I feel like British Columbia is more like the California of Canada. It hosts a strong international population, a Canadian Hollywood equivalent and both have the most temperate climates in their respective countries.
I think you could say BC is practically the whole East Coast of the US. I went on a trip from Vancouver to Victoria to Seattle, and that grungy, progressive vibe definitely carried the whole way.
@@kt_lavigne06 BC, Washington State, and Oregon are all basically the same thing. There's even a secessionist movement that calls for the three to separate from their respective countries and join together.
Fun fact: a large chunk of Louisianas French population mostly comes from Acadia, which is Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, which got kicked out from canada after the 7 yrs war, which is where the name Acadiana comes from which pretty much means cajun
I like to compare Newfoundland and Labrador to Alaska. Both are isolated to the rest of their countries. They both rely on oil and fishing for their economies. Both are mostly empty. NL was the last province to join Canada while Alaska was the Most recent state in the Union. Both also have significant Inuit populations.
As a current wisconsin resident, I agree. I kind of get his point, especially because being in Wisconsin does feel surprisingly isolated from the rest of the country (especially when compared to Indiana, the state I grew up in and is known for having lots of people passing through), but I definitely think Alaska is better for NL
Saskatchewan is interesting politically because it is rural and conservative, but it's also where the NDP was founded, it had the first social democratic government in North America, and was the first place in Canada to have universal healthcare
Just had to point out that the lobster statue photo you used for Nova Scotia is not found in NS at all but is the main attraction of Shediac, New Brunswick
Saskatchewan is known for Oil and other natural resources like potash, gold, uranium (Best quality in the world), diamonds, coal, silver and . . . Saskatchewan is the one of the most resource rich places on earth.
Oil is the most important resource by far in terms of value extracted annually. If Saskatchewan had more oil it would be known more for natural resource wealth, but it is only a moderate producer, well behind Alberta.
As a Canadian I think it would be funny to go over every region in each province and compare it to a us county because the east Kootenay area is the opposite of Vancouver in most ways
I think Nunavut would be like Oklahoma because they are both places where indigenous culture is around and they not have indigenous names and where intended for indigenous people to live in.
I know that the Atlantic provinces are similar to New England. New England has a historically dominant mainline Protestant population and has voted for moderate Republicans until it recently became democrat. The Atlantic Provinces have historically been dominated by mainline Protestantism and has long voted for Red Tory’s until the provinces recently became heavily Liberal.
I’d argue that BC is closer to the California of Canada. The similarity between Vancouver and LA in terms of housing, traffic, multi-culturalism and is quite large. Not to mention the beautiful nature, mountains and coastline. BC is also home to Canada’s wine country and the northern tip of the California Desert.
Ontario is New-York- New-Jersey- Pennsylvania D.C. Quebec is Louisiana Nova Scotia is Florida- Massachusetts -Connecticut Manitoba is Illinois-Michigan and Missouri British Columbia is California -Washington- Oregon. Alberta is Texas - Colorado Saskatchewan is Carolina -Virginia New Brunswick is Maine -Rhode Island.
I don't think you can just go one-to-one comparisons. Ontario is like New York+Illinois+California combined. Quebec does not have any comparison, and Texas is a particularly terrible one. British Columbia is like Washington. Alberta is like Texas. Saskatchewan is like North Dakota and South Dakota. Manitoba is like Missouri in my opinion. Flyover farm country, but it does have a large minority population and shitty, irrelevant cities that make up major urban populations. Nova Scotia is like Massachusetts if Boston was smaller. New Brunswick is like Maine minus the Portland metro area. Prince Edward Island is like the Portland metro area. Newfoundland doesn't have a good comparison either, but a lazy one could be Alaska.
I would not say BC is a very leftist province. Yes, Coastal BC of Vancouver and Vancouver Island (Victoria, Nanaimo etc.) are more leftist and hold a lot of power in BC and account for around 3.5 million out of the 5.1 million people living here; however, BC is MASSIVE and Interior/Northern BC are very conservative (I live in the interior).
I think he selectively chose to go off of the urban or rural stereotypes based on what’s most prominent for each province. Definitely agree about the reality of BC and its rural areas, but I do think that our “urban” culture is what an outsider would think of first.
Ontario elects conservative provincial governments and BC elects NDP. Its fair to say theyre the most left wing. Quebec has a weird communist thing going on though, theyre arguably the most.
Great video and comparisons. Maybe try speaking more slowly and clearly to help the audience understand you. BC could also be a mix of Washington, Oregon and California. Yukon and Idaho was an unexpected, but apt comparison.
I feel like Prince Edward Island is very much like Rhode Island. It has a small population compared to everything else, a very maritime-based culture, and is the province, being the majority of the state's population, just like Charlotown is. British Columbia is very liberal and large and has a similar influence on the nation as California. If you ignore extreme south Cali and extreme north B.C, they are very similar.
Hey this is an awesome video! 👌 One critique I have is maybe slow down when talking? Sometimes I have trouble understanding what you're saying, because you perhaps felt rushed when recording it. Otherwise you're doing amazing. Keep on keepin on brother!
I hate to be one of those people but one thing you were wrong about is the % of the population that NYC is of New York NYC has a population of over 8 million so it’s not 65% of the state’s population it’s actually more along the lines of what Toronto is to Ontario it’s about 44, 45% of the states population just had to make sure I got that tid bit in about as a Buffalonian 🤣🤣🤣
It should be like: 1. British Columbia - Washington 2. New Brunswick/Quebec - Maine, excepting the extremes 3. Nova Scotia - Maine 4. Ontario - New York 5. Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba - North Dakota, South Dakota, Kansas, Nebraska 6. Yukon - Idaho 7. Prince Edward Island - Rhode Island
@@deliverant9375 It is in no way a mini-Massachusetts. Maybe there's some small cultural similarities, but Massachusetts' economy is a lot different and a lot more high tech focused and value added than Nova Scotia.
In Saskatchewan (as well as Alberta and Manitoba) we generally hate the east, especially Ontario and Quebec. We are more Conservative, blue collar, and down to earth and polite.
How could you forget about Rhode Island? It’s the perfect comparison to Prince Edward Island. Also some other adjustments I would make with the Maritimes is New Brunswick is more similar to Maine if you been to both, very forested, both have a presence of Irving (corporation based in NB), both have similar coasts, people and accents, culture. One could make the argument Nova Scotia is like a smaller Massachusetts. Mostly because Halifax is often compared to Boston. They still have the seafood factor as New England Clam Chowder is a New England/Massachusetts staple and clam chowder also widespread in Canada Maritimes.
The maritimes are four separate provinces, with 4 different sets of laws.. NB is like maine for there industries, pei is like road isle for its size, ns is Canadian Flavored Florida and Newfoundland & Labrador is east coast Alaska to a tea.
Neat video. Quebec/Texas is a little weird but the others are fair. As a Canadian I didn’t even know a lot of these American stereotypes. Not to overstep boundaries but you have an interesting accent, what state are you from?
I'd say Quebec should be comparable to Florida. Not because they're culturally similar. But I hear a lot about crazy people from Gatineau and that reminded me of florida man.
Dealing with the east coast provinces, Nova Scotia's analog is easily Massachusetts (dominance of NS wrt the Maritimes vs dominance of MA to the rest of New England, Halifax vs Boston (Public Gardens, the Commons, multiple universities, horrible traffic). The analog for New Brunswick is Maine (size, location, absence of a single dominant city (Moncton, Saint John, Fredericton vs Portland, Bangor, Augusta), reliance on fishing, forestry and farming). I like your analogy of Prince Edward Island vs Vermont. That seems appropriate. As for Newfoundland, the only comparable US jurisdiction is Alaska. Both NL and AK are seriously isolated on the fringes of the continent and are difficult to get to, and tend to have severe climates. Fishing and oil production sustain both jurisdictions.
as a yukoner (the only one you'll ever find) I know very much we complain about people coming here whether it be to live or for tourism its an everyday complaint 😂
Canada only has 10 provinces to the 50 states in the US. Ontario has such a large share of Canada's population that you would have to combine California Texas New York and Florida and still that wouldn't be as large a portion of the US populationwise as Ontario is for Canada. It is difficult to compare for that reason.
2 месяца назад+2
BC is not "leftist" it's 50/50 at best,it's also a major supplier of power to all of the western states and Alberta, it is also basically Canada's loading dock as 85% of all imports and Exports go through bc
BC's politics aren't super clear cut leftism, despite the stereotypes, it has a long history of electing centre-right governments. The SoCreds and the Liberals (now BC United) have had long stints in power over the last half century
Interesting video but I don't think Idaho has 8+ million people! And while BC and Washington have plenty in common (Oregon too), I always felt that culturally BC had more in common with California.
I would say northwestern Ontario is completely different from southern Ontario. With the former being much more similar to Minnesota and the UP of Michigan. Southern Ontario however is much more similar to Illinois, New York, and Ohio.
It’s pronounced NewfoundLAND, not Newfinlind - rhymes with “understand.” And it’s not part of the Maritime provinces, despite being very small-m maritime in nature - the Maritimes are only NB, NS, and PEI, because NL has such a different history and culture and is physically separated. As a Newfoundlander who’s married to an American, I’d say Newfoundland is akin to Alaska, or perhaps West Virginia if West Virginia was a couple hundred miles out in the Atlantic Ocean by itself.
BC is way more than just Vancouver. Most of the interior is actually considered desert resembling more the likes of Wyoming, Montana and even Arizona in some parts of
I just started the video and I'm guessing. Ontario will be New York quebec will be Louisiana. British Columbia. Will be Washington Alberta will be Texas. PEII sort of view as a mix of Florida and hawaii maybe The rest of them. I have no clue
Please enunciate the "i" in Ontario more. "On-tair-e-oh". I would also note there's a wide disparity between Northern and Southern Ontario. Southern Ontario may be very similar to New York, yes, but I would say the Northern half of the province is more akin to Minnesota or even Alaska, especially in the winter, given just how remote and isolated communities can be.
Quebec is the only Place in the entire North American continent that speaks French. After the us and most parts of Canada declared to speak English. While Mexico Central America and Cuba speak Spanish.
A better comparison for Nova Scotia would be Massachusetts. New Brunswick is more like Maine. Fun fact: NS, NB and Maine were Acadia, and when the British took it over NB and Maine were part of the colony of NS until after the American Revolution. Also, Newfoundland is not part of the Maritimes. The Maritimes are NS, NB and PEI. The Maritimes combined with Newfoundland is called Atlantic Canada
Also Halifax is basically a smaller Boston. They even share a tradition together since Boston helped the recovery from the Halifax explosion, so Halifax sends Boston a Christmas tree every year.
This entire comparison is ridiculous. Every province and state has their own culture and trying to correlate any of them is futile and a waste of time.
WASHINGTON DC IS LIKE OTTAWA ONTARIO . THEME PARK DISNEYLAND IN ORLANDO, FLORIDA IS LIKE CANADA WONDERLAND. DISNEYWORLD IN LA CALIFORNIA IS SILMIAR TO LA ROUGE THEME PARK IN QUEBEC.
As a Canadian, my comparison, similar to yours in many respects, goes like this: Ontario = New York Quebec is unique, but similar to Louisiana due to the French.... B.C. = Washington State Alberta = Texas Winnipeg = Minnesota Saskatchewan = North Dakota Maritimes (Nova Scotia/ PEI and New Brunswick) = Maine Newfoundland/Labrador = Alaska. There's no comparing the Territories to US States, these places are absolutely empty, and the culture is quite foreign, Yukon and NWT may be slightly comparable to Alaska, but there's nothing like Nunavut at all in USA, other than maybe the Northern coast of Alaska, or the Island chains south of them.
Lol, Winnipeg is so big, I accidentally named it instead of it's province, Manitoba! Manitoba realy does feel like the massive expanded wilderness surrounding Winnipeg though.
texas and QC similar? lol i get the oint of how they stand out n all but their views and lifestyle are polar opposite. being from sk id say AB is the most comparable in economy and lifestyle. just to make a jab at the states.... we can fit over 3 (atleast) per province. new orleans is more understandable , especially so because of heavy french roots and culture. didnt know washington was so left wing but obvious comparison for BC for me would be california
Idaho MORE LIKE PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND BECAUSE THE MAIN ONE KNOW FOR THEIR POTATO WHILE HALIFAX NOVA SCOTIA MORE LIKE RHODE ILSANDS WITH THE DIFFERENT COLOUR HOUSES.
Ontario has had a conservative government for the last 9 years. More people in ontario vote for the federal conservatives than the federal liberals. The liberals just have a mite consented vote. So they end up with more seats. Its a mistake Americans make thinking that Canada is inherently a leftist country. Over the past 20 its been an even split for governing time betwenn the federal conservatives and federal liberals. Most of our provinces since 2015 have had a conservative government. Is Canada. Is conservative as the USA? No. But when compared to Europe or Aus and NZ. It is way more conservative. At the moment the federal Conservative are way way ahead in the polls and ate about to win a super magority. I think the miss information about the comes from our media. The left dominate the media here. There is no rightwing tv news coverage and there only only 2 right leaning mainstream news papers.
@@BasePuma4007 absolutely, and don’t get me wrong im so thankful for all the privilege that comes with living here. It just gets kinda tough for different reasons
I feel like British Columbia is more like the California of Canada. It hosts a strong international population, a Canadian Hollywood equivalent and both have the most temperate climates in their respective countries.
I think you could say BC is practically the whole East Coast of the US. I went on a trip from Vancouver to Victoria to Seattle, and that grungy, progressive vibe definitely carried the whole way.
@@kt_lavigne06 BC, Washington State, and Oregon are all basically the same thing. There's even a secessionist movement that calls for the three to separate from their respective countries and join together.
The Canadian hollywood is based in Toronto lmao. Vancouvers film industry isn't anything special.
BC sucks. Full of nothing but a bunch of drug addicts and communist hippies.
😂 Ok
Fun fact: a large chunk of Louisianas French population mostly comes from Acadia, which is Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, which got kicked out from canada after the 7 yrs war, which is where the name Acadiana comes from which pretty much means cajun
and PEI*
I like to compare Newfoundland and Labrador to Alaska. Both are isolated to the rest of their countries. They both rely on oil and fishing for their economies. Both are mostly empty. NL was the last province to join Canada while Alaska was the Most recent state in the Union. Both also have significant Inuit populations.
Agreed, I've been to Wisconsin and there's not much similarity between WI and NL.
As a current wisconsin resident, I agree. I kind of get his point, especially because being in Wisconsin does feel surprisingly isolated from the rest of the country (especially when compared to Indiana, the state I grew up in and is known for having lots of people passing through), but I definitely think Alaska is better for NL
tbh i didn't know there were Inuit in Alaska. I agree with your point tho.
Nfld is definitely the east coast Alaska
The culture is very different though other than the Inuit and I think culture is very important
Saskatchewan is interesting politically because it is rural and conservative, but it's also where the NDP was founded, it had the first social democratic government in North America, and was the first place in Canada to have universal healthcare
Just had to point out that the lobster statue photo you used for Nova Scotia is not found in NS at all but is the main attraction of Shediac, New Brunswick
B.C., Washington, Oregon, and northern California might as well be the same place honestly lol
Saskatchewan is known for Oil and other natural resources like potash, gold, uranium (Best quality in the world), diamonds, coal, silver and . . . Saskatchewan is the one of the most resource rich places on earth.
Oil is the most important resource by far in terms of value extracted annually. If Saskatchewan had more oil it would be known more for natural resource wealth, but it is only a moderate producer, well behind Alberta.
Missed opportunity to compare Prince Edward Island to Rhode Island
I was really expecting that comparison, one of the easiest one to one comparisons yet he seemed to forget RI even existed.
As a Canadian I think it would be funny to go over every region in each province and compare it to a us county because the east Kootenay area is the opposite of Vancouver in most ways
I wanna go to Alberta is it good?
I think Nunavut would be like Oklahoma because they are both places where indigenous culture is around and they not have indigenous names and where intended for indigenous people to live in.
I know that the Atlantic provinces are similar to New England. New England has a historically dominant mainline Protestant population and has voted for moderate Republicans until it recently became democrat. The Atlantic Provinces have historically been dominated by mainline Protestantism and has long voted for Red Tory’s until the provinces recently became heavily Liberal.
I’d argue that BC is closer to the California of Canada. The similarity between Vancouver and LA in terms of housing, traffic, multi-culturalism and is quite large. Not to mention the beautiful nature, mountains and coastline. BC is also home to Canada’s wine country and the northern tip of the California Desert.
as a Minnesotan, I'm glad you don't think we are forgettable :)
Ontario is New-York- New-Jersey- Pennsylvania D.C.
Quebec is Louisiana
Nova Scotia is Florida- Massachusetts -Connecticut
Manitoba is Illinois-Michigan and Missouri
British Columbia is California -Washington- Oregon.
Alberta is Texas - Colorado
Saskatchewan is Carolina -Virginia
New Brunswick is Maine -Rhode Island.
God you must hate Ontario smh
@@butterknife5155 I don't hate Ontario
@@mlbroblox8620 I'm joking 🙏😞
no pei hmmm
I don't think you can just go one-to-one comparisons.
Ontario is like New York+Illinois+California combined.
Quebec does not have any comparison, and Texas is a particularly terrible one.
British Columbia is like Washington.
Alberta is like Texas.
Saskatchewan is like North Dakota and South Dakota.
Manitoba is like Missouri in my opinion. Flyover farm country, but it does have a large minority population and shitty, irrelevant cities that make up major urban populations.
Nova Scotia is like Massachusetts if Boston was smaller.
New Brunswick is like Maine minus the Portland metro area.
Prince Edward Island is like the Portland metro area.
Newfoundland doesn't have a good comparison either, but a lazy one could be Alaska.
I agree, comparing Quebec and Texas isn't accurate : one is hot and conservative, the other cold and liberal.
@@ns2859 You severely underestimate the conservatives of Québec
@@Foxikaze There is almost no conservatives in Québec.
They dont reach more than 15% of the population @@Foxikaze
@@ns2859Québec is quite warm half the year. 3months average and 3months really cold. With global warming Québec's winter is getting weaker and weaker
I would not say BC is a very leftist province. Yes, Coastal BC of Vancouver and Vancouver Island (Victoria, Nanaimo etc.) are more leftist and hold a lot of power in BC and account for around 3.5 million out of the 5.1 million people living here; however, BC is MASSIVE and Interior/Northern BC are very conservative (I live in the interior).
same here in WA State, more interior conservative too.
I think he selectively chose to go off of the urban or rural stereotypes based on what’s most prominent for each province. Definitely agree about the reality of BC and its rural areas, but I do think that our “urban” culture is what an outsider would think of first.
Ontario elects conservative provincial governments and BC elects NDP. Its fair to say theyre the most left wing. Quebec has a weird communist thing going on though, theyre arguably the most.
Great country side though!!! Beautiful!
As a canadian, ive never heard of canadian politics
BC is more similar to to California imo
We have Christian right-wingers in our remote areas, very similar to eastern Washington, I gather.
@@rexpontiff1001 still
@@GOAT_GOATERSONno
@@rockomax2732 yes
@@rockomax2732 yes
Great video and comparisons. Maybe try speaking more slowly and clearly to help the audience understand you. BC could also be a mix of Washington, Oregon and California. Yukon and Idaho was an unexpected, but apt comparison.
Just fyi, the image of the city you used for Kansas is Kansas City, Missouri
I feel like Prince Edward Island is very much like Rhode Island. It has a small population compared to everything else, a very maritime-based culture, and is the province, being the majority of the state's population, just like Charlotown is. British Columbia is very liberal and large and has a similar influence on the nation as California. If you ignore extreme south Cali and extreme north B.C, they are very similar.
Hey this is an awesome video! 👌 One critique I have is maybe slow down when talking? Sometimes I have trouble understanding what you're saying, because you perhaps felt rushed when recording it. Otherwise you're doing amazing. Keep on keepin on brother!
I hate to be one of those people but one thing you were wrong about is the % of the population that NYC is of New York NYC has a population of over 8 million so it’s not 65% of the state’s population it’s actually more along the lines of what Toronto is to Ontario it’s about 44, 45% of the states population just had to make sure I got that tid bit in about as a Buffalonian 🤣🤣🤣
It should be like:
1. British Columbia - Washington
2. New Brunswick/Quebec - Maine, excepting the extremes
3. Nova Scotia - Maine
4. Ontario - New York
5. Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba - North Dakota, South Dakota, Kansas, Nebraska
6. Yukon - Idaho
7. Prince Edward Island - Rhode Island
Alberta is a different from those other places.
Nova Scotia is more of a mini Massachusetts
@@deliverant9375 It is in no way a mini-Massachusetts. Maybe there's some small cultural similarities, but Massachusetts' economy is a lot different and a lot more high tech focused and value added than Nova Scotia.
I would wager that on a per capita basis more Canadians could name a greater number of US states than Americans could. I am Canadian.
BC is mainly left wing in the coastal areas. East of the coast mountains it tends to be more politically conservative.
Note that Quebec is the largest in area, you show it as second (yet the area square mileage are accurate!)
This is a great video
Amazing video. Thanks a lot
This was a good quality video hopefully the channel grows
In Saskatchewan (as well as Alberta and Manitoba) we generally hate the east, especially Ontario and Quebec. We are more Conservative, blue collar, and down to earth and polite.
Calling everything boring is just uncool. And it really appeals to the ignorant masses mindset.
It may be "uncool", but it's still true.
As a Manitoba I would not call it "uncool" I would call it down right rude.
I think he’s just referring to the general stereotype, even if that stereotype may be unfair or ignorant
@@dehavillandcanadatwinotter9621 Still rude.
Underrated!
How could you forget about Rhode Island? It’s the perfect comparison to Prince Edward Island. Also some other adjustments I would make with the Maritimes is New Brunswick is more similar to Maine if you been to both, very forested, both have a presence of Irving (corporation based in NB), both have similar coasts, people and accents, culture.
One could make the argument Nova Scotia is like a smaller Massachusetts. Mostly because Halifax is often compared to Boston. They still have the seafood factor as New England Clam Chowder is a New England/Massachusetts staple and clam chowder also widespread in Canada Maritimes.
The maritimes are four separate provinces, with 4 different sets of laws.. NB is like maine for there industries, pei is like road isle for its size, ns is Canadian Flavored Florida and Newfoundland & Labrador is east coast Alaska to a tea.
NovaScotia is Canadian Flavored Florida 😅
Canadian Flavored Florida is planing to have a million people in the chity of Halifax
Neat video. Quebec/Texas is a little weird but the others are fair. As a Canadian I didn’t even know a lot of these American stereotypes.
Not to overstep boundaries but you have an interesting accent, what state are you from?
Sounds like Midwest.
Funny thing about Alberta is that although it is arguably the most conservative province, it is also one of the least religious.
I'd say Quebec should be comparable to Florida. Not because they're culturally similar. But I hear a lot about crazy people from Gatineau and that reminded me of florida man.
I mean BC is quite similar in feel to Washington, but in reality is far closer to something like Oregon or even California
Dealing with the east coast provinces, Nova Scotia's analog is easily Massachusetts (dominance of NS wrt the Maritimes vs dominance of MA to the rest of New England, Halifax vs Boston (Public Gardens, the Commons, multiple universities, horrible traffic). The analog for New Brunswick is Maine (size, location, absence of a single dominant city (Moncton, Saint John, Fredericton vs Portland, Bangor, Augusta), reliance on fishing, forestry and farming). I like your analogy of Prince Edward Island vs Vermont. That seems appropriate. As for Newfoundland, the only comparable US jurisdiction is Alaska. Both NL and AK are seriously isolated on the fringes of the continent and are difficult to get to, and tend to have severe climates. Fishing and oil production sustain both jurisdictions.
as a yukoner (the only one you'll ever find) I know very much we complain about people coming here whether it be to live or for tourism its an everyday complaint 😂
Canada only has 10 provinces to the 50 states in the US. Ontario has such a large share of Canada's population that you would have to combine California Texas New York and Florida and still that wouldn't be as large a portion of the US populationwise as Ontario is for Canada. It is difficult to compare for that reason.
BC is not "leftist" it's 50/50 at best,it's also a major supplier of power to all of the western states and Alberta, it is also basically Canada's loading dock as 85% of all imports and Exports go through bc
BC's politics aren't super clear cut leftism, despite the stereotypes, it has a long history of electing centre-right governments. The SoCreds and the Liberals (now BC United) have had long stints in power over the last half century
The GTA is the least canadian “culture” area in the whole country, most people will tell you its just an Americanized city located jn Canada
NFLD isn’t a part of the Maritimes but it is a part of Atlantic Canada.
Interesting video but I don't think Idaho has 8+ million people!
And while BC and Washington have plenty in common (Oregon too), I always felt that culturally BC had more in common with California.
I was gonna say BC is more like Califonia.
9:21 that giant lobster is in shediac, witch is a town in NEW BRUNSWICK, not Nova Scotia
I would say northwestern Ontario is completely different from southern Ontario. With the former being much more similar to Minnesota and the UP of Michigan.
Southern Ontario however is much more similar to Illinois, New York, and Ohio.
It’s pronounced NewfoundLAND, not Newfinlind - rhymes with “understand.” And it’s not part of the Maritime provinces, despite being very small-m maritime in nature - the Maritimes are only NB, NS, and PEI, because NL has such a different history and culture and is physically separated.
As a Newfoundlander who’s married to an American, I’d say Newfoundland is akin to Alaska, or perhaps West Virginia if West Virginia was a couple hundred miles out in the Atlantic Ocean by itself.
Alaska and all three Territories are really the only comparables for each other, but thanks for trying others
BC is way more than just Vancouver. Most of the interior is actually considered desert resembling more the likes of Wyoming, Montana and even Arizona in some parts of
It almost was a state
by area Québec:1,542,056 s.k. Ontario: 1,076,395
Minnesota Is very Canadian. you said it correctly.
British Columbia is not one of the most "left" provinces. 33 of its 44 ridings are conservative. Only Alberta and Saskatchewan are higher.
As a lifelong Albertan (even though I’m liberal) this is pretty damn accurate.
I would say New Brunswick as New Hampshire and PEI as Rhode Island
I just started the video and I'm guessing. Ontario will be New York quebec will be Louisiana. British Columbia.
Will be Washington Alberta will be Texas. PEII sort of view as a mix of Florida and hawaii maybe The rest of them.
I have no clue
Please enunciate the "i" in Ontario more. "On-tair-e-oh". I would also note there's a wide disparity between Northern and Southern Ontario. Southern Ontario may be very similar to New York, yes, but I would say the Northern half of the province is more akin to Minnesota or even Alaska, especially in the winter, given just how remote and isolated communities can be.
Please slown down
There's a button for that in the top right corner
I was thinking that too buddy talks at like 2000bpm
I agree 100% and I'm from Quebec!
Mardis gras isn't in may, it's usually in February
British Columbia is basically the Eastern Asia of North America
I think the Dakotas and Saskatchewan are more similar. Germanic peoples and fair bit of Lutherans
British Columbia is Canada's 3 largest province in area. Not the 5th.
Saskatchewan also has lots of oil, potash and uranium…
It's just flat like Kansas
Quebec is the only Place in the entire North American continent that speaks French. After the us and most parts of Canada declared to speak English. While Mexico Central America and Cuba speak Spanish.
Thats not true. There are french communities in Manitoba, Ontario, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Louisiana amongst others places
A better comparison for Nova Scotia would be Massachusetts. New Brunswick is more like Maine. Fun fact: NS, NB and Maine were Acadia, and when the British took it over NB and Maine were part of the colony of NS until after the American Revolution. Also, Newfoundland is not part of the Maritimes. The Maritimes are NS, NB and PEI. The Maritimes combined with Newfoundland is called Atlantic Canada
Also Halifax is basically a smaller Boston. They even share a tradition together since Boston helped the recovery from the Halifax explosion, so Halifax sends Boston a Christmas tree every year.
If you include Newfoundland and Labrador you should call the area Atlantic Canada
I'd maybe compare PEI to Delaware
I don’t think Idaho has 8.5 million people
Texas and Alberta
Oil and cattle
This entire comparison is ridiculous. Every province and state has their own culture and trying to correlate any of them is futile and a waste of time.
"Leftist" politics in ON?
Tell that to Doug Ford.
Alberta is not hated in Canada. I dont think Texas is hated in the USA either
I find Alberta to be most similar to Colorado
It's not pronounced Newfinlind. It's pronounced Newfin-LAND. You can always tell when an American pronounces it. It's the Canadian shibboleth.
Wow, most of them are most similar to their neighbors to the south, how shocking, who would have guessed that
You could compare nunavut to Oklahoma because ofvthe indigenous population
New Brunswick is the Wyoming of Canada, it simply isn't real.
0:42 I’m Canadian and I can’t even tell you what goes on in New Brunswick.
WASHINGTON DC IS LIKE OTTAWA ONTARIO . THEME PARK DISNEYLAND IN ORLANDO, FLORIDA IS LIKE CANADA WONDERLAND. DISNEYWORLD IN LA CALIFORNIA IS SILMIAR TO LA ROUGE THEME PARK IN QUEBEC.
As a Canadian, my comparison, similar to yours in many respects, goes like this:
Ontario = New York
Quebec is unique, but similar to Louisiana due to the French....
B.C. = Washington State
Alberta = Texas
Winnipeg = Minnesota
Saskatchewan = North Dakota
Maritimes (Nova Scotia/ PEI and New Brunswick) = Maine
Newfoundland/Labrador = Alaska.
There's no comparing the Territories to US States, these places are absolutely empty, and the culture is quite foreign, Yukon and NWT may be slightly comparable to Alaska, but there's nothing like Nunavut at all in USA, other than maybe the Northern coast of Alaska, or the Island chains south of them.
Lol, Winnipeg is so big, I accidentally named it instead of it's province, Manitoba! Manitoba realy does feel like the massive expanded wilderness surrounding Winnipeg though.
texas and QC similar? lol i get the oint of how they stand out n all but their views and lifestyle are polar opposite. being from sk id say AB is the most comparable in economy and lifestyle. just to make a jab at the states.... we can fit over 3 (atleast) per province. new orleans is more understandable , especially so because of heavy french roots and culture. didnt know washington was so left wing but obvious comparison for BC for me would be california
Better check your numbers on Idaho, boss.
Kansas City isn’t in kansas
Bc is not the most left place in Canada
5:44 Less than one third of Saskatchewan is flat. Wheat is no longer a major crop either. Canola is king.
BC Hollywood North is California.
quebec and the maine is alike.
Alberta is definitely Texas
Idaho MORE LIKE PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND BECAUSE THE MAIN ONE KNOW FOR THEIR POTATO WHILE HALIFAX NOVA SCOTIA MORE LIKE RHODE ILSANDS WITH THE DIFFERENT COLOUR HOUSES.
damn hold it with your covert french racism
Ontario has had a conservative government for the last 9 years. More people in ontario vote for the federal conservatives than the federal liberals. The liberals just have a mite consented vote. So they end up with more seats.
Its a mistake Americans make thinking that Canada is inherently a leftist country. Over the past 20 its been an even split for governing time betwenn the federal conservatives and federal liberals. Most of our provinces since 2015 have had a conservative government. Is Canada. Is conservative as the USA? No. But when compared to Europe or Aus and NZ. It is way more conservative. At the moment the federal Conservative are way way ahead in the polls and ate about to win a super magority.
I think the miss information about the comes from our media. The left dominate the media here. There is no rightwing tv news coverage and there only only 2 right leaning mainstream news papers.
you sounds like whatifalthist!
You need to speak slower dude
15:10 hate Alberta WTF that is the only other province I can relate to besides Saskatchewan , get your stories straight!
"leftist" politics 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Alberta is just the south in general. I hate it here. I call it Ala-berta ( Alabama and Alberta ).
It's the wealthiest Canadian province percapita (by far).
@@BasePuma4007 absolutely, and don’t get me wrong im so thankful for all the privilege that comes with living here. It just gets kinda tough for different reasons
Other than winter it's a great province to live in
@@ERAviation-sq7ud That’s pretty fair tbh.
Idaho does NOT have 8.5 million people