Plimoth Plantation: Virtual Field Trip

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  • Опубликовано: 15 ноя 2012
  • Thanksgiving virtual field trip featuring Pilgrims and the Native American Wampanoag, discussing their lives, their collaboration, and the first Thanksgiving. For more great Thanksgiving lesson plans and teaching resources visit www.scholastic.com/scholastic_thanksgiving

Комментарии • 312

  • @carlabelisle9399
    @carlabelisle9399 8 месяцев назад +4

    The participants did such a good job playing their parts: language, gestures, etc. Great presentation.

  • @paulbutterworthbillericay
    @paulbutterworthbillericay 3 года назад +9

    Was very interesting, like the actors role play, very well rehearsed, Americans really know how to put a good show on

  • @YnkeeDoodlFlppyDisk
    @YnkeeDoodlFlppyDisk 9 лет назад +7

    This is such a helpful video for sparking conversation about Thanksgiving with children! Thanks so much for making and posting!!

  • @fggghost8593
    @fggghost8593 3 года назад +28

    Yo. I am watching this for school but HOLY this is good reenacting.

  • @Janadu
    @Janadu 6 лет назад +25

    So interesting! Thank you for posting this. We went to Plimoth Plantation on our honeymoon 31 years ago and it was a fantastic experience! Loved how everyone was in character and funny when visitors tried to trick them with questions and comments about cars or other modern things. They never wavered. Would love to go back soon.

    • @imsubbingtoeverybodywhosub6207
      @imsubbingtoeverybodywhosub6207 Год назад

      My guy wasted his own time typing that

    • @imsubbingtoeverybodywhosub6207
      @imsubbingtoeverybodywhosub6207 Год назад

      How old are you

    • @mariababcock803
      @mariababcock803 Год назад

      Yes and that feast it represents the head of the Indians which were negroes or you can call them as the Bible cause them Hebrews that turkey on a plate every year represents the heads that were cut off and set on those plates that's why the Bible says don't eat strange meats on strange holidays to strange gods

  • @radioman5688
    @radioman5688 3 года назад +1

    My ancestors came over 1629 left England arrived in 1630 1631 John Perkins Sr I have to get back to enjoy this is a wonderful video thank you for posting

  • @madaketmom
    @madaketmom 5 лет назад +60

    Constance Hopkins is my 11th great grandmother, so exciting to see her portrayed as a young woman! Thank you

    • @WestSJ408
      @WestSJ408 5 лет назад +6

      madaketmom that’s so cool to be able to see your history this way🙌🏽I’m happy for you 🖤

    • @robo08ify
      @robo08ify 5 лет назад +9

      I’m also a descendant of Constance Hopkins. Descended through her husband Nicholas Snow.

    • @__TrishMartinez
      @__TrishMartinez 5 лет назад +6

      madaketmom she is my 11th great aunt :)

    • @__TrishMartinez
      @__TrishMartinez 5 лет назад +6

      madaketmom her father is my 11th great grandfather

    • @kathleenegan6196
      @kathleenegan6196 4 года назад +2

      This is super fun-- Constance Hopkins' grandson John Cole is my first cousin nine times removed! So Constance and I are related in some convoluted way. I wonder what that makes us, madaketmom?

  • @8091pinewood
    @8091pinewood 9 лет назад +63

    I think the actor did a great job portraying Hobamock. BTW, I was born in Plymouth, still live in Ma., and my wife is part Wampanoag.

    • @simp_for_barney198
      @simp_for_barney198 4 года назад +1

      8091pinewood cool

    • @paulbourdon1236
      @paulbourdon1236 4 года назад +1

      The Interpreters are amazing!! I would love to see how they get to this point.

    • @briansutton574
      @briansutton574 3 года назад

      happy thanksgiving rick

    • @ashazarr8241
      @ashazarr8241 4 месяца назад

      Is she also descended from Ousamequin?

  • @lindam7430
    @lindam7430 Месяц назад

    I love the rich history, thank you for sharing this virtual history

  • @davemanhawaii
    @davemanhawaii 5 лет назад +4

    Love the campfire!

  • @cristengraceobregon9745
    @cristengraceobregon9745 7 лет назад +6

    i am i student and my teacher is Mrs. Horner and we watch this in my school! and its awesome! and i want to watch it again!

  • @Aislinnmomma
    @Aislinnmomma 8 лет назад +3

    Plymouth is such a huge contrast to Jamestown. Nobles and "well-born" society trying to build a settlement from the ground up? Ha! That's why John Smith made the rule "If you don't work, you don't eat." They'd rather plunder Indian hunts and search for gold rather than farm or build houses--hard work.
    The Pilgrims worked hard and befriended Indians. They would never have survived without Indian help! They weren't all Christians, but there was a system of self-government in which the citizens had a say in the laws. So much more fair.
    I LOVE that Indian with the "Boston" accent! And of course some of the British citizens might have Scottish/Welsh/Irish accents. London is full of that even in modern days. This is a fanastic video---thanks for sharing!!
    We're using this to study American History and the first Thanksgiving!

    • @skellagyook
      @skellagyook 8 месяцев назад

      It's more based on an English accent of the 17th century.

  • @dvorahjaecorvinus-vhb3935
    @dvorahjaecorvinus-vhb3935 7 лет назад +13

    I've been to the Plymouth Plantations many time and every time It just so wonderful. BRAVA..............
    I praise GOD for my Pilgrim Brethren and Native friends, a true miracle of GOD between the first Pilgrims and Natives of the land. .

    • @kilipaki87oritahiti
      @kilipaki87oritahiti 7 лет назад +4

      BJae Corvinus So you praise genocide and theft?

    • @dvorahjaecorvinus-vhb3935
      @dvorahjaecorvinus-vhb3935 7 лет назад +3

      Ummmm, did you read my post? Your response makes zero sense!!!
      For my general overall answer to your comment at this point: No, I do not praise genocide and theft. Nor do I praise erroneous "data" or false crusaders.
      Take care..........................

    • @woohooo7634
      @woohooo7634 3 года назад

      creator** but sure yeah

  • @Sir-Monchi
    @Sir-Monchi 3 года назад +22

    I need to watch this for homework

  • @Vercingetorix.Fantasia
    @Vercingetorix.Fantasia 2 года назад +1

    Hobomock may be my favorite lesser known native of the 1620s New England conflicts.
    Wonderfully portrayed by Tatanka Means in Saints and Strangers

  • @waynefederico9396
    @waynefederico9396 3 года назад +3

    When in school years ago we went on field trips to the Mayflower. Some of the post will understand the importance in their later years...

    • @purepepperedchickenrelish5254
      @purepepperedchickenrelish5254 3 года назад

      I remember going on a field trip when I was very young i think too young to appreciate it fully I’d love to go back

  • @danielgarcia9095
    @danielgarcia9095 3 года назад +4

    In england they spoke with a Irish accent?

  • @donclark4685
    @donclark4685 11 лет назад +6

    This is Great! So interesting! Great Job.

  • @davidhuber7552
    @davidhuber7552 3 месяца назад

    I visited the museum outside settlement on a frigid day some years ago - tremendous. I sometimes think there are parallels between how the Wampanoag perceived the English upon contact and how humans perceive Martians in science fiction.

  • @johnwayne6501
    @johnwayne6501 3 года назад

    really enjoyed this video.

  • @cristalhernandez4169
    @cristalhernandez4169 3 года назад +2

    How are they still alive

  • @8091pinewood
    @8091pinewood 9 лет назад +5

    I think the actor portraying Hobamock did a great job. BTW, I was born in Plymouth. Ma.

  • @glendasaravia1916
    @glendasaravia1916 8 лет назад +2

    I want to go their again I went 3 years ago

  • @JLummin
    @JLummin 3 года назад +8

    grew up near Boston and always wanted to visit there and kinda grew up thinking it is a real village like Amish communities but it is a museum village that has actors hired to portray the pilgrims and Native Americans of the period. I read that they hire and train the actors to perfect the accents and their speech and obviously stay in character so I can imagine that its like Disney World where the actors have to be trained and dedicated in staying in character. I hope to visit there someday

    • @hoangminhle8705
      @hoangminhle8705 Год назад

      Giờ tôi mới hiểu tại sao có nhiều người da đỏ nhìn giống người da trắng thay vì trông giống người châu á

    • @ashazarr8241
      @ashazarr8241 4 месяца назад

      The Native actors are all Native Americans.

  • @QueenShireen
    @QueenShireen 7 лет назад +3

    Very good video! :)

  • @womanhere
    @womanhere 2 года назад

    It’s so amazing

  • @warriorofthemosthigh7565
    @warriorofthemosthigh7565 5 лет назад +10

    Hobamock played here is most definitely Native. If youre a Native you know what our people look like

    • @ashazarr8241
      @ashazarr8241 4 месяца назад

      Yeah, all the Native actors are Native. :) I asked when I was there on Indigenous People’s Day. Never made time to visit the Pilgrims’ town. Too painful even though I’m descended from a number of them.

  • @the_Sam20
    @the_Sam20 8 лет назад +4

    I went there on November 2011 on a field trip!

  • @IrishmanNH
    @IrishmanNH 10 лет назад +7

    I've been there once for a New England tour. Met a lot of people, I like seeing the Native Americans, Made me feel like I stepped back in time,

    • @robinhoodstfrancis
      @robinhoodstfrancis 9 лет назад +1

      I was born in Boston, grew up near NYC, and have been into world music and cross cultural activities from martial arts to food co-ops. I visited PP at one point and loved it. This is a great video, with excellent work by all the actors and personnel. It gives a great feel of the history, and is a great chance for people to go deeper in some of America´s cultural roots. Those were non-automatized days of living close to the land, with a need for intercultural understanding, and that´s what today´s world really needs, like bringing the U.N. together with NOLS, Appalachian Trail hikers, and an international student exchange program.. Truly, it was a great gift, and i thank thee all for your most sundry skill and work. A fine way to thank the Creator, and as Black Elk called it, if I recall correctly, Wakan Tonka. Let´s meetash....

  • @nariegallegos3146
    @nariegallegos3146 7 лет назад +4

    I think it is a good video the native did a good job and is very cute also in his other videos hes an atrative guy

  • @sandrapaz5834
    @sandrapaz5834 3 года назад

    i watched this for something in school thank u

  • @BubblegumPost
    @BubblegumPost 11 лет назад +3

    This is terrific. We'll feature it tomorrow on Bubblegum Post. Thanks!

  • @justrosy5
    @justrosy5 Год назад

    So I used Google's BARD ChatGPT thing and said, "Tell me about American Residential Architecture." It listed all the different residential Architectural styles in the US by listing them off by name, then describing them. It refused to give links to pages that discussed them further, so I started Googling each one, and "Colonial" was the first one that came up! I clicked on "Videos" and this was the first video to come up! Glad it did! I'm posting about that here because I think there's a good opportunity for students to use this method to supplement their studies. First Google BARD for the basics, then RUclips for more info. All free! I really appreciate how this video helped me learn better about what a textbook or ChatGPT could only describe in words or 2D images (no images in ChatGPT though). I intend to keep using this learning method! Pass it on!

  • @cristiansalgado1869
    @cristiansalgado1869 3 года назад +2

    cool field trip :)

  • @nutmegger1957
    @nutmegger1957 10 лет назад +4

    Plimoth Plantation is not new to us. We've been there. A couple of observations if I may. The Natives were previously not "role playing" at Plimoth. In fact, they felt that to "role plaly" was to dimish who they were/are as a people. It's interesting to see that the young man portraying "Hobomock," was trying to Act. Secondly, I remember asking the Character Actors once, "Have you tapped your trees yet?" They had not learned from the Natives yet, (at the year of their focus as Plimoth) how to do that, for Syrup. (Just a bit of trivea)

  • @jennascruggs8
    @jennascruggs8 11 лет назад +2

    Awesome:-)

  • @jess9956
    @jess9956 Год назад +1

    Well done, but a fairly large oversight: Elizabeth Hopkins does not mention that her baby Oceanus, died on the voyage over!
    Constance is my great+++ grandmother.
    Loved hearing the accents.

  • @melanieparker7898
    @melanieparker7898 8 лет назад +2

    I did not know some of the things you talked about in this video. That is pretty interesting!

  • @MinhNguyen-ff6xf
    @MinhNguyen-ff6xf 8 лет назад +4

    Expect to visit Plymouth one day!

  • @juliewitt7496
    @juliewitt7496 8 лет назад +2

    Saw Plymouth a long time ago, in '68. The tour guide was showing us Plymouth Rock. He was wearing a colonial costume with a hole in its rear end. All we did was laugh. I was just a kid.

  • @oliviastevens6023
    @oliviastevens6023 2 года назад

    I like his feathers and I love Plymouth I live in Missouri green valley

  • @ghostfromdeadmenatseawilli2248
    @ghostfromdeadmenatseawilli2248 5 лет назад +5

    The game is life work .

  • @rosaosuna4022
    @rosaosuna4022 6 лет назад +1

    I will like to visit this place

  • @rodrigobartolo4047
    @rodrigobartolo4047 3 года назад +4

    This Video was made 8 years ago Today is Monday | November | 23 | 2020😋

  • @paulinecormier7238
    @paulinecormier7238 11 лет назад +5

    Wonderful, entertaining and informing. However, it is misnamed as I was expecting a 'virtual tour of the village/museum. It is a documentary on the cultures of the day, albeit, a very good one.

  • @lindapoteat6545
    @lindapoteat6545 Год назад

    Where is the tour of the Mayflower?

  • @paulmcguire3789
    @paulmcguire3789 8 лет назад +1

    nicely done

  • @kknation105
    @kknation105 5 лет назад

    Thankd

  • @Tristargodzilla
    @Tristargodzilla 7 лет назад +1

    Great , now show a recreation of a plantation in South Carolina circa 1840.

    • @nimbostratus6870
      @nimbostratus6870 3 года назад

      I know this is veeery late, but there are actually these places, and they're mostly horrific and racist (to their workers)

  • @happyderp2717
    @happyderp2717 3 года назад +3

    This was helpful thank you!

  • @infernalswords8902
    @infernalswords8902 6 лет назад +3

    I watched this in school.

  • @autumnspring6624
    @autumnspring6624 6 лет назад

    They were pilgrims whether they call them that or not or when they got the term.

  • @jamieharkin5141
    @jamieharkin5141 10 лет назад +7

    ...and our Native People NEVER fake their accent. They share the history of their ancestors from a modern day perspective.

    • @jwlundgren
      @jwlundgren 10 лет назад +3

      could be a regional accent or he is hearing impaired. The ends of words are missing or very "light"

    • @TheSuburbanBase
      @TheSuburbanBase 10 лет назад +10

      Their acting here. He has to act like he just learned English. Its not like the white people here are actually pilgrims.

    • @mackenziewhethers1257
      @mackenziewhethers1257 6 лет назад +1

      lol the way he drops some endings may be acting but hs accent is not a far cry from the new england accent of MA, NH And ME.

  • @xkioskii8629
    @xkioskii8629 3 года назад +19

    Bro somebody save me from school

  • @irmarichards7764
    @irmarichards7764 24 дня назад

    My 8th great grandfather was William Brewster.

  • @thetrumpnewsnetwork7503
    @thetrumpnewsnetwork7503 6 лет назад +6

    Hey I recognize that clay oven from Jas. Townsend and Son

  • @amberdavis5928
    @amberdavis5928 3 года назад

    Yes

  • @FrankJSmith76
    @FrankJSmith76 3 года назад

    If I may, let me suggest a new video, The Pilgrims, 17th-Century English Emigrants, available at this link:
    ruclips.net/video/DzDeCLpJkYE/видео.html

  • @JohnnyBlaze5100
    @JohnnyBlaze5100 3 года назад +1

    well done

  • @jess9956
    @jess9956 Год назад

    Was there really evidence that Constance Hopkins was ever in London to know of the marketplace?

  • @paul_xflfa4539
    @paul_xflfa4539 3 года назад

    very schön

  • @MrTee-hw7mp
    @MrTee-hw7mp 3 года назад +2

    Is all of your clothing handmade, Hobbamok?
    “No, actually this was imported from a factory in China, moron!”

  • @leomcauliffe411
    @leomcauliffe411 3 года назад +2

    holy crap those girls are over 200 years old

  • @jonathanmontes4038
    @jonathanmontes4038 3 года назад +1

    This all after right 😭

  • @pixelsock1446
    @pixelsock1446 3 года назад +1

    i am bein totrured by school help me

  • @johnn3542
    @johnn3542 3 года назад

    Plimoth, Plymouth?

  • @laynemaag4003
    @laynemaag4003 2 года назад +1

    cool place omg

  • @jamesrupert2945
    @jamesrupert2945 Год назад

    I’m listening

  • @gamewithrivi4951
    @gamewithrivi4951 3 года назад

    yea

  • @TRINI123A
    @TRINI123A Год назад

    eel pie! omg

  • @cholos17
    @cholos17 9 лет назад +1

    The first Thanksgiving happened with the Spanish in St. Augustine, Florida in 1565. Look it up. Of course its a nice holiday but technically speaking it started with the Spanish.

    • @kevinkaiser3236
      @kevinkaiser3236 2 года назад

      Actually, Native peoples were holding thanksgivings long before Europeans arrived. They had thanksgivings for many events, such as "Green Corn Thanksgiving" and "Strawberry Thanksgiving."

    • @cholos17
      @cholos17 Год назад

      @@neutraliserjanine More people speak Spanish in the USA than in all of Spain. Spanish has been spoken here especially in the Southwest longer than English.

    • @cholos17
      @cholos17 Год назад

      @@neutraliserjanine The number I gave includes only US Citizens. Spanish got here first sorry. No historian disputes this. The Viking got to the Americas first but not the current USA. The Spanish were the first Europeans to have an actual effect and explore the land.

  • @Benicio_Fols
    @Benicio_Fols 4 года назад +1

    I weather this in school

  • @lusolad
    @lusolad 10 лет назад +5

    Huge powwow Roach!!!

  • @maceys3299
    @maceys3299 3 года назад

    i live right next to there

  • @brianparent
    @brianparent 2 года назад

    Oh...I hate liars! I guess that can be a problem. Of course, I know history too, and that sets me apart from most others. I've been to MGH in Boston many times. I still haven't visited The Paul Revere House. I've been to Cheers on Beacon Street, they only opened at 11 A.M. I was there at 10 A.M., so I still haven't had a burger and fries there. I don't drink, but a bottle of Pepsi is just fine by me. I was supposed to stay at The Sheraton on Dalton St. the last time I was there, but I ended up in the emergency room at MGH instead a few weeks ago. Can't wait for Dr. Ricciardi to schedule another surgery for me. Tired of living in pain. Just went through a Liver Transplant there in October of 2021. I was in the hospital a total of 6 months last year all together. Tired of that too. One more operation, and I'm golden....Well, I hope!

    • @brianparent
      @brianparent 2 года назад

      Plymouth, MA....Home of my ancestors. I will never forget The Mayflower, Speedwell, and The Fortune like others do or The Wampanoag Clan or Narragansett Clan, or Chief Massasoit, or King Philip. I guess that is why I have a lot of respect for Indians since Roger Williams became the first Abolitionist even after Anne Hutchinson was killled by Sewanoy Indians in 1643 who came to know Roger Williams. Such a web of history that led to "Religious Freedom," a quest by Pilgrims also shared by our U.S. Founding Fathers. "God save us all," a motto changed from "God Save The Queen." History sure is a very complicated place. That is for sure, and I can't even believe how much I've learned. I hated history classes in school. lol

    • @brianparent
      @brianparent 2 года назад

      One day, when I'm all better, I'll visit your plantation. I've been wanting to take a camping trip on Motorcycle for years. While driving a Semi across The United States for CR England, I didn't get to visit much. Always pressed for time.

  • @ObamAmerican48
    @ObamAmerican48 3 года назад

    Plymouth. Plimoth. Who knew...

  • @storytimecompilations5496
    @storytimecompilations5496 6 лет назад

    ilove you

  • @AAvfx
    @AAvfx 4 года назад +5

    I'm here as a reminder for your call, you're a universal soul 💖😇

  • @R0SEY.F0X..
    @R0SEY.F0X.. 5 лет назад +1

    can you make more video's like this i' learning about eastern woodlands and plimoth.thankyou.

  • @sachemofboston3649
    @sachemofboston3649 4 года назад +6

    I find it funny that the natives people have strong Boston/New England accents and the white people have regular American accents

    • @oliviastevens6023
      @oliviastevens6023 2 года назад +1

      Thank you for your service I have a cousin who is in the Marines he’s in Hawaii

  • @stevesmith4355
    @stevesmith4355 6 лет назад +1

    I'm going to plimouth plantachoin

  • @mmhickcox
    @mmhickcox 7 лет назад +2

    I am a student in Mrs.Coronas class in second grade

  • @amybennett2343
    @amybennett2343 Год назад +1

    What happened to the Plimouth Colony webcast? I've been using for years. I checked the link last Friday for today's lessons, but now it's disappeared. So sad! This video is boring.

  • @Noah-uy7qm
    @Noah-uy7qm 6 лет назад +2

    I love this even the inden

  • @will2Collett
    @will2Collett 9 лет назад +15

    NICE NATIVE AMERICAN INTERPRETATION. THEY WOULD HAVE HAD THE BROKEN ENGLISH THAT HOBOMUCK WOULD HAVE. THIS IS SO COOL . . .

    • @will2Collett
      @will2Collett 3 года назад

      Better than Bahston, check out the accent in Maine. There are accents all over New England.

    • @oliviastevens6023
      @oliviastevens6023 2 года назад +1

      You’re not cute

    • @will2Collett
      @will2Collett 2 года назад +1

      @@oliviastevens6023 Not trying to be. I live in Cambridge, Mass, right next to BOSTON, Mass.

  • @f0ry0u81
    @f0ry0u81 Год назад

    Why didn't he ask her what she thinks about the cameras?

  • @janellejames8832
    @janellejames8832 3 года назад +1

    mine diid

  • @loosinator
    @loosinator 3 года назад +1

    Hi!

  • @ingridswen
    @ingridswen Год назад

    Did they inhabit this land for 12,000 years? Do you know the number of Natives by now in that area, even before the Pilgrims? No way.

  • @swampertjustin9676
    @swampertjustin9676 3 года назад

    His hand glitched 12:23

  • @citrusthetoad
    @citrusthetoad 6 лет назад

    at my elementary - intermediate school, they milked the fuck out of the place, and went there almost every year.

    • @purepepperedchickenrelish5254
      @purepepperedchickenrelish5254 3 года назад +1

      I remember going when I was in elementary school I wish we went more this place is cool but im from Lowell MA so it was kinda far especially for a bunch of little kids lol but as you get older you appreciate it more I would love to go back

  • @-bambi7550
    @-bambi7550 6 лет назад +1

    My teacher told me to watch this (个_个)

  • @resumar9894
    @resumar9894 7 лет назад +2

    My pet peeve-- The lady in the red jacket somewhat contradicted the lady in blue pilgrim attire. The Pilgrim lady referred to Edward Winslow"s letter stating that they ate fowl and did military exercises. His letter also refers to their eating turkey and having a parade. The main thing is that we can know many details that today's "authoritative historians" try to pass off as legends and myths, stating we "cannot really know." While this might seem picky, it annoys me that we taught our children one thing and then newspapers (and now the Internet) love to discount all that, saying we cannot know. But the person who does the research can learn a great many things about history, including the character, attitudes, and motives of the people living throughout various times in history. And so often, those who "can't really know," like to insist that the Indians and Pilgrims did not really get along. The often like to say that the English harmed the Indians. While many diud, it was not this group of people. To blame this group because they are white and from Europe is just as racist as any other blaming that goes on towards people from other origins. Pretty good video-- thanks for doing it.
    BTW, som historical fiction, Christian included, is just as guilty of ascribing character qualities for the sake of plot that were not true to the characters in their novels.

  • @PaganTeapot
    @PaganTeapot 8 лет назад +2

    I was waiting for the two Wampanoag to just go ham and kick the benches over and storm off disgusted. But alas. I kid. Great video.I was truly fascinated. Is this a place you can visit? Where everyone is in Character?

    • @resumar9894
      @resumar9894 7 лет назад +1

      Yes, a living museum

    • @another90daystochangethis34
      @another90daystochangethis34 6 лет назад +1

      You can ask the people in character about things that would be familiar to them or their time. There are also general guides who answer questions that wouldn't make sense to ask someone who was actually from that time period.

  • @Vercingetorix.Fantasia
    @Vercingetorix.Fantasia 2 года назад +1

    Unfortunately all of the Wampanoag Men have moved on. They were forced during covid to find other work and as a result there remains only 3 wanpanoag women on the home site.
    They means they can no longer keep the fires, do the work with the dug outs, etc.
    I hope some men return. It's an entirely different experience without them

  • @morroschreiber
    @morroschreiber 7 лет назад +2

    Whoa! Nice to just eat out of the serving dish!! Does his Italian family do it that way at their Thanksgiving dinners? Because in my family, we think it's a bit disgusting and rude to eat right out of the serving dish, off of the serving spoon!! Sheesh!

  • @marleymom
    @marleymom 3 года назад +1

    yeet

  • @adriennewalker8303
    @adriennewalker8303 Год назад

    They are divers of acpcolipto too sweetie

  • @sarahpope2367
    @sarahpope2367 Год назад

    Plymouth is NOT the first permanent English colony, Jamestown is.

  • @Labooboobombah
    @Labooboobombah 8 месяцев назад +2

    Please help me 10:15