under the sun from Miami and LA
@@fabricio4794 the most attractive thing women can wear imo is a casual knee-length dress
I’ve only been to Miami of those two places though, the furthest west I’ve been in the US is southeastern Utah
Ana is my Hero but im missing Julia ❤
Good episode😊
I spent 3 weeks in NW France this summer, and the stripey shirt and beret fashion was strong in every shop and in all the streets. Maybe Lille and Rouen are weird, but I was also in Paris for a bit, and it was all over there as well. This was before the Olympics, so...
Here in Catalonia is really typical to do a school trip at the end of high school and most of those tend to be in Italy, so we tend to wear jumpers/hoodies that says Università and the name of the city.
And we wear funny packs but crossed over
It's not true that Portuguese people don't wear hot pants or mini shorts. They would even wear them with thighs under them in the winter. And since Portugal is a hot country in the summer, they wear them.
Also with fitness being a (good) trend this day, I have seen people even wearing short fitness leggings everywhere
Ana eu te amo, você é a brasileira mais linda desse pais. ❤️❤️
Thank you 💗💗💗
It's definitely bad manners in the U.S to wear a hat inside, but I'm sure it just depends on where you were raised. I learned not to do that even before joining the Army.
I lived in a rural town and it was a thing in school but haven't heard it since
As a German it's hard for me to understand why Americans are so fashionable. I would be afraid of when I went to America with my clothes that people might look weird at me. I'm so unfashionable that I literally just wear what's the most comfortable. I don't even wear jeans ever, I literally just wear jogging pants all the time.
well, you shouldn't wear joggingpants in germany all the time as well... :x maybe at home or for sport..
Nah you can pretty much wear whatever you want in America. The only exceptions if it's a formal event or a club with a dress code.
khaki pants, khaki shorts it's my favorite for warm weather
Pochete é útil e mt legal mas geralmente as mulheres acham brega ou cafona...quando usava o que eu mais ouvia era: vc vai mesmo com isso? Ou: tire isso!!!
Tenho visto o pessoal mais jovem usando aquelas shoulder bag e ainda acho cafona igual 🤣
E usam pra qualquer rolezinho.
Eu lembro que era uma moda gigante nos anos 90. Hoje em dia se usa bem menos
@@SamtheIeu sou dos anos 90 mas até naquela época pochete era coisa de tiozão e vendedor de rua
@@fabricio4794 sim. Eu lembro que a maioria dos adultos que eu conhecia usava kkkk mais homens
Khaki pants are uncommon but not unheard of in Brazil.
🇧🇷 you have to be smart to pass the admission exam to a public college... your daddy money can do nothing for you to enter it
so of course we are proud to prove we can outsmart a rich kid 😂😂
Yeah you have to be smart but it sure help to have money and go to a good school and have the best professors, like I'm poor but I did go to a good private school (scholarship) and it was miles ahead of the school my sister went(public shcool), all the professors had phd, one even went to a NASA program back in the 00's. The dad's money can do alot.
@@ThePaulodash money always helps
on my experience on several public and private brazilian institutions, private is way better for elementary and middle school and public is way better for colege... for real and for status too
Hot pants and super short skirts were also worn in Germany 20 years ago. That was normal. Nowadays it has become dangerous because of the many immigrants from the Middle East and North Africa. Many young women even wear long baggy clothes in the summer heat so that they don't get harassed. Germany has changed a lot, but unfortunately for the worse.
sad but true
This is stupid try wear super short skirts out of Carnival here in Brasil in public places and you be on TV news and arrested hahah
Wow interesting episode 😊
Where is Julia (Brazil)? Really missing she in the recent videos
its weird to heard that military rule of wearing cap, now in common sense in europe
UK: Bakcwards hats yes, take them off indoors? Yes. Good shoes where appropriate because you want to look after them and look good too. We call fanny packs bum bags and they are mocked mostly for the name (women's genitals are a fanny) but it's largely unfashionable until the recent move to wear them crossed over. Linen clothes where possible for me and because I'm from Northumberland....shorts almost always cos we're 'ard!
Clau fan ♥
When I lived in Italy the locals would target American girls for sex because they were considered easy. The way an American dresses really stands out abroad.
Over here in Turkey, baseball caps are seen as a little bit weird. Especially if it's backwards. At least in where I live.
They forgot to mention the "Country" fashion(cowboys and stuff), only happens in the American continents, pretty commom in Brazil and USA
Yes🇧🇷
True
Also in Mexico, Paraguay and northern Argentina
Yeah that's right!
@@jeanalex7698 acho que o norte da Argentina é mais a cultura gaúcha, não?
yh, as fanny packs são de gunas, Miguel😭 pelo menos hoje em dia
Fanny packs were really a thing in Brazil back in the 80s and 90s (99% women). But in the 2000s it became a horrible thing to wear. Everybody would ridiculize you for wearing it, specially if you were a guy. It also started to carry a derogatory meaning that only woman that likes woman wore them.
As for cargo jeans, they were a huge trend in the 2000s, every guy would have one. Lots of pockets to stuff things, lol.
Ana is wrong about the caps. You are expected to remove it when you enter a restaurant or a commercial building, for example. Nobody is going to tell you to take it off, of couse, but they will look at you sideways.
Today i went in socks and flip flops into school and my friend asked me: "going like Czech today?😂" well i'm from Slovakia🇸🇰 and Czechia is our neighbourhood country so we're the closest from all the Slavs
I am a new supporter ✋️🌼
Miguel 🙂👍
Well... Crocs and skinny jeans = burn in hell (in Europe) 🤣🤣🤣
😂😂😂😂true funny nonsense
Portuguese and no way I am not dressing up to leave the house. 😳
Yessah Lauren🤙🏼🤙🏼🤙🏼
Ana🇧🇷😍🇵🇹
Maybe for women you can wear generally what you want in North America fashion wise, but for men it's different. "Gay or european" is a thing I've heard when Americans see well dressed men xD
I'm wearing baseball cap backward because it's never will be blown with the wind on the bike and rest of the time because it's habit to wear it backward :)
Brazil is also America, South America
Where are Slavic countries, haven’t seen them for a while 😮
This channel should get some Polish folks on. I noticed that the teenagers there dress like the 90s USA. I wonder if other countries are like this
My brother has a men clothing store. He dressed nicely. I tried but I felt like a hobo in Spain, France and Italy. On Barcelona though we got robbed because they thought we were rich lol
But truth be told, most people were just wearing overcoats and scarfs. If its all that takes to be well dressed...well, I'll continue to look like a hobo because its too hot for Brazil except maybe winter.
Does Lauren has IG?
I think Europeans don’t realize Americans don’t dress to impress we dress for comfort and convenience
More like they do realize it and they judge them for it 😂
It depends what part of the usa you are in
Hello guys😊
Nice video and my God the American girl and the Brazilian girl they look like 2 sisters same nose .
🌹💐🥂👍🍸nice observation they're closed friends there in South Korea 🇰🇷 ❤
1:55 the shame face from Lara 😂
European way of fashion is considered borderline gay in the US.
The who fashio trends thing makes no sense to me because the style ypu look down upon becomes trendy later and dies off and then becomes trendy again. It's like a malaria fever
As mulheres do Ceará são as mais linda do mundo ❤
As a French I ALWAYS wear fanny packs at hip level
And people won't give you looks or laugh at you? Where in France do you live?
@@GeoSocratic That's happened to me one time, but I don't care at all. I live in south west of France
Todas as mulheres foram simpáticas nesse vídeo.
First.
I love this channel and all the girls on this channel, leave the public in absolute peace and always allow the freedom of truth to flow on the channel and on RUclips, always without any restrictions, the video was beautiful, everyone was friendly kisses and hugs to all the girls To the entire cast, good energy and love to all of us.
💎💎💎💎💙💙💙💙💙🥂🥂🥂🥂🥂🥂🥂🥂🥂🥂
How has the german girl never seen fanny packs, they are talahon Zubehör number 1, also, where i am from no one will judge you for wearing short pants or skirts especially when its hot(like the weather)
People wear baseball caps in Portugal...and it's not even weird to wear them indoors, such as at the mall or grocery store..no one will bat an eye. It's considered rude to wear a hat to church tho, or at the dinner table
US, Lauren foot
DE, Lara foot
US,Lauren foot
In this video, The USA was the closest to us.
🇧🇷🤝🇺🇸
Subtitles please: she says "yeah they are foreigners" and it's subtitled "yeah they are French". It doesn't even make sense.
O que o brasil tem a ver com o assunto?
é continente americano e continente europeu
Saiu barato ainda porque não abordaram o assunto dos biquinis. E olha que merecia.
0:42 yeah yeah I see Ana absolutely don't care what she's wearing daily :)
do you know her personally? does she live in Brazil? is she talking about herself? :)
@@julianasilva6946 no, such girls never talking to my kind. As far as I know currently no. Who knows....
😂😂👏🙌🙌🇧🇷🇧🇷😎
Where's Philippines 😢
Stay Serene, this video was never about austronesian nations as Philippines, Malaysia or Singapore.
Calm your mind, they will do again for future videos about austronesians cultures.
France created fashion, Brasil destroyed it, especially the people of northeast and Rio.
Hi, about the short shorts. There are some dad joke videos embarassing the daughters with himself wearing short shorts.
Hot pants and super short skirts were also worn in Germany 20 years ago. That was normal. Nowadays it has become dangerous because of the many immigrants from the Middle East and North Africa. Many young women even wear long baggy clothes in the summer heat so that they don't get harassed. Germany has changed a lot, but unfortunately for the worse.
@@inotoni6148 hallo, hot pants und Mini Röcke waren aber vor langer Zeit Mode oder wie man hier sagte waren in. Das war aber schon in den 60er bis 70er wo die Mädels das trugen. Mode kommt allerdings immer wieder wenn auch ein wenig anders.
I Like How they out Brazil as American country, cuz it is! America is not a single country
White socks with sneakers equals Americans.
And Germany. Even politicians and 60 year old TV presenter wear them.
a ana nao é boa p esse tipo de vídeo pq parece q ela vive numa bolha kkkkkkk nesse estilo de video especificamente, a julia representaria melhor
If someone studies at a private school in Brazil, that person can also study at a public university. Yes, students at a private school can do that! I don't think Ana knows that.
universidades públicas deveria ser só para quem foi de escola pública
@@veyrrPorque?
@hompseanit8942 se a pessoa teve condicoes de bancar escola particular tbm tem condiçoes de bancar faculdade particular e nao tirar a vaga de pessoas que nao tem condiçoes
@@Gustavo.A.schweigerto propósito da faculdade pública é ser uma instituição de excelência e não de caridade.
@@Gustavo.A.schweigert 👍
“Quem leu e não tocou no Deadpool, vai broxar pelo resto da vida!” 😁
Ela deveria ter falado que chinelos só são usados para ir em locais perto de casa . Ninguém pega ônibus ou metro de chinelo .
aqui no litoral de santa catarina todo mundo usa havaianas pra tudo, inclusive ônibus!
Rapaz, eu uso chinelo para ir a qualquer lugar, exceto em ocasiões muito especiais ou em dias de chuva.
Tem gente em SP que faz tudo de chinelo.
Onde eu moro só usamos sapatos para ir ou a escola, ou universidade ou a eventos importantes. O resto é só chinelo
@@TypoMornings sou de Vila Velha Espírito Santo, saio pouco de chinelo porque parece que estou desarrumado. Muitos homens usam tênis por aqui , me sinto mal em usar chinelo .
Украинский парень с красивой испанкой сидит 😂😂🤣🤣🤣
He is gypsy domari romani indian guanche, lost in the sky, on earth, in the sea, in everything.
🤭🤭🤭🥂🥂🥂🛸🛰✈
Miguel is Portuguese, not Ukrainian.
Interesting how the beautiful Ana said the United States and not America when she referred to the United States, as the american said and another subject she spoke about is education in Brazil, because unfortunately here public education is very bad and public college is very well, something that doesn't make any sense, regarding fashion, as Brazil is a tropical country, people wear more light and comfortable clothes in spring and summer, unlike Europe, which is made up of countries with colder climates, they wear more heavy clothes, I think that's why the fashion of Italy and especially France is a reference, as well as being the most respected on the planet.
I think the backwards cap in American restaurants only applies to college catering areas. Which makes me doubt what the others are saying as well.
I'm definitely not American 😂
we want julia