Americans that think they’re Irish

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  • Опубликовано: 28 дек 2024

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  • @meditationsfortheanxiousmind
    @meditationsfortheanxiousmind  Год назад +2408

    Hi guys it’s me again (guy from video in the white jacket) Americans I love you deep down but please stop giving your money to Irish tourism they will just rip you off. start giving your money to ME instead so I can make cultural documentaries like this one and buy myself new clothes because I need them✨ if you’d like to support you can do so via the buy me a coffee link in the description

    • @gejzervosta
      @gejzervosta Год назад +9

      I fully agree sir

    • @philosoraptor777
      @philosoraptor777 Год назад +9

      I'll send you a jacket.

    • @7EEVEE
      @7EEVEE Год назад

      whoa, theres you

    • @7EEVEE
      @7EEVEE Год назад +3

      do ya know micky bartlett

    • @ValerianDare5658
      @ValerianDare5658 Год назад +31

      You disowned the diaspora in the video, we arent gonna give you money for the priviledge of being spat on.

  • @AlexVegasUK
    @AlexVegasUK Год назад +7383

    I love how Americans always identify as their great-great-great-great grandmother's nationality but they don't like immigrants.

    • @ZechsMerquise73
      @ZechsMerquise73 Год назад +2

      europeans on the other hand love immigration when its happening in someone else's country

    • @jackreilly4427
      @jackreilly4427 Год назад +195

      Only if we learned to how to treat immigrants like the UK. They historically have been so kind to outsiders.

    • @nektarios5291
      @nektarios5291 Год назад +80

      ​@@ZechsMerquise73considering no European countries are settler colonies like the US that literally depended on immigration then ye we like them fine. We just don't have the same history.

    • @nektarios5291
      @nektarios5291 Год назад

      ​@@jackreilly4427UK and US is the same shit at the end of the day, US is just the turd the UK shat out that grew a life of its own

    • @FrReilly
      @FrReilly Год назад +45

      Haha exactly it’s so weird

  • @piccalillipit9211
    @piccalillipit9211 Год назад +5085

    *AN AMERICA FREIND ASKED ME* "My grandmother is from Northern Ireland and my grandfather is from Ireland, when I visit Ireland will they think I'm British or Irish?"
    "They will most definitely think you are American:"

    • @crunch1757
      @crunch1757 Год назад +164

      Your friend is eligible for Irish citizenship

    • @user-uo2zt3qg8t
      @user-uo2zt3qg8t Год назад +406

      @crunch1757 please don't encourage them...

    • @thalissevero7627
      @thalissevero7627 Год назад +92

      @@crunch1757I am not sure about the Irish, but Latin Americans of any country can tell pretty easily an American of Latin American descent and it’s not really because of looks or anything like that. In most cases, they’ll barely be able to speak in their parents’ language but most times will be able to understand conversation, they will often have this racializing perception of Latin Americans (there are regions with more white people, other regions with more black people, but mestizos are pretty much everywhere in higher or lower percentage) and ask or say things that don’t really make that much sense in our cultural environment (No, you cannot be more or less Latin American than me just because of trait x, y, z you have which you associate with Latin American people and yes, I had a situation where an American guy just straight up said he was more Brazilian than me, a guy born and raised in Brazil until adulthood, because he watches more soccer/football games than I do)

    • @TheNumber
      @TheNumber Год назад +22

      When I visited Northern Ireland they thought I was English even though I’m 100% Californian and have never set foot in England.

    • @newjerseyyouth4853
      @newjerseyyouth4853 Год назад

      @@TheNumberthat’s because they probably believe the American revolution was a mistake (if they are loyalists)

  • @rebeccahicks2392
    @rebeccahicks2392 Год назад +1554

    I love the way people just stand there with a little smile as he roasts them.

    • @halk3
      @halk3 Год назад +7

      I think you are reading things into it that aren't there. This guy has done other videos where he makes comments about groups of people while people stand there without saying anything.

    • @killswitch6361
      @killswitch6361 Год назад +131

      @@halk3 You just repeated what he said with more words. I think YOU'RE the one reading into things too much.

    • @halk3
      @halk3 Год назад +19

      "Roast" is too strong a word in this context. He was not criticizing or mocking these people personally. They are just props. He probably asks people to stand there without saying anything while he says what he wanted to say.

    • @wjcferguson
      @wjcferguson Год назад +7

      People would do that whether they're oblivious, laughing along fully understanding, or just recognizing that they have no particular better option.

    • @thosethatcan
      @thosethatcan Год назад +3

      They're use to it @ trvmp n GOP n priests etc

  • @Nabium
    @Nabium 11 месяцев назад +396

    I can relate as a Norwegian. As a Norwegian living in the countryside I've always met these Americans coming over here to find the farm where their great grandfather was born. To find their heritage and roots. And I've always admired them, having heritage and roots, so in inspiration I decided one day to take the bus and see the farm where my great grandfather was born, which is about 30 minutes from here. As I stepped out of the bus I was gripped with tears. I slowly walked down towards the farm, knocked on the door and said with a strong American accent that hi my name was John, I'm from Minnesota and my great grandfather came from that farm. They showed me their traditional clothes, instruments and traditional food and we all felt so close, like we were distantly related. Which we were. And that's how I got in touch with my roots as an American with strong Norwegian heritage. I didn't even know I was American before that, I've lived in Norway all my life and don't even have anyone in my family from across the pond.

    • @HamelinSong
      @HamelinSong 11 месяцев назад +51

      I envy you. I wish I could visit the farm where my grandfather grew up in. It's 20 minutes away, but they built a supermarket there now.

    • @Nabium
      @Nabium 11 месяцев назад +80

      @@HamelinSong That's a touching story, imagine that, having ancestors from a supermarket. Which aisle did your grandfather come from? Tex-mex?

    • @KarunaHD
      @KarunaHD 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@Nabium that was too good

    • @Nabium
      @Nabium 11 месяцев назад +8

      @@anahata2009 At least I got free coffee and lefse.

    • @HamelinSong
      @HamelinSong 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@Nabium I mean, we are from Florence, so I hope for the Vin Santo aisle.... That would be an iconinc reunion.

  • @Ryan-kn6xd
    @Ryan-kn6xd Год назад +3626

    No one is more proud to be European than Americans

    • @makaylalynn206
      @makaylalynn206 Год назад +2

      America is full of immigrants. It’s just people trying to find out where their ancestors came from.. nationality is different than ethnicity, if you come to America you’ll find that people with Irish heritage have different traditions than someone with African heritage and yet they are both American. It’s not because they want to be European, it’s that there is a clear distinction between the two. I think Europeans have a hard time grasping the concept of a nation full of 3rd and 4th generation citizens that still have ties to their ancestry.

    • @user-jb1mb5xh9t
      @user-jb1mb5xh9t Год назад +205

      And yet also the most hateful towards europeans when the opportunity arises to separate themselves from the country they claim they're from lmao

    • @shaunsteele6926
      @shaunsteele6926 Год назад

      that's because we perfected European culture in North America, while you twats who stayed behind descended into socialism.

    • @caveworld7849
      @caveworld7849 Год назад +33

      Yep. See that all the time with Anglo Americans.

    • @cromwellg60
      @cromwellg60 Год назад +26

      Unless its English European

  • @thomasllewelynjones5546
    @thomasllewelynjones5546 Год назад +1528

    I’m Welsh, and one time my sister and I were on holiday in Washington DC, and we were chatting amongst ourselves in Welsh, and a lady (who was American just to clarify) came up to us and said “Excuse me, I couldn’t help but notice you’re speaking Celtic, my family is Irish, where in Ireland are you from?”

    • @-______-______-
      @-______-______- Год назад +257

      Mega cringe.

    • @punchy1325
      @punchy1325 Год назад +19

      😂😂😂😂

    • @elliotpaton5531
      @elliotpaton5531 Год назад +483

      I’m Scottish, so just speaking English in my own accent is enough for people to ask what bit of Ireland I’m from.

    • @stalfithrildi5366
      @stalfithrildi5366 Год назад +89

      Occupied Far East Ireland

    • @9wowable
      @9wowable Год назад +126

      who would’ve thought someone with the name thomasllewelynjones was Welsh 🤣

  • @gumbaa479
    @gumbaa479 Год назад +1672

    When I was in Ireland I asked an Irish lady what she thought of Americans that think they’re Irish. She laughed for like a full minute

    • @davidryan7613
      @davidryan7613 Год назад +36

      Did ya meet her outside Burger King on Ó Connell St?

    • @gumbaa479
      @gumbaa479 Год назад +17

      @@davidryan7613trinity college

    • @davidryan7613
      @davidryan7613 Год назад +37

      @@gumbaa479 and she laughed for a full minute just in response to that.
      Was she sniffing glue?

    • @shaggybreeks
      @shaggybreeks Год назад +16

      Ho-hum. This is intentionally misinterpreting a person's meaning when they say they "are" Irish, meaning that they ARE of Irish ancestry. I thank my Irish ancestors for leaving that mean country.

    • @serinadelmar6012
      @serinadelmar6012 Год назад +21

      @@shaggybreeks😂

  • @TinTeddyVideos
    @TinTeddyVideos Год назад +282

    Over on the AncestryDNA subreddit, there are daily posts from sad or confused Americans who have taken the DNA test, and discovered they don't actually have any measurable Irish DNA after all.
    And grandma clearly wasn't actually full-blood Cherokee.
    As they don't have any Indigenous genes either.
    It clearly is a heck of a shock for many.

    • @gyorkshire257
      @gyorkshire257 Год назад +29

      Those commercial DNA tests are mostly bollocks anyway, but it's not too surprising. Most Americans either choose their ethnicity from their surname, or if it's an unpopular one like English or Hungarian or something, they go for the most recent popular ethnic name. Now, surnames are handed down the male line more frequently than DNA is, so you are always going to get some big mismatches between name and DNA in a place like the USA.

    • @laptv2144
      @laptv2144 11 месяцев назад +1

      Most of us don’t need a DNA test because every name in our ancestral line is Irish and we can easily find when and where our ancestors were born. It’s honestly funny how mad it makes y’all that we are Irish especially because our identity is responsible for a large part of your economy.

    • @laptv2144
      @laptv2144 11 месяцев назад +15

      @@gyorkshire257 The DNA tests are not bollocks. They can literally trace back the town that your ancestors lived in 400 years ago and show a direct line from person to person. I had Czech ancestry and it showed me the exact region of Czechia and the towns in Bohemia.

    • @gyorkshire257
      @gyorkshire257 11 месяцев назад

      No, they can't do that. Anybody who is telling you that is lying, unless they are comparing your DNA to that of a 400 year old body dug up from consecrated ground.@@laptv2144

    • @Ramberta
      @Ramberta 11 месяцев назад +3

      Yep, my dad thought he had indigenous Canadian genes, but turns out he's just mostly Irish! Haha!

  • @MOED.weightlifting
    @MOED.weightlifting Год назад +483

    Good thing those Americans didn’t understand a word of what Frankie said

    • @CircumlunarFeasibility
      @CircumlunarFeasibility Год назад +18

      just sounded like a slurring drunk, i mean irishman.

    • @Thedarcyboys
      @Thedarcyboys 9 месяцев назад +16

      @@CircumlunarFeasibilityFound the American

    • @michellesuter9259
      @michellesuter9259 9 месяцев назад +1

      Oh, this one did....

    • @WilliamMcKenna-x2e
      @WilliamMcKenna-x2e 7 месяцев назад +2

      Americans hear everything. Americans expect non-Americans to be disrespectful so they don't say anything but I would like to see you try that on American soil.

  • @kevinhateswriting
    @kevinhateswriting Год назад +714

    As a 9th generation Irish-American this really spoke to me and my deep Irish roots.

    • @Ionabrodie69
      @Ionabrodie69 Год назад +36

      You are American NOT Irish 🙄.. my ancestry goes back to the Plantagenets I do not consider myself Royal ..🤨🇬🇧

    • @kevinhateswriting
      @kevinhateswriting Год назад +145

      whoosh@@Ionabrodie69

    • @-______-______-
      @-______-______- Год назад +71

      Same here. My ex girlfriend's step mother was 2% Irish, and this really brought back emotional memories for me and my Irish roots too.

    • @Scottie444
      @Scottie444 Год назад +1

      🤭

    • @Ned88Man
      @Ned88Man Год назад +9

      Whoosh is right@@Ionabrodie69

  • @Omega30t2RG
    @Omega30t2RG Год назад +3079

    There's nothing worse for an English man than being in a New York irish pub/bar and surrounded by aggressive Americans who think they are Irish,who blame me and my friends for occupying their far away home that they dont come from 😂

    • @stalfithrildi5366
      @stalfithrildi5366 Год назад +226

      Thank fuck that nobody lived in the land thats now New York before all you guys arrived tho

    • @batemanboi9672
      @batemanboi9672 Год назад +156

      Man it’s almost like the famine that is the reason the Irish ended up in NY was caused in part by your country of origin.

    • @thisfishiscoolashell
      @thisfishiscoolashell Год назад +15

      @@batemanboi9672 Blaming people generations down the line is stupid. They had nothing to do with it. Get a grip, you don't hear the english mouthing off at the danish and swedish for invading do you?

    • @dynguskhan
      @dynguskhan Год назад +36

      Yeah I wouldn’t mention burning down their capital either bud

    • @batemanboi9672
      @batemanboi9672 Год назад +62

      Fun fact in 1850 the population of Ireland was about 5 million Catholic Irish natives (excluding Protestants as a proxy for English settlers) and about 1 million Catholic Irish immigrated to the US during the great famine, or about 20% of the entire Catholic Irish population. In America with better access to food and resources, these Catholic Irish Americans were able to have larger families than those who remained in Ireland, thus there are more Americans of Irish heritage than in Ireland itself. The AOH member body speaks for itself :)

  • @leelee7609
    @leelee7609 Год назад +185

    Being Scottish in America is so scary, everyone keeps assuming you are Irish, telling you they Irish, and then asking what the troubles were like

    • @The_Gallowglass
      @The_Gallowglass 10 месяцев назад +6

      Probably didn't happen

    • @WaitAMinute1989
      @WaitAMinute1989 8 месяцев назад +6

      In Canada, is not that different. Most Canadians, identify themselves as Scottish (mainly after the movie Braveheart).

    • @WilliamMcKenna-x2e
      @WilliamMcKenna-x2e 7 месяцев назад +4

      There is a huge difference in Irish-Americans and Scottish-Americans but there is some blurring of the lines

    • @irishduck2826
      @irishduck2826 6 месяцев назад +5

      And then Irish people getting confused for Scottish people 😂

    • @nothingtofind9099
      @nothingtofind9099 6 месяцев назад +5

      I'm (or was at the very least) Catholic in America (with western European features) so I got cornered a lot by Irish American Catholics to reveal my Irish heritage, even a bit or at very least some British heritage. Nope. NO IRISH in me, not even on St. Paddy's Day despite being (or was anyways) Catholic.

  • @junpi8562
    @junpi8562 Год назад +452

    A guy with an American accent refused to serve my sister in a bar in Boston because of her English accent. But we have Irish great grandparents, making us probably about as Irish as him... (i.e not Irish at all.)

    • @shaunsteele6926
      @shaunsteele6926 Год назад +48

      should've told him that, then he'd consider you family

    • @iankelly3081
      @iankelly3081 Год назад

      Much like their current president Biden. Could he be any more blatant about how he hates the British?

    • @NeillWylie
      @NeillWylie Год назад +100

      I'm Scottish from Glasgow and when I was in Boston they were all giving me free shit because "Hey that guy drinks for free tonight, he's Irish like us". Needless to say, I didn't shatter their illusions or point out that they don't know what an Irish accent sounds like.

    • @ianbyrne465
      @ianbyrne465 11 месяцев назад +18

      @@NeillWylieIt baffles me how often Americans get the accents mixed up. I say this as an American (though my father was born and raised in Scotland) but they really are fairly distinct accents.

    • @markwilson5967
      @markwilson5967 11 месяцев назад +6

      ​@@ianbyrne465because they dont come across foreigners enough to differentiate.

  • @daysofboyhood
    @daysofboyhood Год назад +1354

    Hey, I LIKE Americans that think they're Irish. They're really, really easy to pick up. You just teach them like 3 words of Gaelic and they're all over you.
    I'm not even Irish, I'm Scottish, but they don't know the difference...

    • @jumantewashington8715
      @jumantewashington8715 Год назад +13

      Is é an canán ceudna.

    • @annmarie_
      @annmarie_ Год назад +13

      🤣

    • @KellyMonk156
      @KellyMonk156 Год назад +23

      you've got plenty of indians living in the UK who don't speak hindi. does that make them "not indian"?

    • @osscarfransson
      @osscarfransson Год назад +74

      @@KellyMonk156 Do they practice and have basic understanding on hindi culture?

    • @KellyMonk156
      @KellyMonk156 Год назад +15

      @@osscarfransson LOL gatekeeping ethnicity

  • @TheMixCurator
    @TheMixCurator Год назад +1874

    Fun fact - By 1860, there were 7* million German immigrants living in the US. This is by far and away the largest single ethnic group in the states (i still believe it is currently). In comparison, there were under a million Irish in the country at that time.
    Guess some events in the 20th century dropped the enthusiasm to be seen as German.
    * Edited as got figure wrong

    • @lucawasserer
      @lucawasserer Год назад +23

      It's sad

    • @dayglodoggy
      @dayglodoggy Год назад +111

      unless its oktoberfest and time to get DDDDDDDDDD-RUNK!!!

    • @davidpryle3935
      @davidpryle3935 Год назад +53

      What’s your sources for those statistics ? In 1860 the population of the United States was just over 30 million. You’re saying that almost one third of the entire population were German immigrants ? Also, you’re figure for the number of Irish immigrants seems quite low, considering the huge immigration from Ireland during the famine, and the following years.

    • @rexfoxoloughlin6033
      @rexfoxoloughlin6033 Год назад +24

      @@davidpryle3935 Huge imigration sure, but from a smaller starting population. Numbers of Irish there look about right, 1 million ish Irish emigrated during the famine in total.

    • @RyfkahChan
      @RyfkahChan Год назад +44

      @@davidpryle3935 i know shit about statistics, but considering that germans are a much larger ethnic group than irish (if you consider all germans as one ethnic group they have been the secondlargest european ethnic group for quite some time, afaik only russians are more). so even if a much larger percentage of irish emigrated than germans, it sounds reasonable that the total number of german emigrees was higher.

  • @Thejugglingbum
    @Thejugglingbum 11 месяцев назад +51

    I too come from a family that, as I was growing up, told me I was Irish. Despite being born and raised in northeast Philadelphia we still sang Irish songs at gatherings and my cousins did Irish dance. I found out later that our grandmother was full Irish but our grandfather was half Irish and half French. Now I smoke cigarettes and wear a beret and ride my bike around with a stale baguette in the basket.

  • @justliam2768
    @justliam2768 Год назад +537

    It was only a matter of time before you addressed this issue.
    You gave them plenty of opportunity to pack it in.

    • @Aster_Risk
      @Aster_Risk Год назад +8

      Is this an intentional reference to Jump Around?

    • @davidpryle3935
      @davidpryle3935 Год назад +5

      Strange then that the Irish Americans are specifically mentioned in the foundation document of the Irish Republic, the 1916 Proclamation.

    • @jumantewashington8715
      @jumantewashington8715 Год назад +2

      ​@@davidpryle3935Which was written by Pádraig Pearse-a "plastic Paddy".

    • @davidpryle3935
      @davidpryle3935 Год назад +2

      @@jumantewashington8715 The 1916 Proclamation had several authors, including Pearse. Many academics and historians regard Sean McDermott as having had the most influence on the document. But besides that, I’d be interested to know, What is a “plastic Paddy” ?

    • @jumantewashington8715
      @jumantewashington8715 Год назад

      All of the Irish diaspora are Plastic Paddies, according to the native-born gombeens.

  • @SAHBfan
    @SAHBfan Год назад +1054

    I suffered a tirade of anti-British abuse about how the British slaughter Irish babies in their cots on a daily basis from an ‘Irish’ America while I was in California. Turns out her Great Grandfather -one of them - was from Ireland, allegedly. I was born in England, my parents were born in England, I have an English accent. I’d say I was English. All of my great Grandparents were born in Ireland, though, plus one grandfather - so I am at least 350% more Irish than she was…. 🙄

    • @zombieoutbreakprod
      @zombieoutbreakprod Год назад +203

      Always seems the biggest IRA supporters I see online are American whose nan was 3% Irish and don't actually know anything about the situation at all lol

    • @Amberle38
      @Amberle38 Год назад +73

      It's such an odd phenomenon because they're so patriotic at the same time. I have Irish grandparents, my dad spent time in both Ireland & England growing up, I literally have an Irish passport but I was born & raised in London - I'm English. Been to Ireland several times & strangely enough never been abused for being English either 😂

    • @BusbyTreeSurgery
      @BusbyTreeSurgery Год назад +3

      The mobs in town
      And the guns are out
      And Louie knows what it's all about

    • @ADayWithoutYesterday
      @ADayWithoutYesterday Год назад +11

      If you test your blood you'll find out you are Irish. You're not English just because you were born there or have an English accent. If you think otherwise then tell me who is more English, you or the baby girl born to Somali immigrants in an East London hospital this week. Embrace your ethnicity. The Irish need you right now.

    • @gregdart9920
      @gregdart9920 Год назад +2

      What’s worse if you are/ were dating somebody from Ireland and 8/10times some AHole intrudes on your date to tell you about their family history. And your Irish date politely nodding her head.

  • @bobocop69420
    @bobocop69420 Год назад +224

    I visited Dublin this year and Temple Bar was literally at breaking point with retired Americans explaining how they're Irish to anyone who'd listen.

    • @murphypaschal
      @murphypaschal Год назад

      Great. If you don't want to listen then don't. We are an ancient, proud, noble people. The snooty hubris of some naysayers should just be ignored. From my own experience, the worst offenders are the cutewhores whose families managed to avoid taking the boat.

    • @mckernan603
      @mckernan603 11 месяцев назад

      I fail to see the problem. Stick to the Hairy Lemon.

    • @The_Gallowglass
      @The_Gallowglass 10 месяцев назад +3

      To be fair Temple Bar is a tourist trap. Get out of Jackeenland as soon as ye can

    • @johnno8586
      @johnno8586 9 месяцев назад +5

      You'll consider any filthy black yoke off a boat last week Irish so be consistent.

    • @TzunSu
      @TzunSu 9 месяцев назад

      Seek help kid ​@@johnno8586

  • @MaximusLigmus
    @MaximusLigmus Год назад +119

    My aunt used to tell me stories all the time about how Irish we were. 2 decades and a DNA test later shows 90% mix of German and Austro-Hungarian. There wasn’t a lick of Irish in those results 😂

    • @labt8194
      @labt8194 11 месяцев назад +4

      there is no such ethnicity as 'austro-hungarian'

    • @MaximusLigmus
      @MaximusLigmus 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@labt8194 I don’t know how the test works, it wasn’t even mine it was my brothers. That’s just what I remember him telling me. Regardless, still no Irish.

    • @laptv2144
      @laptv2144 11 месяцев назад +1

      Okay your aunt was stupid. That doesn’t change the real ancestry of other Irish Americans

    • @AEgir347
      @AEgir347 11 месяцев назад

      then you have never heard of the austro-hungarian empire@@labt8194

    • @theduck0
      @theduck0 11 месяцев назад +6

      Reminds me of one "Italian"-American girl on tiktok or smth, who took a dna test and it turned out she was more German than Italian.

  • @michaelmcnally9737
    @michaelmcnally9737 Год назад +340

    My great, great grandfather came to canada in the late 19th century, then my great grandfather married some canadian woman and moved to chicago where my grandfather married some american woman, then my dad married my american mom whose grandparents came from Germany and Poland. So I'm basically Irish. just look at my name

    • @emmanuelgoldspleen2905
      @emmanuelgoldspleen2905 Год назад +9

      Lmfao

    • @Dreyno
      @Dreyno Год назад +5

      Perfectly cromulent.

    • @nadinegriffin5252
      @nadinegriffin5252 Год назад +1

      My heritage is a mix of Ukrainian, German and a percentage of Polish that I can't figure out. But I now identify as Irish because of my last name of my husband. Just kidding.
      All jokes aside, he can trace his portion of Irish roots back from Canada to the US but due to a fire that burned records can't trace them back to Ireland. He's a mix of Irish, Welsh, English and German roots. Not too sure if he has Scottish roots as well...
      So when our kids ask we say that they are Canadian but not Indigenous Canadian. But they also like to identify as Irish. 🤦🏼‍♀️

    • @alicequayle4625
      @alicequayle4625 Год назад +1

      ​@@nadinegriffin5252yeh I know that fire burned my g gmas records. IRA burned the census records office during the civil war. Hence my mum auntie and uncle cant get an Irish passport.

    • @loganstroganoff1284
      @loganstroganoff1284 Год назад +1

      You're very brave to admit you have Canuck ancestry.

  • @barryfoster453
    @barryfoster453 Год назад +496

    Englishman here...Love this! They tend to come here, also (perhaps on their way to Ireland) and tell us how Irish they are, and that they can't wait to visit their homeland! When you ask them if their parents are Irish, they ALWAYS say: "No, but there was an Irish person in my family in the late 1800s." You have to love the Americans.

    • @tripperdelaluna1
      @tripperdelaluna1 Год назад +7

      American here - that's an amazing story.

    • @barryfoster453
      @barryfoster453 Год назад +15

      @@tripperdelaluna1
      Well, we still love you (and are still thankful for WW2) even if we think you're all crazy.

    • @estbgti424
      @estbgti424 Год назад +64

      @@barryfoster453I mean we're not that thankful for WW2, we did a lot by ourselves before they decided to help out.

    • @barryfoster453
      @barryfoster453 Год назад +1

      @@estbgti424
      With all due respect, this is my interest. We did stand alone for two years...but not really. We were helped by our Commonwealth countries, and helped by resistance fighters. President Roosevelt really wanted to help, but after the horrors of WW1, the US people didn't. He did ensure that a lot of aid came our way. Admittedly, the US only entered WW2 as Germany declared war on them the day after Pearl Harbour. The US could have confined their operations to the Pacific, but they elected to get involved throughout the world, and it has to be said that we couldn't possibly have opposed Germany without the US. If you were to examine some parallel universe where the US kept to the Pacific only, then you might see a collaboration between Russia and Britain. However, D Day might never have happened, and Germany could have got the atom bomb first.

    • @ATXnomad698
      @ATXnomad698 Год назад +12

      @@estbgti424 ??? Ireland was one of the few countries to remain neutral up through the end of WW2. You can easily look it up. Y'all saw the Nazis and went "hmmm I can't decide if these guys are bad or not"

  • @lykanno5137
    @lykanno5137 Год назад +96

    For the first time ever I have absolutely zero doubt that these were just people you picked off the street

  • @scemat
    @scemat Год назад +214

    This was the funniest thing I've seen in quite some time. Especially the bit of the guy who found out about Ireland not being part of the UK from Netflix. 😂
    I can also confirm than many Americans think they are Italian in a similar manner.

    • @elemar5
      @elemar5 Год назад +9

      And African Americans.

    • @j1430
      @j1430 Год назад +2

      italian american is an entire culture though. a bunch of americans with italian heritage have grandparents or parents from italy.
      obviously their experiences won’t be the same as being born and raised in italy but its just as valid nonetheless.

    • @Squif2809
      @Squif2809 Год назад +18

      @@j1430tell me you missed the point without telling me you missed the point

    • @ALotOfCancer
      @ALotOfCancer Год назад

      ​@@elemar5 Maybe we should do a study on people like you...
      ...People too afraid to say their racist thoughts out loud and post them on the Internet for brownie points from like-minded pillsbury doughboys.

    • @ALotOfCancer
      @ALotOfCancer Год назад +16

      ​@@j1430Italians in the US are nothing like Italians overseas wtf are you on about.

  • @almister
    @almister Год назад +379

    Some of them looked genuinely sad. Poor Yanks, as an Englishman who has delusions of being Scottish, they have my sympathy.

    • @lucas82
      @lucas82 Год назад +62

      Why would an Englishman pretend to be Scottish, that's a step down, innit?

    • @barryfoster453
      @barryfoster453 Год назад +8

      @@lucas82
      It's very odd. My very English uncle went on about his Scottish ancestry, but although he had the name, Watson, I couldn't trace any Scottish in his family at all! His dad (my grandad) was a quarter Irish (!) and my nan was English.

    • @barryfoster453
      @barryfoster453 Год назад +4

      @@Ian1-ff3vi
      Thanks, Ian - didn't know that. My uncle even went to the trouble of finding his tartan.

    • @dointhebiz
      @dointhebiz Год назад

      It's a step up, geographically.@@lucas82

    • @BigBillKelly-x2z
      @BigBillKelly-x2z Год назад +6

      You should move up there and live out your delusions, it'd be great!

  • @Tom_-
    @Tom_- Год назад +152

    Thanks for doing this. I am neither American nor Irish, so I have no dog in this fight, but this still annoys me for no good reason.

    • @CircumlunarFeasibility
      @CircumlunarFeasibility Год назад +5

      you might want to look into that, see whats going on inside.

    • @Clleonie
      @Clleonie Год назад

      Here's one ☝️ ​@@CircumlunarFeasibility

    • @rachelcookie321
      @rachelcookie321 Год назад +21

      I’m Scottish so you’d think I’m completely unaffiliated but I’m sick of Irish Americans hearing my accent and then start asking where in Ireland I’m from because their great grandmother was from cork.

    • @CircumlunarFeasibility
      @CircumlunarFeasibility Год назад

      @@rachelcookie321 you dont sound very tolerant of people who arent trying to be malicious, in fact you sound petty, and if you are going to be bent out of shape about something, maybe it should be the fact that all of your countries in the british isles are being taken over while you do nothing about it? hows your "new" leader working out? really for your people huh? have another cookie, maybe all the bad men will go away, or are you pretending that everything is just wonderful?

    • @projectc.j.j3310
      @projectc.j.j3310 11 месяцев назад

      @@rachelcookie321don’t care

  • @Domn879
    @Domn879 Год назад +279

    Ah yes. A guy told me he was a quarter Irish once. I asked if that meant one of the his potential dads was Irish and he attempted to punch me in the face.

    • @TheBorkLaser
      @TheBorkLaser Год назад +5

      Hahsah😂😂

    • @darahdoyle3176
      @darahdoyle3176 Год назад +6

      Massive lols! Jimmy Carr quality burn!

    • @palaceofwisdom9448
      @palaceofwisdom9448 Год назад +26

      Not surprising, the Irish are known for being quick to brawl.

    • @Jorge-dw8pb
      @Jorge-dw8pb Год назад +2

      cool story bro

    • @Ciprian-Amarandei
      @Ciprian-Amarandei Год назад

      Irish peope are a big family. Each Irish is potentially related to each other

  • @martinmitchell7280
    @martinmitchell7280 Год назад +9

    Quite a big difference between someone whose ancestors left Ireland 200 years ago vs someone whose father is from Tyrone. That guy from Connecticut was legally an Irish citizen the day he was born. Indeed most countries - not though the US - grant citizenship on blood/parentage not where you are born.

  • @df1985
    @df1985 Год назад +247

    I know we laugh at it but as a Dubliner living in the city centre American tourists are very friendly and they love a chat. They seem genuinely happy to be visiting Ireland, other tourists can be miserable.

    • @peterlarkin762
      @peterlarkin762 Год назад +19

      So true. I was a tour guide for a while... Americans were lately sound and enjoying their time. French, Australian and Indian tourists were a huge PITA.

    • @df1985
      @df1985 Год назад +23

      @@peterlarkin762 the French are a different breed altogether as much as I love visiting France. My favourite pub mulligans gets plenty of tourists - when Americans sit beside me I know I’ll get a warm friendly chat 👍🏻

    • @davidmccann9811
      @davidmccann9811 Год назад +18

      I've usually found American tourists friendly too.

    • @seanwade8188
      @seanwade8188 Год назад +27

      Despite the stereotype, American tourists are usually super nice

    • @A_friendwithoutbenefits
      @A_friendwithoutbenefits Год назад +11

      And they tip.

  • @AlasdairXV
    @AlasdairXV Год назад +140

    I'm a different breed of american, I'm an american that thinks he's english. ground breaking new discovery of self identity, I came into ireland and started spouting unionist talking points and calling the locals ethnic slurs, because it's more fun.

    • @tk421trading6
      @tk421trading6 Год назад +27

      The English applaud this American....

    • @matchuBBG
      @matchuBBG Год назад +26

      Well mucker I'm proud to hear you found your new national Identity. We are embracing it too and would like to congratulate you with a free car

    • @cinilaknedalm
      @cinilaknedalm Год назад

      You sound simple.

    • @GlizzyGoblin757
      @GlizzyGoblin757 Год назад +22

      @@cinilaknedalmsimply based

    • @arthurfletcher4695
      @arthurfletcher4695 Год назад +5

      ​@@matchuBBGoh boy a free car sounds great!

  • @Coco-xb4qd
    @Coco-xb4qd Год назад +27

    I (born in Ireland) once got into a drunken debate while in a bar in America with an American who tried to tell me he was Irish because his great granda was from Ireland lmao

    • @kellydalstok8900
      @kellydalstok8900 Год назад +4

      By that standard Che Guevara was more Irish as his granny was from Derry.

    • @The_Gallowglass
      @The_Gallowglass 10 месяцев назад +5

      I wonder if these people realize, their grandfathers told their dads they were Irish and the dads said they were Irish, so on and so on. If you don't want to have a brotherhood with those people that's fine, but that makes you the asshole, not them.

    • @turtle-ot2qc
      @turtle-ot2qc 6 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@The_GallowglassThat's true, when TF are they supposed to stop saying that they're Irish, especially when each generation can only align with that origin

    • @gmodrules123456789
      @gmodrules123456789 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@kellydalstok8900
      Che being Irish explains so much about him lol

    • @sparkysjoint1616
      @sparkysjoint1616 4 месяца назад +1

      So if you move to Germany and have a kid, your kid is no longer Irish. Got it.

  • @kokonbini
    @kokonbini Год назад +101

    the look on 0:49 when he slowly realises he's getting the piss taken out of him and not posing for a documentary on "totally irish, dude" culture

  • @TheOneWhoKnocks969
    @TheOneWhoKnocks969 Год назад +387

    Americans who think they are Irish because their great-great-grandma had a shamrock tattoo"

    • @Anonymous-vu8qq
      @Anonymous-vu8qq Год назад +6

      Or their dad had a shamrock shake

    • @Jorge-dw8pb
      @Jorge-dw8pb Год назад +46

      Its because in the US people identify with the heritage of there genetic background. Go to NY/NJ and alot of people will identify as Irish or Italian. They aren't saying that they are Irish or Italian citizens they are just saying thats there main cultural background. When you are a country of immigrants of course you are going to hang on to your origins. No reason to shame them, especially since there ancestors and relatives who came from those countries are the ones who encourage them to identify with there country of origin.

    • @raindawnson9254
      @raindawnson9254 Год назад +30

      @@Jorge-dw8pbthank you!! I’m so sick of people harping on Americans solely because they don’t understand the background context of what we mean when we say we’re Irish or what have you. If only people bothered to do an ounce of research in something they don’t get but of course that’d be asking for too much

    • @onaematopia
      @onaematopia Год назад +37

      ⁠​⁠@@Jorge-dw8pb​​⁠​⁠I’ve never understood why some Irish people have a problem with Irish-Americans identifying as “Irish”, because they are Irish. Sure, their nationality is American but their ancestry is still Irish, regardless of whether they lived there or not. People from Ireland, Italy etc should be proud that the diaspora still embrace their roots. Just because they were born in the USA, that doesn’t doesn’t make them fake Irish/Italian etc. I’ve never liked the phrase “Plastic paddy”

    • @RazPerignon
      @RazPerignon Год назад +16

      Ethnicity never changes no matter what country you live in

  • @DugongClock
    @DugongClock Год назад +426

    The kid who said his Dad is Irish has a point, as that would mean he has Irish citizenship.

    • @emilyosullivan6770
      @emilyosullivan6770 Год назад +127

      Yeah... no. Citizenship is not the same thing as being Irish. Neither is heritage. It's not about blood or legal documents, it's about lived experiences.

    • @erin-mo8qe
      @erin-mo8qe Год назад +8

      Of course he's from CT tho lol

    • @DugongClock
      @DugongClock Год назад +120

      @@emilyosullivan6770 If he has family back home, I’d speculate he spent much of his “lived experience” in Ireland as well. It seems like you’re fixating more on something like an accent. I know people who speak Irish with an American accent, and thus can speak to monolingual Irish speakers while the average Irish person cannot. I know Irish people who have moved to Australia, the UK, or the US who lose their accent after a while. Dual citizenship and émigré communities are a real thing, and I’ve known Americans who were born in the States and lack the American accent, keeping their parents’ foreign accent due to being more socialized with said communities. Even to this day the “lived experience” of many Irish is emigrating for economic opportunities, hell this has become a stereotype in Irish culture.

    • @MacToirdealbhaigh
      @MacToirdealbhaigh Год назад +37

      Irish is an ethnicity, can't argue with scientific facts kiddies.

    • @afrosteeve
      @afrosteeve Год назад +40

      He is Irish, nationality is based on genetics not geographical location.

  • @LilyGrace95
    @LilyGrace95 Год назад +35

    I'm English, but ¼ Irish on my dad's side. My brother and I are entitled to Irish citizenship, and have been looking for the documents for over a decade. But I'm uncomfortable saying I'm "Irish" and just say "British" instead. I have several American friends who say they're Irish, but their last living Irish relative died in like, 1900 😂😂

    • @chrisy6707
      @chrisy6707 Год назад

      My friend got an Irish passport for easy EU travel, it sounded like a good idea. Can't you still say you are British with Irish heritage?

    • @LilyGrace95
      @LilyGrace95 Год назад +2

      @@chrisy6707 Yes of course I can. But why bother when I can just say "British"? The whole point of my comment was that fixating on your heritage as your identity is an incredibly bizarre thing, and something pretty much solely northern Americans do.

    • @chrisy6707
      @chrisy6707 Год назад +1

      @@LilyGrace95 Yes I guess the only reason or time to say you are Irish is when accepting an Irish Passport, for travel purposes. It does seem that Northern Americans are far more concerned about being Scottish or Irish that people living in Scotland or Ireland.

    • @xragdoll5662
      @xragdoll5662 Год назад +1

      1/4? Oh geez 🙄🙄

    • @LilyGrace95
      @LilyGrace95 Год назад

      @@xragdoll5662 ......? What's "oh jeez" about what I said?

  • @kieranbell2221
    @kieranbell2221 Год назад +79

    on behalf of all of Scotland, thankyou Ireland for being a physical barrier between us and the Americans tryna "reconnect with their roots"

    • @loganstroganoff1284
      @loganstroganoff1284 Год назад

      You're gonna miss them and their money the more your countries turn into 3rd world hell holes from all the "refugees". Americans spend their money and go home. Mohammad from Algeria moves into an apartment with his 10 kids and tells you he's scottish now.

    • @sernoddicusthegallant6986
      @sernoddicusthegallant6986 Год назад

      We actually get plenty of "Scottish" Americans trying to "reconnect with their roots". But fortunately our government came up with a cunning trap known as "Inverness" specifically designed to lure tourists to the least densely populated region of Scotland where the second hand cringe they cause is minimised. I wouldnt blame you for not knowing this if youre from the central belt, its just a testament to how successful the plan was.

    • @brendenstyre4784
      @brendenstyre4784 11 месяцев назад +10

      Incoming Americans in kilts and bagpipes shouting freedom 😂😂😂😂

    • @laptv2144
      @laptv2144 11 месяцев назад +1

      lol okay have fun staying poor in Scotland then. I’m sure all the immigrants you’re importing will be more helpful than pesky Americans with their money 😂

    • @vinsanity1976
      @vinsanity1976 11 месяцев назад

      No worries. You can keep yer soggy lochs and midges

  • @lastsecondshot5779
    @lastsecondshot5779 Год назад +153

    As someone from Massachusetts, I can confirm this is 100% accurate

    • @tomconnolly9895
      @tomconnolly9895 Год назад +69

      As an Irishman living in Massachusetts, 50 per cent of my day consists of Americans telling me the entire history of their family tree. For the love of god I dont give a fuck that your Granddad was from Galway please let me drink in peace.

    • @Dreyno
      @Dreyno Год назад

      @@tomconnolly9895Ask them what part of Galway. Most haven’t a clue. But if they do, tell them it’s known as dump full of prostitutes and inbreeding. Usually stops them asking any more questions.

    • @BCThunderthud
      @BCThunderthud Год назад +9

      @@tomconnolly9895 One of the big disconnects is that the Irish seem to be about the hardest people to have a conversation with, at least for an American. So guarded, you can meet an American on a bus and they'll tell you all about their son's struggle with addiction and how it relates to their grandfather's blah blah blah. I get that that's horrifying to an Irish person but that's what we're like. Also, especially in a place like Boston, ethnicity is what we have instead of a well-defined class hierarchy. We pretend we don't have classes here but historically the Irish were the servant class for the wealthy yankees.

    • @tomconnolly9895
      @tomconnolly9895 Год назад +14

      @BCThunderthud I don't think Irish people are any more guarded than other Europeans, it's just that Americans tend to overshare very personal information about themselves way too quickly with strangers and that's very strange to Irish people. I can't count the amount of times an American person has told me they were having marital problems, finanical problems, were recovering Alcoholics/drug addicts, or were on meds, within minutes of meeting me for the first time. I think to myself "Why are you telling me this?" It's a very awkward position to be put in. Don't get me wrong I like Americans and get on well with them, but that was a major culture shock for me. I think Americans (and the world in general) thinks Irish people are extremely outgoing and gregarious, when in reality we are mostly introverted.

    • @Dreyno
      @Dreyno Год назад +7

      @@BCThunderthud You’re having the wrong conversation. Personal lives usually stay personal here. Americans tend to have whole a narrative for their life story that they tell to anyone who’ll listen. And hey, if you’re a Vietnam vet who set up a recording studio in the 1980s before eventually buying an island in the Florida Keys and setting up a sanctuary for marine life, keep talking. I’m interested.
      But if you’re a dentist with a large, dull family and an interest in hunting turkeys, I don’t care.

  • @lukepynhon
    @lukepynhon Год назад +34

    You just described everyone in South Boston

  • @matthewoconnell4700
    @matthewoconnell4700 Год назад +28

    Always confused me this, my grandad was Irish, I have an obviously Irish surname, a quite famous one, but I was born in England thus I'm English, even though I have very strong roots and bloodline from Ireland I would NEVER call myself Irish.

    • @Ramberta
      @Ramberta 11 месяцев назад +3

      If you're born in England then your NATIONALITY is English, but your HERITAGE is still Irish! Two different things!

    • @lkidds4222
      @lkidds4222 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@Ramberta his heritage is mostly English. I also had a grandfather from Ireland but the only Irish heritage I have is my surname and possibly my pale complexion.

    • @Ramberta
      @Ramberta 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@lkidds4222 same here, but that doesn't mean the Irish heritage doesn't exist! Just because I don't call myself Irish in most contexts doesn't mean the heritage doesn't exist...

  • @Alf1eN0akes
    @Alf1eN0akes Год назад +18

    Same here in Scotland Americans don't only think their Scottish but also descendants of Braveheart

    • @The_Gallowglass
      @The_Gallowglass 10 месяцев назад

      Actually, I am related to William Wallace. My uncle lives in Paisley.

    • @davidpryle3935
      @davidpryle3935 6 месяцев назад

      I wouldn’t mind being a descendant of the Scottish American bloke with all the money, Andrew Carnegie 💰💵💷💶

  • @evillink1
    @evillink1 Год назад +149

    He needs to do this skit in Boston lol

    • @aikighost
      @aikighost Год назад +16

      Bostonians totally love the Irish especially when you tell them they aren't really Irish 🤣

    • @killswitch6361
      @killswitch6361 Год назад +12

      That's how you get assaulted.

    • @evillink1
      @evillink1 Год назад +4

      @killswitch6361 either way, it makes for great entertainment lol

    • @patrickglennon7058
      @patrickglennon7058 Год назад +1

      Southie

    • @RazPerignon
      @RazPerignon Год назад +4

      He would die

  • @prayforjonas
    @prayforjonas Год назад +61

    As an American, I grew up with a friend like this, who did make being Irish a huge part of his identity lol it was never a point of contention between us but I always found it really silly.

    • @morini500dave
      @morini500dave 11 месяцев назад +9

      Like Joe Biden who has both English and Irish heritage but fails to mention his English hertitage as Irish gets him more votes ffs.

    • @Ramberta
      @Ramberta 11 месяцев назад +4

      if he had real irish heritage then why is it silly? Americans don't have any good culture besides slavery and capitalism so, most of us like to reconnect back with heritage that means something more than that.

    • @mitchamcommonfair9543
      @mitchamcommonfair9543 11 месяцев назад

      ​@morini500dave The irony about Biden is that his English ancestors were working class and his Irish ancestors owned a lucrative architecture business

    • @richardjohnson7379
      @richardjohnson7379 11 месяцев назад +6

      @@Ramberta I can understand that but as a non-american, it feels quite disingenuous and dishonest for people to claim an understanding of a culture that they have no relation to. Ethnicity is just a very weird idea for people to grasp on to and as Europeans, it just seems needlessly divisive.

    • @Gnomgnash
      @Gnomgnash 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@Ramberta If you think Americans have no culture then you have not actually looked into it.

  • @squidwardt0rtellini
    @squidwardt0rtellini 6 месяцев назад +7

    Can you blame them though? There is a lost sense of ethnic identity in the US. The idea of “whiteness” has erased European ethnicities. If you are of European descent & living in the US, you get mushed into a western, imperialist culture, leaving your original culture behind. It’s odd. White Americans get bashed and told that they have no culture. But at the same time, when White Americans try to honor and celebrate their European ancestry, they still get bashed. In a way, you have to feel sorry for Americans. It all goes to show how the concept of race even hurts white, European peoples.

    • @markpowell6417
      @markpowell6417 2 месяца назад

      It is funny how when someone replies with logic and reality , no one thumbs up . Nor do they reply . I will reply ....... You are 100% correct . I am an American . By birth . My ancestry is from Ireland , Wales , North Carolina Tuscarora and France ( Heugenot ) . I do not claim to be " Irish " . I am a mutt , just like most Americans with European heritage . However .....my Mother's Mother was a Tiernan ..... from Ulster and County Cavan . I am very proud of knowing from where that blood comes from . No one can take that from me . I don't have to claim any one ancestry ..... I am proud of all of my heritage .

    • @Baronvanhausen88
      @Baronvanhausen88 9 дней назад

      @@markpowell6417 Being of fully european ancestry isnt a mutt, you are genetically closer to any european than a person with 95% one european ancestry and a small percentage non whtie

  • @johnmordecai2776
    @johnmordecai2776 Год назад +146

    It really just comes down to cultural misunderstanding + naivete. When Americans tell each other things like "I"m Irish," or "I'm Irish and Italian," we know what we mean; we're talking ancestry, not nationality. It's the whole "melting pot" thing. A while back, different immigrant groups had their own communities and everything... it's become somewhat ingrained in us. Problem is that this doesn't make sense to someone from another country, whose place of origin, for the most part, IS their ancestry. And Americans are so used to the way we understand it, that we don't consider this when we do actually travel somewhere. So, cultural misunderstanding. It does indeed get annoying though, when some of these Irish-Americans have zero idea of what Ireland is actually like, or that the Irish-American thing they like isn't an Irish thing, etc. At that point, it's on them.

    • @Xiiiiky2H
      @Xiiiiky2H Год назад +24

      no theres no such thing as irish american just becasue your great grand father came from ireland, YOU ARE ALL AMERICAN

    • @jeffreygarty8214
      @jeffreygarty8214 Год назад +47

      @@Xiiiiky2H it is actually kind of a gross sentiment for those who are descendent of the survivors that were able to stay to deny outright the ethnicity of those who were forced to leave. the great hunger wasn't that far in the past. Its one thing to poke fun at some of the ignorant American tourist who try to appropriate a culture so they can center themselves while on vacation but its another thing entirely to finish the job the British started all those years ago by acting as if because our ancestors were expelled from the land that their kin will one day be told that their generational trauma has no right to exist, that all the songs and stories, and hopes of our ancestors for us to return aren't valid and should i dare say be cleansed from our heart.

    • @westington1
      @westington1 Год назад +40

      @@jeffreygarty8214It’s really mainly just funny to wind up Americans claiming to be Irish - just for the Craic like.
      But sure, sure you absolutely hold these things dearly.
      What is a bit offensive though is that Irish-American culture is it’s own thing, and split off from Irish culture 200 odd years ago.
      I grew up in N.Ireland during the troubles, I don’t mind the Irish-American thing at all, but people claiming to be Irish and thinking generational trauma is anything like the actual trauma we went through is a bit offensive like.

    • @Beedji
      @Beedji Год назад

      When in reality, most of you are either german or british, statistically.

    • @Planet_Perfume
      @Planet_Perfume Год назад +26

      ​@@Xiiiiky2Hthat's really stupid because as much as you want to see it as black and white and "you're no longer irish" a lot of people still have brought their cultural traditions over and kept them going. To say "you're just american" without considering that its more complicated then that, you just come off as bullheaded as americans do.

  • @channelbrookes
    @channelbrookes Год назад +77

    It's a fascinating perspective that they have when it comes to cultural or national identity. My grandfather is from Ireland but you've never catch me ever saying I was Irish as a result, neither would my mum try to claim she was, we'd say "My grandad/dad is Irish." Going further back I've got ancestors from Russia and Italy, but I couldn't keep a straight face attempting to say "I'm Russian-Italian-Irish". Does any other country in the world do that?

    • @ZechsMerquise73
      @ZechsMerquise73 Год назад +15

      It's because American is not an ethnicity. In Ireland, Irish is a nationality because it is a Nation State deeply dependent on an identity derived from ethnicity.

    • @SomeSomaek
      @SomeSomaek Год назад +17

      At the very least it’s the only country where people are this vocal about claiming the wrong national identity. The general consensus in Europe, and I assume most places, is that you have to grow up in the culture and speak the local language to be able to claim it. I don’t understand why Americans are so loud and proud of their country, yet desperately seek to be not American

    • @mehallica666
      @mehallica666 Год назад +8

      I also had Irish grandparents, but have never considered myself anything other than 100% English.

    • @djinnxx7050
      @djinnxx7050 Год назад +5

      My great great grandfather was one of those who fled to America, his son came back to Britain and for some reason decided to hold up in England, then popped some sprogs, and then I eventually arrive, and no doubt to the rotational chagrin of my Irish ancestors, as a proud Englishman. But I'm only proud because it'll annoy others, in reality I couldn't give a fuck, it's not as if anyone chooses the geographical location of their own birth. Like what, is anyone tugging on the umbilical like reigns and guiding their mother to another fucking continent out of a desire not to be French?
      Wait, I imagine that desire would certainly be intense enough. The mother probably wouldn't even need the guidance though, who would want to bring another French into existence, ugh...

    • @mehallica666
      @mehallica666 Год назад +18

      @@hectorcot597Aussies and Kiwis don't have this obsession. They're in the same boat as Americans, but are more than happy to proclaim themselves nothing but Australians and Kiwis, regardless of their European heritage or otherwise. This truly is an American phenomenon.

  • @michaelc.1710
    @michaelc.1710 Год назад +70

    I’d love to see a version of this for Americans who think they’re Italian.

    • @shaunsteele6926
      @shaunsteele6926 Год назад +11

      try telling a New York mob boss he's not Italian.

    • @NoRockinMansLand
      @NoRockinMansLand Год назад +15

      ​@@shaunsteele6926 hey I'm walking here

    • @JonS
      @JonS Год назад +7

      They will “prove” they are by telling you how their grandmother made them spaghetti with meatballs (not an Italian dish for any Americans reading this) every Sunday! 😂

    • @jmo8525
      @jmo8525 Год назад +9

      They have Italian ancestry. They don't literally think they are Italian as in from Italy. They are American and quite fine with that. Unbelievable you guys think when Americans reference their ethnic heritage that you literally think we mean we are from these foreign countries.

    • @JonS
      @JonS Год назад +3

      @@jmo8525 no one said that. It's a strawman argument. They believe they are CULTURALLY Italian.

  • @justme8340
    @justme8340 Год назад +4

    In the 1920’s my dad asked his grandfather what he remembered about Tuam Galway when he left at age 7.
    “It’s a dump!” That story passed along to us ended any interest of going to see the place.

  • @KapteinFruit
    @KapteinFruit Год назад +182

    I never get old of these "cultural observations". They are always so spot on in my mind :D

  • @e2theoc
    @e2theoc Год назад +60

    The most impressive thing is that you get people to stand there while you insult them 😅

    • @T4SelNiNO
      @T4SelNiNO Год назад +22

      It's not that impressive when you realise they have no idea what the fuck he's saying

  • @__nadine__
    @__nadine__ Год назад +8

    the fact he kept in the parts where he let them speak (he usually always keeps those parts out) says it all really

  • @stevehowe8218
    @stevehowe8218 Год назад +48

    In the early 80's I worked in Stratford upon Avon (The birthplace of William Shakespeare) in a shop. I was chatting to a lovely American lady. She was gushing over our heritage and "quaint little town". I really struggled when she asked me if I ever met William Shakespeare........
    Most Americans live in a bubble, they rarely leave the US, and are fed such a load of BS from their media. I applaud the ones who actually seek out new places, and see the rest of the world.

    • @rachelcookie321
      @rachelcookie321 Год назад +9

      I like to believe she actually thought you were 400 years old as opposed to Shakespeare being born in the 1900s. I also like the idea of Shakespeare being this guy born in like 1950 but he just wrote all his poems and plays in old English for some reason and everyone loved it.

    • @chrisy6707
      @chrisy6707 Год назад +4

      Best story of the day!!! hahaha. I in Edinburgh Old Town and the Americans sometimes think its like a Disney theme park or something that's been built and laid on for tourists like a film set. They treat people who live here like staff and ask them questions like we are paid actors. The Harry Potter fans think its all a real Dungeons and Dragons world...how daft can people be?

    • @JonS
      @JonS Год назад +1

      @@chrisy6707I visited Edinburgh for work shortly after I moved to the States for work. One I the Americans I was with genuinely thought all the buildings were modern fakes.

    • @chrisy6707
      @chrisy6707 Год назад

      @@JonS that is hilarious!!

    • @kaihimura3897
      @kaihimura3897 Год назад

      Thanks for the positive reinforcement and silly story. I’m glad I’m not as misinformed as some of my fellows seem to be.

  • @easycoding8255
    @easycoding8255 Год назад +76

    I'm English and met a lot of Americans in Mexico and New York who thought they were Irish. Not a bloody clue. Couldn't believe the delusion.

    • @shaunsteele6926
      @shaunsteele6926 Год назад +10

      we literally are Irish. DNA doesn't lie

    • @catalinaa766
      @catalinaa766 Год назад +25

      @@shaunsteele6926DNA means shit all mate.

    • @shaunsteele6926
      @shaunsteele6926 Год назад +9

      @@catalinaa766 DNA means everything. Science has identified the Irish race

    • @easycoding8255
      @easycoding8255 Год назад

      Ask an actual Irishman in Ireland then. I'd love to see how it goes down.@@shaunsteele6926

    • @zombieoutbreakprod
      @zombieoutbreakprod Год назад +15

      ​@@shaunsteele6926yeah 4% lmao

  • @RobertJeffreyHill
    @RobertJeffreyHill Год назад +127

    My mom was from Germany, but I was born in Dublin. Although I have a German passport and speak conversational German, I’m Irish. My cousins on my Irish dad’s side were born in Philadelphia, USA. Their own kids were also born in the US.
    When they visit us here in Ireland they find it odd that people considered them to be American only.
    To me they are “the American cousins”. They were born there, went to school there, follow American sports, have US passports, vote in U.S. elections, and speak with US accents. They lived the American experience. Living in Ireland would be difficult to navigate for them because it’s not what they know.
    However, I also can’t deny them having an Irish family history and having Irish cultural traditions passed down. So I understand their thought process in a country where most people have recent origins elsewhere.
    So, to me, the terms Irish-American and American of Irish descent make sense. But I see “Irish” as a legal nationality and a shared life experience.

    • @Aethid
      @Aethid Год назад +28

      Your "national identity" is really defined by where you grew up.
      I have Irish citizenship, but I grew up and still live in Britian. I think it would be rude of me to claim to be Irish - like I am trying to claim to be part of a nationality/culture that I have never participated in.
      Americans acknowledging their ancestry is fine, but claiming to actually be of that culture is the most extreme form of actual "cultural appropriation" possible.

    • @jennyhaytch
      @jennyhaytch Год назад +4

      Egggzacly. They are "of Irish descent." 👍✨

    • @zigzag8392
      @zigzag8392 Год назад +12

      It’s because Americans are raised to believe they belong everywhere. We’re all honorary European owners of a plantation in the Philippines.

    • @ZechsMerquise73
      @ZechsMerquise73 Год назад +4

      @@Aethid Tell your theory to a Nigerian who grew up in Japan

    • @-______-______-
      @-______-______- Год назад

      @@jennyhaytchIf indeed they are.

  • @cdev2117
    @cdev2117 Год назад +3

    The best are people who's great-great-grandfathers name was originally something like "Stanislaus Kołodziejczy" and then he changed his name to "Stan MacDonald" to better fit in, as soon he arrived at Ellis Island.

  • @mrmeldrew693
    @mrmeldrew693 Год назад +7

    I'm English with Irish heritage on my Dad's side, (his grandad floated over).
    Went to Dublin once.
    It was actually awful.

    • @The_Gallowglass
      @The_Gallowglass 10 месяцев назад

      It is awful. It's basically England lite. Liverpool is more Irish than Dublin.

    • @davidpryle3935
      @davidpryle3935 6 месяцев назад +1

      Very English city Dublin, with all it’s GEORGIAN streets.

  • @vincentsalgueiro
    @vincentsalgueiro Год назад +7

    these are becoming more and more cinematic please keep going

  • @NaturalSlow
    @NaturalSlow Год назад +48

    This is hilarious! I am Scottish I work in a hotel in Scotland and yeah every tourist season I have to keep my mouth shut and just smile 🤣

    • @jmo8525
      @jmo8525 Год назад +4

      Good to know. We'll make sure to tell as many Americans as possible not to go to Scotland. Thanks for the heads up.

    • @ian-flanagan
      @ian-flanagan 8 месяцев назад +5

      @@jmo8525 Haha, sulking is maybe the least Irish or Scottish reaction to being ribbed I can imagine. You sure you're not "English" like me?

    • @jmo8525
      @jmo8525 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@ian-flanagan Who is sulking? And yes, we are Americans. We don't naturally think to insult strangers, especially tourists we don't know because why would we. Do you have self-hatred issues or something. Who does something like that? We're just practical and don't want to waste our time or our hard-earned working class money. We have plenty of other places at home or abroad to travel to.

    • @ian-flanagan
      @ian-flanagan 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@jmo8525 Making fun is how they show affection. It brings people together by removing the politeness barrier. It’s why I much prefer living in Ireland than England, but you need to be able to laugh at yourself. I get called a “bluffer” (fake Irish) all the time. It’s a conversation starter. If you can’t understand other cultures, then yes, best stay at home

    • @bobithpopit3193
      @bobithpopit3193 4 месяца назад

      @@ian-flanagan sounds like a shitty culture. Being kind is free

  • @haledork
    @haledork 4 месяца назад +5

    Generational trauma is real. You can research how horribly Irish immigrants were treated in the United States - really not that long ago. Grandparents and great grandparents passed on their cultural identity and cultural pride in the face of Anglo-American hate and oppression.

  • @andrewwallace4821
    @andrewwallace4821 Год назад +5

    My recent trip to Boston was hallmarked by seeing the red flag of ulster alongside the harp in an Irish pubs rafters

  • @SC-bc6tz
    @SC-bc6tz Год назад +527

    it's strange that they're so loudly proud to be American yet desperate to identify as anything else 🤣
    Edit: I hope you guys don’t think I’m reading your replies…

    • @sumlem
      @sumlem Год назад +43

      With none of the effort to look into history and culture lol

    • @Karl_Marksman
      @Karl_Marksman Год назад +44

      @@sumlem they don't have much of a history unless they're indian. My house is older than the US

    • @jamieclifford5491
      @jamieclifford5491 Год назад +28

      @@Karl_Marksmanor just history they’re ashamed of, like slavery and being the only Nation to use nuclear weapons in war

    • @folksurvival
      @folksurvival Год назад +14

      ​​​​@@jamieclifford5491Both the transatlantic slave trade and nuclear weapons were by a certain group from the middle east though that are a tiny minority so you can't blame whites or Asians for that. Obviously you can't blame black who were enslaved either but you can blame the blacks who sold them into slavery in Africa. The vast majority of Americans in the past had nothing to do with the slave trade or nuclear weapons so have nothing to be ashamed of (then or now). Plus almost all races in America have been slaves. Also most countries that all Americans came from have been affected by slavery and some still are today.

    • @jamieclifford5491
      @jamieclifford5491 Год назад +43

      @@folksurvival a group in the Middle East is responsible for slavery in America and the use of nuclear weapons in Hiroshima and Nagasaki?
      What is it you’re trying to say?

  • @margonaut
    @margonaut Год назад +43

    They get upset that they can’t find corned beef & cabbage (a 19th century Irish-American invention) in every pub.

    • @kckasem3360
      @kckasem3360 Год назад +15

      Witnessed an American man arguing online with a couple of women from Ireland that he too was Irish and understood Irish politics because his family were Catholic and always ate corned beef and cabbage on the weekends. Insanity.

    • @fkboyStalin
      @fkboyStalin Год назад +8

      some Americans with Irish ancestry just don't get that time did not stop once our ancestors got here and that they did indeed do new things rather than do everything the exact way they did it in an entirely different country

    • @hughneek12
      @hughneek12 Год назад +3

      Actually, I believe that corned beef and cabbage was a New York Jewish restaurant St. Patricks day invention to substitute for bacon and cabbage, because in the old days they would have had many Irish customers and of course Jews are forbidden by their religion to serve or eat pig meat.

    • @The_Gallowglass
      @The_Gallowglass 10 месяцев назад

      that never happened@@kckasem3360

  • @jaccabwa7914
    @jaccabwa7914 11 месяцев назад +8

    If that guy’s dad is Irish then he’s Irish too no? If you go to school with someone who’s dad is from like Greek, you still consider them a Greek person.

    • @emilyl6746
      @emilyl6746 11 месяцев назад

      It's definitely different for non-white Americans

    • @The_Gallowglass
      @The_Gallowglass 10 месяцев назад

      @@emilyl6746 Greeks are white.

    • @jaccabwa7914
      @jaccabwa7914 4 месяца назад

      @user-dd4qp9yv7p Okay I get your point, they are not really part of irish culture, but what I think they mean is that they have irish blood in them, and this guy whose dad (not great great great granny) is irish, has got a fair amount of irish blood in him, and has probably been to Ireland a couple times and had experience in the culture, so it's a bit unfair to go out and just take the piss out of random people to their face for no real reason.
      Also I think I'd rather be full irish than full american, and I don't think I'm alone there

    • @jaccabwa7914
      @jaccabwa7914 4 месяца назад

      @@emilyl6746 how so? how is it different?

    • @emilyl6746
      @emilyl6746 4 месяца назад

      @@jaccabwa7914 it just is. Like if you go to New York, for example, there are many people who identify as Dominican and Puerto Rican even though they've never stepped foot in those countries. But you don't see people from DR or Puerto Rico distancing themselves from their American born counterparts. Members of ethnic groups are never really seen as American if they aren't white. It's weird.

  • @scottw.3258
    @scottw.3258 Год назад +4

    When i started watching this, i thought it was going to be a pisstake. How relieved i was to see it was a serious documentary style video. Kudos Sir.

  • @ricreation01
    @ricreation01 Год назад +4

    Anybody else notice these videos are getting increasingly more high quality, love it.

  • @andrewdestefano4143
    @andrewdestefano4143 Год назад +37

    This is definitely an Is americanism. I grew up in the states and it was typical for people to self identify as their heritage. My mother still constantly says "that's the Scott in you" despite her family being American for the last 100 years. But unless you're native and no white people are, your family came here from somewhere so most Americans have a little (perhaps naive) affinity for some place outside the states

    • @shaunsteele6926
      @shaunsteele6926 Год назад +1

      my family has been living in North America for 300 years, but my ethnicity is Scots-Irish. Unless my family starts interbreeding with the natives, none of my family will ever be ethnically "American".

    • @ErikPT
      @ErikPT Год назад +4

      @@shaunsteele6926I mean the term American it is an identity not an ethnicity.

    • @shaunsteele6926
      @shaunsteele6926 Год назад +3

      @@zachr1347 technically the first Europeans to establish a colony in North America were English and Dutch. The Scots-Irish started coming over in large numbers about a century later, but that still doesn't make any of them ethnically "American". They could live here for 1,000 years and they would still be ethnic Europeans, unless they started interbreeding with the natives.

    • @peterc.1618
      @peterc.1618 Год назад

      "unless you are native and no white people are" Please look up what 'native' means.

    • @CMOT101
      @CMOT101 Год назад +8

      Tough. If you are born in America, you're a Seppo. End of

  • @lashermayfair0
    @lashermayfair0 Год назад +5

    When your country is a tiny young baby like the US, and your only culture is capitalism, can you really blame an American for searching for some roots to cling to? And you'll have to blame them even less when they spend vast amounts of money at a gift shop to try to find those roots- America doesn't equip us with any other tools. We just end up with a serious thirst for a past and some meaning, and a dictate to spend money forever and ever amen even when we don't have any
    Just remember, and take heart in the fact, that most of us Americans will never be able to afford to visit any corner of the old world in an attempt to have our toes touch at least some soil with soul before our lives are over

  • @lergia
    @lergia Год назад +6

    loving the camera upgrade! looks awesome

  • @0mn1vore
    @0mn1vore Год назад +5

    The 4:3 aspect ratio is sufficiently unusual, in these modern days of widescreen [mostly 16:9] YouYube videos, to be considered a weird aspect ratio. I approve.
    Namaste. 🙏

  • @Lala-kc2fw
    @Lala-kc2fw Год назад +10

    Now do, Irish who think they're American...the lads actually say "Math" 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂

    • @jamestaylor5417
      @jamestaylor5417 Год назад

      We have a special name for Irish people who think they’re American: “mentally ill”.

  • @liammurphy3513
    @liammurphy3513 Год назад +18

    I think there's just a confusion of terms here. Since America is an ethnically diverse nation, ethnic origins have always served as identifying categories. Irish Americans are Irish in the same sense that African Americans are African; it denotes a shared historical connection and thus an ethnic identity. But when Irish Americans go to Ireland, this becomes less relevant and (rightly) doesn't make sense to people who were born and raised in Ireland. I don't call myself Irish when I'm in Ireland but I do when I'm in America.

    • @anonymous-pc5mf
      @anonymous-pc5mf 7 месяцев назад

      Thats actually great point that I havent thought of. I get why other Americans might be frustrated by it though. In Ireland we typically dont view nationality as something that can be inherited like race or ethnicity. instead we typically view nationality as something that is acquired over a long period of time by being immersed in the culture and zeitgeist of a company.

    • @davidpryle3935
      @davidpryle3935 6 месяцев назад

      @@anonymous-pc5mfAnd yet if you look at the old newsreels of the visit of the late president John F Kennedy to Ireland in 1963 (well over 100 years after his ancestors left Ireland), the genuine affinity and bond between the late president and the Irish people is so so obvious.

    • @davidpryle3935
      @davidpryle3935 4 месяца назад

      @@PoopyDiaper0 I think possibly Irish people misunderstand what some Americans mean they say Irish.
      They are referring to their ethnicity, not their nationality.

    • @davidpryle3935
      @davidpryle3935 4 месяца назад

      @@PoopyDiaper0 Yes, of course I know what you mean. But I don’t get this sudden (in my experience) hostility to people of Irish descent in America calling themselves Irish. I mean what does it matter if they call themselves Irish, its no skin off any of our noses here in Ireland.
      It makes me sad to see the vitriol, indeed downright abuse, hurled at Irish Americans by SOME Irish people on these type of comment pages, over something so innocuous. I often wonder have SOME native born Irish people some sort of feeling of insecurity, or inadequacy, to make them want to do this.
      Many of the people of Irish descent in North America are directly descended from the mass emigration of the great famine, the worst catastrophe in Irish history, and so, worthy of some sort of recognition and respect, surely.
      Finally I would say to people of Irish descent in America, you get a special mention in the 1916 proclamation, the foundation document of the Irish republic. So in future tell all the begrudgers to put that in their pipe and smoke it.

  • @rubyjames3105
    @rubyjames3105 Год назад +9

    as a Canuck that lived in Ireland I was forever explaining that I was not from the USA. It made for an interesting exchange.

    • @loganstroganoff1284
      @loganstroganoff1284 Год назад +6

      Good work reminding them that Canada exists

    • @The_Gallowglass
      @The_Gallowglass 10 месяцев назад

      The irony isn't it. Everyone in the comments talkin' shit about Americans not knowing anything, but Europeans can't even tell the difference.@@loganstroganoff1284

  • @mfmatthew420
    @mfmatthew420 Год назад +9

    the ballygowan line actually really got me lol

  • @whatwilliswastalkingabout
    @whatwilliswastalkingabout Год назад +6

    As a Canadian who became Irish after “Jump Around” and the movie “State of Grace”, I feel personally attacked by this video

    • @Mgaffo222
      @Mgaffo222 9 месяцев назад +1

      U aint Irish...

  • @maryg3597
    @maryg3597 5 месяцев назад +2

    “Raised on songs and stories” because that’s all we had. Back in the days when we visited our neighbours and wrote letters to our loved ones who were forced to emigrate.
    A diaspora evolved that hung on to our mystical, musical, humorous consciousness in a land that had been conquered, as had we. Irish Americans have a loneliness in their DNA that they are entitled to come here to heal and regenerate, and no matter what the percentage, they are welcome Home.

  • @lorider500
    @lorider500 8 месяцев назад +23

    There literally seems like no way to win for Americans and Canadians. Mention your heritage? “Well you don’t even understand the language or culture!”. Learn more about the culture and language? “Why are Americans so obsessed with being ____??”. Some folks act like they want Americans/Canadians to forget all about their heritage and just be European’s idea of a stereotypical “American”, when American culture has been created by a blend of all these different ethnic groups. Including the one Europeans seem to want them to forget about.

    • @dasmysteryman12
      @dasmysteryman12 7 месяцев назад +3

      As a Filipino who lives in Canada, who grew up all his life in the Philippines before moving, and who has a slight pet peeve for diaspora people… I can say you have a very good point. North American countries have blended cultures that are unique on their own, and there is nothing wrong with declaring and owning your heritage while at the same time be Canadian or American.
      I think what people from the original lands like me are annoyed by is the arrogance and superficiality of some Americans when it comes to their heritage. Like they go on all about how they’re Irish or they’re Filipino and yet not share the same experience, trials, issues, or cultural norms as we do in the motherland, not learning these sincerely, yet insist on saying they’re from such and such. Some going as so far as trying to impose their “idea” of what the country of their heritage should be without even considering the people from there.
      I’m not including Canadians in this, because from my experience, while they are proud of their ethnic heritage, they are way more in touch with their countries. They are way more grounded in that they emphasize they are Canadian as well as such and such. There isn’t that arrogance at all, they’re not willing to pretend.

    • @catoutawindow2279
      @catoutawindow2279 6 месяцев назад +7

      @@dasmysteryman12exactly, I’m Irish and I don’t mind when people try to get in touch with their roots but it’s those who claim to be Irish and only list of stereotypes without having a clue about how the country actually is

    • @Kaiserbill99
      @Kaiserbill99 6 месяцев назад +3

      That does not explain why Americans with an Irish dresser in the front room call themselves Irish or even Irish American. They are American with European heritage but in most cases they will have multiple parts of Europe within their heritage.
      Plenty of British people have Irish grandparents, so are "more Irish" than any American, but they do not consider themselves anything other than British who just happen to have an Irish granny if anyone bothered to ask the question.
      And it only seems to be the Irish and Italian and perhaps Polish Americans who seem so desperate to hang on to an imagined culture. People of British and German origin seem comfortable in just being American. It almost seems that the "crappier" the country of origin the more folk cling on to that culture.

    • @svendinsvinderlin4569
      @svendinsvinderlin4569 6 месяцев назад +3

      I don't think most people have a problem with Americans who are genuinely curious and their family carries on Irish traditions. But every single American tourist I've ever met has both been ignorant about huge parts of our culture, and stubborn enough to argue.
      Also we kinda find it fun to talk shit about ye so don't take it too serious.

    • @seamusca99
      @seamusca99 5 месяцев назад

      Crappy the country? Who are the crappy countries? Surely not Britain, a country that colonised half the world and responsible for a legacy that ensured centuries of conflict wherever they where.Or perhaps Germany, no need to explaint​@Kaiserbill99

  • @Cclo215
    @Cclo215 7 месяцев назад +4

    Irish-American and proud! Socialized at birth to love and care about all things Irish (from my 100% mother and 50% dad), still follow old family customs from Dingle (Moriartys from Dingle/Lispole, Sullivans from Kerry, Kenneys, O’Connors on both sides… Almost all of my ☘️ dna is Munster … Lynches … grew up learning the stories of my brave and desperate ancestors who fled the Great Famine … started an Irish-American society in my city, which gives a scholarship to a university student to study in Ireland, have visited four times now (most recently this past December with our adult children) and hope to retire there someday. Some of us Americans do feel it in deep in our Irish bones.☘️❤️✌️

    • @walter3433
      @walter3433 7 месяцев назад +1

      Craic isn't the same as crack

    • @Cclo215
      @Cclo215 7 месяцев назад

      @@walter3433 ☘️Love it!

    • @svendinsvinderlin4569
      @svendinsvinderlin4569 6 месяцев назад +1

      Ye ur a lot more Irish than a lot of Americand in all fairness. If you love culture we'll love you back 😘😘

    • @Facthuntcentral
      @Facthuntcentral 6 дней назад +1

      An Irishman with African parents is Irish...You're American, no matter how much you try to convince yourself to the contrary.

  • @High_Lord_Of_Terra
    @High_Lord_Of_Terra Год назад +3

    "completely unperturbed by the parameters of reality" . that's fucking poetry friend

  • @MuonRay
    @MuonRay 10 месяцев назад +2

    Great video man and fantastic to bump into yourself today right after we were talking about cultural comedy at lunch! Again great work you are doing and in the tradition of top-drawer truths as revealed through the comedic experience!

  • @ManateeMentality
    @ManateeMentality Год назад +13

    What if Ireland is just a mispronunciation of island.

    • @ZeoWorks
      @ZeoWorks Год назад

      Iceland could make more sense hhh

    • @Lala-kc2fw
      @Lala-kc2fw Год назад +1

      English people say that. They go "Island"...

    • @KellyMonk156
      @KellyMonk156 Год назад

      it's not though

    • @grlth
      @grlth Год назад

      ​@@Lala-kc2fwnot all, but sure.

  • @newenglandgreenman
    @newenglandgreenman Год назад +13

    I have a very Irish last name, and I know very well that I am not Irish. It's a lovely country, I've been there a couple of times. But I know that I'm a foreign guest when visiting the home of some of my ancestors.

    • @1594simonsays
      @1594simonsays Год назад +4

      Cool, you still have Irish blood

    • @ErikPT
      @ErikPT Год назад +4

      If you have ties and family by blood you are Irish by blood

    • @MacToirdealbhaigh
      @MacToirdealbhaigh Год назад +4

      Science says you're Irish. I'm sitting here in Ireland and I'm saying you're Irish, like you're hardly Choctaw or Comanche now are you.

    • @newenglandgreenman
      @newenglandgreenman Год назад +4

      @@MacToirdealbhaigh Well, I'm flattered that you might think me Irish. Frankly, I'd rather be Irish than American. But I was born and raised in the USA, and only 1 of my great great grandparents (paternal grandfather's paternal grandfather) was 100% Irish (County Mayo). Two more were Ulster Protestants, and a few more were various mixes of various kinds of Irish along with other ethnicities. But I frankly (and not proudly) have more British ancestry, some German ancestry, and according to a DNA test, some mysterious Spanish ancestry. (I suspect that one of my great grandfathers (father's maternal) was not my biological great grandfather.) The Southern US side of my family has a legend of indigenous ancestry, but experts say that's usually a cover for mixed African ancestry. So I'm really an American mongrel.

    • @MacToirdealbhaigh
      @MacToirdealbhaigh Год назад +3

      @@newenglandgreenman That doesn't make you a mongrel, that gives you strong human genes, no chance of inbreeding in you.

  • @BuffOrpington7
    @BuffOrpington7 Год назад +4

    "The Irish Americans will do anything for Ireland, except live there."

  • @northernsegageorge6510
    @northernsegageorge6510 16 дней назад +1

    I'm Northern Irish and when I lived in the US, people use to ask me if I liked cabbage and corn beef like it was out national dish. I had never known anyone in Ireland to eat that. Same with "top of the morning" that NOBODY in Ireland even says and I never heard the phrase till living in the US. The sheer amount of people who claimed to be Irish yet didn't know my accent, had never been here and had zero relation to Ireland. Just because a great great great grandparent was Irish does not mean your'e Irish,, you are American.

  • @jooname
    @jooname Год назад +16

    They questioned if they are Irish, but they never questioned if they should be Irish.

    • @The_Gallowglass
      @The_Gallowglass 10 месяцев назад

      Def don't wanna be Irish. It is just one long lament.

  • @daroth7127
    @daroth7127 Год назад +36

    Americans when they learn they're grandma's last name is "O'Clery"

    • @dorkbrandon4422
      @dorkbrandon4422 Год назад +3

      Or she just has an extra fondness for potatoes on Sunday

  • @NoName-t7e
    @NoName-t7e Год назад +9

    Americans are not claiming to be Irish by passport or citizenship but Irish by ancestry.
    How do you people not understand this?

    • @jmo8525
      @jmo8525 Год назад +6

      Bizarre isn't it. I'm totally perplexed at how they can take an American just referencing their familial American immigration story and jump the shark with it and think that means they are claiming to actually be from Ireland and trying to claim Irish culture and citizenship and challenging the identity of actual Irish people!!! What the literal heck!

    • @VladTepesVEVO
      @VladTepesVEVO 8 месяцев назад

      Because everywhere else in the world, saying something as stupid and non-sensical as that, would get you laughed at all the way back to the airport.

    • @edwardgilson9891
      @edwardgilson9891 7 месяцев назад

      Why would we ignore our ancestry to suit a bunch of wankers?

    • @davidpryle3935
      @davidpryle3935 6 месяцев назад

      Yes of course we understand it. Nationality American, Ethnicity Irish.
      Only an illbred ignoramus would not understand this.
      Its not that long ago when almost every house in Ireland would have a picture of the late president John F Kennedy on their wall, such was the affinity between the Irish and the Irish Americans.

    • @ThemoonsFullofgoons-qn9xl
      @ThemoonsFullofgoons-qn9xl 4 месяца назад

      Which is silly because we may as well be African then 😂

  • @jerseygirl9402
    @jerseygirl9402 11 месяцев назад +1

    I have been waiting for this video. Thank you so much

  • @kevinmacleod6761
    @kevinmacleod6761 Год назад +27

    Hi from the Highlands of Scotland. We have American tourists coming here that think they are "Scattish".😂

    • @RossBradley-vd5rc
      @RossBradley-vd5rc Год назад +3

      Telling you they are from a Clan that doesn't exist or adamant that they are highlanders when you know for a fact their surname is Lowland Scot or Borderer, right?

    • @atomic_wait
      @atomic_wait Год назад +1

      My grandma was from caithness, and I visit my cousins there now and again. I wear my proper highland dress kit for weddings, and I can understand Scots patter a reasonable percent of the time. But I'm not Scottish, really, I'm Scottish-American (among other backgrounds).

    • @shaunsteele6926
      @shaunsteele6926 Год назад

      kind of like Gordon Ramsay claiming to be Scottish while sporting a posh English accent

    • @hez859
      @hez859 Год назад

      @@RossBradley-vd5rc not so fast, my friend is a Campbell and he was literally denied a drink because of his last name despite being American with an obvious Brooklyn accent. Everyone on here is throwing around generalizations

    • @ValerianDare5658
      @ValerianDare5658 Год назад +4

      Sounds like you hate your diaspora but okay

  • @maxlogan96
    @maxlogan96 Год назад +4

    “Oooh you found out from Netflix?” Killed me 😂 Americans, they’re so unaware of themselves it’s stunning

    • @The_Gallowglass
      @The_Gallowglass 10 месяцев назад +2

      Does it make you feel better about yourself to put others down?

  • @hannahkozlovic1715
    @hannahkozlovic1715 Год назад +12

    As a Canadian with absolutely no Irish heritage, I can confirm all of this to be 100% fact

    • @andrewdestefano4143
      @andrewdestefano4143 Год назад

      But do french Canada's ever consider themselves french?

    • @hannahkozlovic1715
      @hannahkozlovic1715 Год назад +5

      @@andrewdestefano4143 I don’t live anywhere near French Canada but I don’t believe they do. They tend to pride themselves on being special Quebecois

    • @waitwho3074
      @waitwho3074 Год назад

      ​@@hannahkozlovic1715 Oh the hypocrisy and condescendence of the classic english ''caNaDiAns''... Since you guys are so proud of being Canadians you should know this, but I know for a fact the vast majority of you don't know sheet about your ''beloved'' country. So never forget this,
      -The original name of Québec's territory was called Canada before you stole it and called the whole land Canada.
      -The term “Canadian” was originally referring to a Québécois or a francophone in Canada, but the anglos have culturally appropriate it. They used to considered themselves as English or British.
      -The national anthem of Canada was about us, written in French by the Québécois Adolphe-Basile Routhier, but they appropriated it and translated it in English.
      -Poutine, one of their last cultural theft, which is now the "Canadian National Dish"
      -The maple leaf as a national symbol, representing us Québécois and franco-canadians, but they also appropriated it.
      And so much more. I could go on and on, you guys are laughable!
      Truth is, English Loyalist of Canuck never had any true culture since it was all the residue left by England. So they all stole everything from the Québécois.

    • @waitwho3074
      @waitwho3074 Год назад

      @@andrewdestefano4143 Read my first comment, I'll leave you with that. I think that's pretty self-explanatory...

    • @wiegraf9009
      @wiegraf9009 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@andrewdestefano4143No definitely not because Quebec is a linguistic minority state that exists within Canada. They don't need to point to a far off country to have an identity. They identify with being Francophone not with being French.

  • @NoName-t7e
    @NoName-t7e Год назад +2

    If an Apache leaves is native geographic region but then returns to the land of his forebears years or even generations later does still make him an Apache?

  • @misottovoce
    @misottovoce Год назад +7

    The times I was in the US and would be asked where I am from (I am born in Germany, German parents, Polish grandmother). I would answer back then, Germany. Invariably they would answer so proudly 'Oh, I'm German too!'. I ask where are you born in Germany then I would ask in German, if they speak German. In the end I'd comment 'oh, so you are born in the US, American parents with Germanic roots. You are proud of your German roots...but you are American, not German.

    • @misottovoce
      @misottovoce 7 месяцев назад

      @SparkConversation It can also be very confusing and/or purposefully misleading to non-Americans who are visiting the US. I have experienced this only in America. Everywhere else, when asked, one simply says the nationality...and not any lineage unless it is part and purpose of sharing a common denominator.

    • @misottovoce
      @misottovoce 7 месяцев назад

      @SparkConversation Oh, and indeed the reverse is certainly true!

  • @IanFay-d1v
    @IanFay-d1v 11 месяцев назад +9

    If a man can identify as a woman then an American can identify as Irish.

    • @anonymous-pc5mf
      @anonymous-pc5mf 7 месяцев назад +4

      I hate that youre technically right

  • @matthewconstantine5015
    @matthewconstantine5015 Год назад +31

    I always thought I was honoring my ancestors who found two pennies to rub together and fled Ireland in the 1800s by never, ever having any interest in visiting. I also don't drink Guinness because it's pisswater. I also haven't celebrated St. Patrick's Day since I was a child because I'm not a child anymore and it's not a real holiday.
    Of course, I don't know why I should honor my ancestors anyway. After fleeing Ireland, they thought it was a good idea to settle in Atlantic Canada, because apparently they missed the depressing misery of home. But worry not, their descendants moved south, to the only slightly less miserable New England. So I got to grow up with crap weather, a crap economy, and a bunch of rich people from Boston telling me how quaint my junkie-infested town was.
    When I got two pennies to rub together, I got the hell out and moved to a place with all four seasons and something to do other than huddle in a dank house for 9 months, smoking meth, and eating potatoes.

    • @seann4678
      @seann4678 Год назад +16

      You replaced your “my ancestors are Irish” personality with the “I hate New England” personality and think you’re somehow enlightened.

    • @jimmyjohnson1870
      @jimmyjohnson1870 Год назад

      Crap weather, crap economy, big city pricks looking down on everyone else... I can see why so many Irish folk flocked to New England, it's just like home

    • @wakeyskate
      @wakeyskate 11 месяцев назад

      How can anyone think Guinness is pisswater, it’s a traditionally brewed stout 😂

  • @Corporate_Mommy
    @Corporate_Mommy Год назад +2

    God this video has my energy all over it. I'm so happy. I feel like I'm at home in Ireland.

  • @gringotroller
    @gringotroller Год назад +4

    The thing is that America is comprised of many ethnic backgrounds. Not just Irish but also German, English, African, Asian etc so most Americans like to know where there families came from. Ireland is the same but you already know where they came from and are still living there. We fly across the pond to see where our families used to live, hoping to have genuinely kind conversations with native Irish, only to be mocked and called stupid. We’ve lived in America for a couple hundred years, and while we’re proud to be American, we still have traditions and culture from the old countries that persist today. You don’t have to be a dick about it

    • @Aliciae411
      @Aliciae411 Год назад

      Which traditions and culture? To be honest we find it funny because all of us, not just Americans, have ancestors that come from different countries as ourselves but we don’t call ourselves or identity by that countries people 😂 we might just say our “great great great grandmother was from “insert country here”. For Americans to call themselves Irish -American simply for having Irish ancestors that they’ve never met IS funny.

    • @austinkavrar9259
      @austinkavrar9259 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@Aliciae411 Irish musicians went to America to learn Irish music. So many folk songs that got lost in Ireland lived on in America, Arthur McBride for example

    • @muragarasu6384
      @muragarasu6384 5 месяцев назад

      @@Aliciae411 Well America is a lot younger than most other places in the world with a homogenous culture (less than 250 years old). Almost all good examples of American culture have been derived from other cultures because it's a nation of immigrants, and the bad stuff? slavery, colonization, individualism and consumerism, nothing you can feel proud of, nothing that brings you together as a group or gives you a sense of unity and belonging. Most Americans that are really vocally proud of being American tend to be anti-immigrant conservatives and not really a group I would feel welcomed in personally. Most families bring stuff from their cultural background with them when they move, which changes how you're raised, for example I had a much different upbringing from my mexican-american partner, and also different from my polish-american roommate; though he shares many similar experiences with our other roommate who is italian-american. Discussing our heritage IS American culture and this interest is sometimes the only thing that encourages some people to want to travel outside of our country to learn about the world even if many of us will never be able to afford to do so.

  • @liam.4454
    @liam.4454 7 месяцев назад +5

    If people struggle with the concept of Irish Americans, how will they cope with the new Nigerian/Indian Irish etc?
    It's gonna be complicated

    • @sapien82
      @sapien82 7 месяцев назад +1

      I have lots of African friends who have sort of afro scots accents and its hilarious .

    • @liam.4454
      @liam.4454 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@sapien82that's the sort of thing I'm talking about, it's similar to Irish Americans

  • @paulfogarty7724
    @paulfogarty7724 6 месяцев назад +1

    Lived in Phoenix for 5 years. One thing I noticed was how friendly Americans were for the most part ( unless you're being an idiot - then watch out ! ). Another thing I learned was not everyone loves or yearns to be Irish, like we're led to believe at home. The sudden feeling of insignificance can be a lonely one. Still, once you get over your " immigrant blues ", its a great place.

  • @TheMidnightBandit
    @TheMidnightBandit Год назад +10

    You've improved your production levels and it really works well. Nice touch of narrative.

  • @Haunt_3D
    @Haunt_3D 4 месяца назад +4

    Ngl it's kinda ignorant of Irish people to not identify w their American cousins. Irish is one of the largest ancestory groups in the u.s by far, and our Irish forefathers experienced the same oppression from the anglos when the great migration happened.