The whole sincerity part is an illusion. To Brits Americans can seem sincere, but Americans can see right through it to the bs because we grew up with it. Also, Americans have a lot of sarcasm, but we try to avoid being sarcastic around people we just met or when we are trying to be polite, especially with foreigners. At least that's how it is with me.
same. Also, some people just don't get sarcasm/dry humor sadly. but that could be a preference thing or a culture thing. Either way, i feel sad that they aren't able to appreciate it
I think maybe because our culture is so service/sales based, and so many of us have worked in those jobs, there's a sort of performative extraversion that people become accustomed to showing to strangers and acquaintances. It's your "public face".
Fun fact: I was literally taught in elementary school to "treat the janitor as you would a CEO and vise versa." And I know many people who literally were taught the same, which I enjoy (not to say everyone is taught that though).
Wow, his theory about Americans making friends being due to them arriving on “Plymouth Rock” and needed to meet people, made me laugh out loud. Our parents encourage us to make friends as children. Some of us are introverted, but we are encouraged to be open and friendly. So even those of us who are fine not talking to others, aren’t annoyed when a stranger speaks to us.
In some ways he isn't really wrong. in the settlers days both early, and manifest destiny, there had to be a heavy instance on unity in community because you needed the whole town to work together to literally not die. it's a very ingrained behavior, even if it doesn't really extend to people who aren't in a particular community or culture.
@@johntrojan9653 so...I don't get that overly friendly attitude either. And I'm american. I just am used to big cities. Where you do what you need to do and don't bother people. It's still slightly creepy, if not a bit annoying when people in rural areas are acting like your best friend. When you just met them. And are busy. Like really...
Joel’s theory of why Americans are good at making friends is so adorable and funny 🤣🤣 he said bc the pilgrims had to make friends that made me laugh so loud
There were many peaceful settlements. Natives were called "savages" because they would attack settlements in the night, burn everything down and throw babies into the air and spear them with pitchforks. Confrontation is natural among all humans.
@@cincybest well Americans are blamed 100%, the natives are given bo blame ever for fighting, even Laura Ingalls Wilders name was removed from a literary award that was made in her honor because as a girl she states she was afraid of native Americans.
When I lived in NYC, I dated a girl from Germany, and she was always amazed when I struck up a conversation with the bartender serving us, which, because I was a bartender, I thought was just being polite. She would ask when we left," do you know him."
I'm dating a Russian girl right now and it's a similar thing. I say a couple words to some dude in the deli or standing in the subway or wherever and she always asks me "who was that? Do you know them?" Nope, never met, just saying hi to em.
My parents taught us that you can and should learn something from every single person you meet in life no matter how short the encounter. Everyone has something to teach you. The other point is that you should try to get along with everybody and treat people the way you want to be treated. Sometimes it's easier to talk to a stranger that a friend.
Talking about Americans, not the Spanish: The history of Thanksgiving isn't a myth, other than a few specific traditional foods not having been present.
I visited the UK last year in and around London and when my southern states accent came out, English folk really opened up. Everyone I spoke to were very kind and engaging. It was a great visit. Ready to go back.
Similar experience, went to visit my family there back in 2018 and my cousins invited some friends for a night out. The first 30 mins was just them (the friends) sitting in the pub amused at how i talked and said certain words lol i have a thick accent. It was a good time haha.
I shave my head now, but when I used to go to the barber, I would always have a conversation if they started talking to me, but I would never start one - I know what it's like to be stuck with a chatterbox while you're trying to focus on what you're doing.
Americans are sarcastic af. The major difference is that American sarcasm usually brings everyone in on the joke. British sarcasm doesn’t and often leaves people wondering if it was a joke or not.
Every hair stylist I've gone to here in the US is chatty. Wish they weren't. I just want my hair cut/ styled and be on my way. I'm an introvert and small talk is not my thing.
Austin, TX here. I'm loving this series of videos on accents and funny things Americans do. We are definitely encouraged to wave and be friendly and meet new people as children. I encourage my boys to say hi when then meet new people, shake hands (pre-Covid), and have the confidence to not shy away from new experiences. There are plenty of painfully shy people in America, so not everyone is friendly and chipper. But a lot of us are!
Waving is such a huge part of my daily life. When people drive down my street and don’t return my wave, I get suspicious. I’m just really Southern, I guess. 😂
Jensen Anderson you said it! It’s horrible. I never watch any of the award shows anymore because I can’t stand when they take this opportunity to take the podium and start whining and shoving their beliefs down our throat. I respect an actor/actress until they make this mistake (in my book). Ricky Gervais was the best thing to happen to the award shows. He went in there and gave them what they long deserved. I loved every minute of it. I can’t remember when I laughed so hard and felt so good!!!
1. The Americans unofficial motto is "Hold my beer". 2. Music. American music is so diverse because they adopted and adapted music through our melting pot society. 3. You can have Hollywood.
@@dougs7367 Triggered much ? I didn't tell you how to think, I gave my opinion on Hollywood. I still do have a right to an opinion in this country. Sorry if you're offended. I don't like anything about Hollywood.
I am a hairdresser in the US. We mostly talk the entire appointment even during the blow out. Most clients do not like silence and expect conversation.
Another Brit here! I, too, hate constant hairdresser/manicurist/masseuse chat. For me, these appointments are a chance to be tended and pampered, not relentlessly chat-chat-chatted to. Oh, how I dread that "Are you going anywhere nice on holiday this year?" opening gambit. I try to respond as monosyllabically as possible without being outright hostile, but an overly talkative "pamperer" never gets a second chance with me.
David Roberts I cut my own hair cause I never know what to talk about with my former Barber. Real cool guy, but we have nothing in common outside of cutting hair.
I did too until I found out that they still judge each other's regional dialects. And their North is considered similar to our South. A lot of it's their government's fault. The North understandably resents the South, especially Londoners because they get a lot less funding. Way more poverty up North (in general). As a result, a lot of people from less fortunate/working class "postal codes" have to show a sense of pride in where they live so that they're not looked down upon.
@@BigDogCountry Yup! Open-mindedness and free speech is a one-way street for most American leftists. Just look to see how well Ben Shapiro is received at most leftist venues! Need further proof? It's "in plain sight."
13:18 Them: Americans are non-sarchastic Me: allow me to introduce my sister, mother, father, uncle, grandma, my cousin, my OTHER cousin, my best friend, my friend, my teacher, my neighbor, my classmates who just want school to end, that one kid at school that's just done with life, that one korean kid that moved to America when she was 4, that one guy-
I literally sat next to a girl basically the first day my freshman semester of college and started talking to her I pretty much said do you want to be friends she's the absolute sweetest and prettiest person I've ever met and we're still friends I'm currently in my second semester of freshman year! Almost over though!
There is a less of a class system in the U.K.. Though many working class behave in a certain way, eat crappy food and get drunk on cheap beer or cider. Stop behaving like that then
@@Uhtredrag1080 How many victims did he have compared to the gazillions of random friendly encounters that have happened for centuries? May as well never get out of bed, since the odds of something happening to you are about the same or even more likely.
Right, I thought they have traveled to the US a few times. The sarcasm must of went over their heads.🤣 No way they did not encounter any. Bless their hearts indeed.
@@slardebard I don't think the original Holmes was supposed to be any stronger than the average man but his ability to pick up on the tiniest details would reveal his opponents weaknesses and he could play on those weaknesses for an upper hand. At least that's what I deduce. What say you Watson?
@@wynn4578 in one of his older storys one of his assailants bent an iron poker into a loop as a demonstration of his superior strength. Once he had left the room Holmes took the poker and bent it straight again. He commented "he will find my grip no feebler than his own". That's what my comments was based on. It was a good story and a long time ago. I could be wrong.
Isn't Dr. Who the longest running TV show ever? It's been over 50 years! I love Dr. Who and am still watching it. I started with the 3rd Doctor and got to see reruns of Dr 1 and 2. Been watching ever since, as often as I could find it on American TV.
They don't sincerely envy sincerity, were they sincere, no envy would be necessary. They were being sarcastic, and more than a little smug in their cleverness.
@@todd9016 Plenty of people are humble, humility is not the same thing as self-loathing, and Todd you sound SUPER arrogant, so how about you start your humility campaign with yourself.
"I love how Americans are so confident and can just strike up a conversation with anyone" Me, an American with crippling social anxiety: "Haha, yeah, totally"
I'll never forget having fish and chips in a crowded little restaurant in London when an older British couple picked up their food at the counter and were looking around trying to find a vacant table. There were only two at our table, so I motioned with a flourish of my arm that they should sit down at our table. When they did sit across from us, the lady said, "You have to be Americans!" When I asked how she knew since we hadn't spoken a word yet, she replied that no British people would smile at strangers and invite them to sit down at their table. And I have found that this is true of most of the other Northern European countries I've visited.
Probably the #1 reason why I don’t go to the salon. I don’t want to have a conversation with someone pawing through my hair. :D I worked in a lab where I didn’t have to speak with anyone.
Yea, like, sitting through a hair cut without a conversation would just be awkward af. When I walk out getting a hair cut I'm happy for two reasons. 1. I have a fresh cut, and 2. I just had a mood lifting conversation
Sarcasm is very common in the US. I also believe insincerity is pretty common but maybe less so than in England. Can't say tho, cuz I haven't visited yet.
Americans have sarcasm, but compared to the British? It's like comparing 3.2% (near) beer with Navy-proof rum--you don't even know you're finished before you hit the floor.
I like how Joel is always trying to get to the root of things. He's always figuring out how things started or where they came from. Its fun to watch the hypothesis form!
Many years ago I moved to England when I was 22. I had the biggest shock of my life! I was so outgoing and I felt like everyone was invisibly holding out their arms saying go back! lol. I did realize something about myself and how I grew up though. I really settled into the English culture. It was a relief to me that I didnt always have to be this outgoing person always starting conversation and having control over everything. I love, love, loved England. I lived in East Sussex for five years. I read many English novels. And tons of poetry. Those were the days of no cell phones or computers!! The english countryside is so enchanting!
I honestly believe I was born in the wrong country simply for this reason. Being outgoing is not who I am and yet I feel I'm surrounded by people who want to strike up a conversation.
Wow how wonderful. I bet it's nice and green and fresh over there. I'm an extremist and can be very outgoing or very quiet and reflective. I'm not particularly fond of small talk like lots of American who want to tell you about their house or new car part or electronic piece they have. I'll talk sports or politics or something interesting. Americans like to talk about the new hardwood floor or entertainment system or fuel injection in they're car or the all time worst how much their home as increased in value... I'm like cool now tell someone who cares.😂😎💯
No, that's not how it happened. They came here and settled, no harm intended, at least with the early British and Dutch settlers. It was later that greed rose to the top and then it became a matter of taking land.
what revolution? do you mean the millions marching against violent systemic corruption in our justice system or the couple hundred fascists that hate that we voted for the other corporate oligarch and thus expressed that we shouldn't vote and just let there be a pathological liar dictator? because both failed because everybody can't grip that we need to get off the TV news and join up vs the two oligarchy parties that keep taking turns taking our rights. UK, send help, please.
well maybe the UN could, or maybe in conjunction with a populist, non-partisan effort by the people together with the UN and the oath keepers? This two party corporate scam has gone too far, perhaps more than the oath keepers will turn, the vets, as long as we're divided we're weak but the marines and green berets would help us if it was clear there was no dichotomy in our want to abolish these two parties, they're beholden to the constitution which also says we're supposed to not let this happen...and we tested waters and it's bad. We can fight about wedge issues once we get the oligarchs out, and man, maybe russia and china will be our liberators, haha and the UN will let us have the Germany deal, updated, better version of our constitution.....but the Uk alone? no, it'd have to be a pretty large coalition including a rebellion within
@Bryan Bradley yea great idea brah, i would fuckin love to but this authoritarian pro-wrestling gov't made it so i can't because once i had in my possession a piece of a plant from mother earth's bounty that is widely accepted as safe legal therapy throughout the world, and it was literally the size of my fingernail on my pinky. They took me to jail, stole my car (had pay more than it's value to get it back) took my blood and said "there's thc in your blood, derp derp, that's a dui" well unless you're a complete idiot you know that THC stays in your blood up to 2 weeks and in the end it cost me 7 days in jail because of "communication oversight" 13,000 in losses over 5 years of getting jerked around and i'm through ARD and fines are paid but still paying off my lawyer, but most importantly, canada, is not allowing people from America into their country that have gotten a dui, and last I heard they're having a "the left is right" kinda issue too so fuck you, get me a plane ticket to europe or dont tell me to leave, because it's not that fuckin simple, look at the southern border, imagine ppl "the cartel wants ti kill my family" cool, so get in this cage"...you ppl with the "just leave then" have no idea what the world is actually like and must have never had to struggle. Honestly, I guess I'm glad for you but help us poor ppl who never got a break and quit being selfish.
Sadly, So do the vast majority of people who live outside Hollywood. Far too often, Fools who work at the mall or Starbucks or the bank in smaller cities or even random small towns now have that awful attitude. Social media and internet has only magnified the worst in people to make 80% of Americans now insufferable!!
American confidence comes from a few things, the revolutionary war, being a world superpower, being a free people and being able to own arms (the 2nd amendment), our constitution, and believing we can accomplish anything.
Most big Rock Stars, like Elvis, were getting their styles and music from the USA black people at the time. The black people's music were not being played on the radio back then, so young, white, rebellious music players and singers, were playing black people's because it was more fun and because it was taboo at the time.
Yup, so just thank our wonderful african americans who we enslaved and then proceeded to steal music from and pretty much any other non-white musician. Plus many other thing.. I wish people would do more shows and books about white americans who stole ideas and things from other people and things. Like: "How History Really Happened". I would watch those obsessively! Music is like my #1 in life so I'm truly thankful that we have so many cultures here even if the circumstances for which they came here/how they were treated when they arrived was an absolute atrocity. And I hope we will someday (at least the majority of us) treat other cultures and people with respect and acceptance and truly show our appreciation for what they add to all our lives.
Have you never heard of Southerners saying "bless his heart" meaning it's so good he/she/they can function even though they're mentally challenged. Sarcasm is our jam.
Sabra Maxwell yes, I’m from Texas too. We talk to everyone and acknowledge people that we pass. It’s also a southern thing. It’s called having good home training. Lol
I’ve traveled all over the country and lived in Ohio, Mississippi, Southern California, northern Virginia, where I spent my teens and 20s (the part around Washington D.C., not to be confused with actual Virginia... I’ve lived in Central Virginia as well), North Carolina, and now Indiana. Everywhere I’ve lived... north, south, east, west, Midwest... it’s definitely a smaller town thing too. Once you’re outside of a metropolitan area, people are much friendlier. There’s more sincerity (I’m generalizing!), more active listening & genuine interest, more eye contact, even more physical contact (touching someone’s arm while in conversation, handshakes are more firm and longer, pats on the shoulder or back, even hugs). That generally didn’t happen in the D.C. area, Chicago, Miami, Tampa, L.A., New York... There’s a lot more friendliness in southern cities, but people are definitely, by degrees, more open and friendlier the further you get from a large metro area! Whatever state you put me in, please let it be an area of fewer than 100,000 people! Growing up in a metro area of 5 to 6 million people sucked! Rudeness and “me first” everywhere.
England gave us our Scarlett O'Hara, Vivian Leigh, after dozens of American actresses auditioned for and failed to get the part. Vivian also starred in, "A Streetcar Named Desire" where she once again spoke with a very convincing Southern accent.
The Southern Plantations were mostly established by the "spare heir" to the British upper class. The eldest son inherited everything under British Law, and for a few thousand pounds could send his brother(s) off to America. Southern accents have frequently been compared to simply a slowed down English accent. Some of the phrases are actually out of both rich and poor British English. Vivian actually spoke a bit too fast for the part (rapid delivery rather than a more measured approached) but her smile and regal approach made up for it. Remember too that the 2nd sons were also from Scottish and Irish landowners (her "father" telling her to keep the land (Tara as in the hill of the Irish Kings) no matter what).
@TJZ hahahhahhhahahh stop lying who was before chuck berry ?...muddy waters.....big mama thortan that did the sound you ain't nothing but a hound dog go look it up before you become the laughing stock of this channel.....whites embraced it the most like everything else they embraced
Rock and roll is a mix of black music (blues, R&B etc) and white music (country, rockabilly, etc). Chuck Berry realized that for crossover appeal, he needed to incorporate white styles of music into his repertoire. His hit “Maybelline” was a reworking of an old country tune called “Ida Red”. This crossover appeal is what propelled him to fame. Elvis had crossover appeal as well, as well as sex appeal.
I live in Seattle. We don't talk to strangers either. It's a southern/midwest thing. One thing that Brits don't envy but should is freedom of speech. We don't have cops visiting our door because they don't like what we said on facebook.
Except not so much Plymouth Rock. It's more the later mass migrations of Germans, Italians Eastern Europeans and Southern Blacks all moving to big cities almost all at once. We were facing strangers every day. So we would get politely friendly.
@@michellemaine2719 In England Cops will come to your house if they don't like something you said on Facebook. Could you imagine that happening in America? A lot of Brits have expressed concern over their loss of freedom of speech.
Every time, I've been in England, we've always have the people of the B&B sit with us while we ate and chatted, they even insisted we stay up and visit with them, people at the museums, restaurants , always chatted us up after they found we were Americans, they always made us feel so welcome.
Cashless society is not a dream--it is a nightmare! When you no longer have physical control of your money, there will be no way to stop the government from controlling all you do by limiting your ability to spend, purchase, save, give, etc. It will be a new form of fascism where even what you eat or where you live can be managed totally by the government. Managing your own money is empowerment and freedom.
Jerry Adams I’m I hate to burst your bubble, but physical money is fiat and can be worth less than the paper it is printed on. You can buy gold and silver like I do, but they can take that too like they did during the Great Depression. Money is not ours the government controls it all. Might as well realize that one now.
One of the things I miss most about America when I'm traveling overseas is the ease with which you can just say anything to anybody anywhere. I'm not sure it's confidence, per se, but it's just one of those things. I can do it without thinking about it, but only in America. Anywhere else, you have to be careful because banter with strangers is not welcomed in most places. In America, you can say the silliest thing to a total stranger standing in line at the grocery store, and they'll one-up you in a second. Then again, when a Spaniard first encountered a native, I highly doubt he said, "Wanna be friends, buddy?". It was most likely, "Off with his head!!!!" In terms of your comment about music - absolutely! One of the benefits of being a melting pot is the blending of musical styles that never actually results in a final product, but keeps morphing into newer forms all the time. I contend that America's greatest contribution to the world has been music - no other country even comes close. A by-product of this is the most ubiquitous musical instrument on the planet, the electric guitar. For a nice look at how American music developed, Ken Burns has a great series called Jazz. Highly recommended watching.
"Americans are so sincere and not sarcastic. If they say we must meet up soon, you know you are going to meet up soon." OMG, it is just so sweet and naive, it's adorable. I was laughing for a good minute.
I've stopped being sarcastic actually because most people thought I was serious or being mean. "It's not funny to be hurtful! =(" etc. Maybe Americans like sarcasm in comedy they watch, but in my experience more just don't get it. At least that's how it is in my neck of the woods. If anything Americans are more blunt and literal than cheeky sarcastic. Many also don't appreciate it because it isn't 'honest'. Which I can get, used to be sarcastic with my friends. Got tiresome if you do it too much, or people start questioning if this is how you really feel if you act this way all the time. Boys...always taking things farther than it needs to go haha.
Yes, sarcasm and superficial flattery and friendliness exists in much of America.... BUT many other Americans are also genuine and sincere and mean what they say!!
As an American I can say with complete confidence that we are actually the exact opposite. We are total BS’ers!! We are just better at faking it I think and there is a cultural expectation to load on the syrup.
I mean..I still mean it (for the most part) whenever I say "Let's meet up soon" but the opportunity to do so does not always come, in fact most of the time not, which is unfortunate.
We definitely gave the world rock n roll, but you guys took it to a whole new place! You gave the world the Beatles, The Who, The Rolling Stones, Queen, Radiohead … so many great bands!
Hello Marty. Ok, maybe you are correct that Brits invented shade. Let’s explore what shade I found in 2 of Shakespeare’s plays: 1) Ghost King Hamlet threw shade at Claudius like “Yo, Guess who killed my ass?” 2) I believe when Juliet’s nurse burst into Juliet’s room to tell her that Mercutio was killed, she could have told Juliet straight away, but the nurse was being a little shady by not getting straight to the point. There is shade in all of the plays, but let’s talk about Shakespeare. At age 18 William started off doing shady stuff...Ann Hathaway was pregnant months before they were married. In America, we call that a shotgun wedding. (That was my version of shade) 😘
Oh god excuse me while I retrieve my eyes that just rolled on the ground., be sure to attached yourself to it. Billions entertained, hundred thousand of jobs and culture contributions wiped out because the internet says its bad. Sure you and your hive mind can do better.
I'm mixed, half-British, half-American, raised in America, and have lived and worked in both places in both urban and rural communities. So, I feel somewhat confident in saying that Americans can comfortably strike up conversations with strangers because there is literally no class, status, wealth and education communication barriers in day-to-day life in America. While the concepts of class and privilege and monarchy have been strongly entrenched in British culture since the Roman era, they have still not gotten much traction in the USA.
Interesting.... 🧐 I never thought about it. Being American and never really leaving the US... We were taught not to talk to strangers, but time and place factor in.
I'm from the South in the US and talking with people you don't know like in the grocery store or just while out & about is So natural. But in the North I know it's not as common. "Southern Hospitality" is our term for it.
What your describing is pretense to display good behavior in public. True southern hospitality is not pretentious as you warmly welcome ppl into your arena - your home, space, town, etc, and generously give to them. May be food, shelter, kindness, a sense of family, etc.
Ohh Meredith Ellen, my apologies, I admit that I misread the one piece of your comment that first seemed to describe using pretense when offering kindness and good behavior with ppl you don't like or know. Thought I read "talking with ppl you don't like" ha ha ha, and of course, your actual comment does describe an aspect of genuine kindness that comes from most southerners.
As Americans, we are taught to be friendly, wave and be polite. We also like to smile a lot. "Hi, how are you"? is very American. I hear in Russia they don't smile much.
And how cold hearted they had to be to wipe out 96% of Native Americans in cold blood. Men women and children massacred en masse but yeah. Yay America 🇺🇸
LOL if you think about it, Americans are basically defectors of Britain. They left because they were being oppressed religiously and they didn't want to be, so of course, they're going to value being able to practice whatever religion they wanted. This probably naturally led to being able to be more opinionated and expressive of their values. This is also probably where individualism first took root. It makes sense. Not only that, we realize that we're a melting pot of a country and we respect that. We're used to talking to people from all sorts of backgrounds. People think we're stuck up and selfish, but honestly, Americans are pretty charitable and selfless people. We have the most charities in the world, and we're usually the first responders to global natural disasters. Foreigners say we have a Hero Complex, but honestly, if we didn't have a Hero Complex, we wouldn't jump at responding to global disasters. It gets rocky once you try to tell us what to do though. We don't like being told what to do. We value our freedom of choice, which is why we are respectful of other people's opinions and can agree to disagree. At least usually.
"Because it's like a nation of immigrants from other countries all coming to America they had to talk to each other." - too bad we didn't learn to listen to each other...
I live in the south, and we couldn't imagine going somewhere and not speaking to strangers, it's just a natural thing, if someone doesn't say anything, people assume they are having a bad day.
Elvis Presley was born and raised in Tupelo, Mississippi. He hung out with the black community and learned their style of music. Much of Elvis’ music is a mixture of black music and gospel music.
Alas, now you have to explain what Gospel Music is to them. Maybe even Black music, since they don’t get nearly as wide a set as we did. They probably thought Hip-hop was the earliest Black music, or maybe as old as Big Band.
in america white people threw black music in the trash can in briton the white kids took it out and said WOW and then the Beatles the stones the kinks the Who the Yardbirds the Animals black sabbath led zeppelin deep purple Elton john david bowie Queen and on and on Thank you BLACK AMERICA....You see black lives do really matter.
Yup! Americans talk all the time. Extroversion is highly valued. Having lots of acquaintances, who we call friends, is the norm for many Americans - and then on the other hand, it’s common to have only a few very close friends, “best friends”.
1369Stiles How about an example for you. England has socialized health care. So with a cashless system they could either raise your individual co pay or deny treatment all together based on your food, tobacco, alcohol etc purchases.
Convenience is king, I always keep cash on me for emergencies but I use my debit card for everything. It's just quick, easy, and done. If the banks had to openly disclose all data to the government I'd be more concerned, but the USA ain't China. Of course, maybe the NSA does do that. Too late now I guess...
Yes, I have, but you really need to educate yourself on what the Spanish did bringing Slavery and stealing all the gold and silver they could get their hands on, destroying some of the world's most advanced civilizations. Please do some research!
When a society goes cashless, each and every transaction is electronically recorded. That means each transaction can also be monitored and taxed. The privacy that cash affords a person means that you can sell something to your buddy, that you no longer need or want, and only two people are involved - the seller and the buyer. Imagine the money to be made, if there was a "fee" (tax) on each and every single transaction, worldwide - now can you imagine banks, big business and governments saying no to that?
The bankers ( owner class ) would love a cashless society ... The RFID chip is what is being pushed ...everyone will have a chip implant with your data from finances to your health ...no buying or selling without the chip...some employers are now seeking to get their employees to get chipped instead of an ID card... That to me sounds like the proverbial 666 mark
@@3DJapan yes I know ...it works for ALL your info .. It is the doorway to tyranny .. Anyone that does not conform to the corporate state can be cut off
'@@xadam2dudex not RFID ok for the products however cashless buying is already in china where its The Phones that are used "We Chat " and (RFID simulated comm)
New Yorkers are extremely sarcastic, so much so that people outside the city are often offended by what we say. We love dark, sardonic humor and don’t really care if anyone else “gets it.”
There has been a beautifully romantic relationship back and forth across the pond between the USA and GB. British legends like the Rolling Stones, the Beatles, Led Zeppelin, etc. were heavily influenced by American artists like Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry and Everly Brothers...John Lennon said he picked up a guitar because of Chuck Berry. And then the entire wave of legendary rock bands from Britain in the 60's inspired a great wave of American rock bands in the later 60's and 70's, then you had the Brit pop acts of the 80's, and most recently America has inspired a wave of original British hip hop acts. And you have American bands coming out saying how much bands like the Arctic Monkeys and Oasis inspired them. And then the Foo Fighters sell out 3 nights at Wembley, and Adele sells out every show she puts on in the USA. All of us win!
If you ignore individual artists and look at entire communities, with the exception of country music (of the genres mentioned in the clip) every single style of "American" music comes from the African American community, or the Latino American community. The ethnic mix of this nation is its greatest strength.
I had a few friends visiting from Essex and I remember one day while we were walking around the city, they kept remarking how everyone was so friendly. I honestly had no idea what they were talking about at first. To me, someone saying, "Hi" was unremarkable, unlike a full conversation with a stranger. They really were trying to explain to me that yes, saying hello to a stranger on the street is something absolutely no one does at home.
When I visited Paris on 3 business trips, I noticed strangers would say a quick "Bonjour" to me as we passed each other on the sidewalk. I thought that was so nice of them. I picked up that habit immediately. I used it particularly when I inadvertently made eye contact, as averting my eyes seems so rude.
In think the Americans confidence is also a way to break social anxiety, when your standing about with others you kinda get a little anxious, saying a simple hello helps to break the tension, rather the conversation continues or not, your just like I'm ok now thank you!
That would be nice! I was in London during the Christmas season once, said something nice to another shopper in Harrods, and they looked at me like I had suddenly grown 3 heads! I have never forgotten it. (Two decades ago)
@@garrett6064 ouch...hope so! I don’t have a heavy accent, but my sis, who was younger than me when we moved to Scotland, does. I can’t even understand her, and I’ve know her since the day she was born! But, she is the friendliest soul you will ever meet, even if you have no idea what she’s saying, you know it’s nice.
With music it's mainly African Americans who bring all the genres to you beautiful Brits. Elvis's songs were originally sung by Black people. 😊 We just couldn't be on TV in the 50's. So this really good looking White dude brought our music to the masses! Blues, Jazz, Rock & Roll, Soul, Funk, Disco, and Hip-Hop all began with African Americans and we are fiercely proud of that fact. Country music is just the blues for White people. LOL 😄 All the sorrow and and heartache they feel is in there!!
That's interesting about Britain's class system. I knew it existed in the past but didn't know it still existed. Could you do an episode on just that? What are the classes, how does language vary, etc...
@@kylespencer6461 The division in the US has become very bad pushed by the press, social media, and the left. I never thought I'd see the press outright lie to the degree they have. Never thought I'd see social media censor one side. This is not healthy for the US. Its not really a class system though. It's more like the start of tribalism.
"Hollywood" as most people think of it, is less a place than an industry. Long ago, it used to be a place specifically when the U. S. movie industry relocated from chilly New York to temperate Southern California. But the tacky, rundown physical locations in Los Angeles that used to be the collective home of the movie industry, no longer really exists. Now Hollywood is mostly a synonym for the entertainment industry, specifically movies and television, regardless of location. Nowadays it's also frequently used as a pejorative term for shallow, egotistical, entitled, and over-rewarded showbiz professionals when they get involved in politics.
Amen! I am so sick of these poorly educated, self centered, overpaid, sanctimonious and pompous fools thinking that we really are interested in their opinions about politics or any subject for that matter! They are actors, basically puppets saying lines that they are paid to say. Spare all of us from such bubble brained idiots!
The problem is that, back at the beginning of the 20th century when Hollywood was just emerging as The Dream Factory, a lot of good looking dumb people in the country moved out there, got married (or not) and started having babies. Then they never left. Not my original idea, but I think a fair assessment over all.
*Don't forget to get your bathrobes here, not many left!:* www.joelandliashop.com
Please contact me about your upcoming trip to Boston! Thankyou my loves! xx 😘😘🙏🙏🎄🎄
Boy do I wish I could moderate the comments above right now! 🙄😂🤦♀️
Oh, Joel...I did recommend you to my YT friend, Samantha March for voice over for her audio books! 😘
I love that my ancestors, uh hemm, the Brits, don't conform to society like US does and they keep and preserve their Old World charm. 🙌🥰
Christmas '15, less than a yr. before he passed on, my son and I went to theatre to see Dr. Who. Thx England
If y'all think Americans aren't sarcastic, you haven't met enough of us. 🤣
We're just so good at being sarcastic they never know
@@Ryno_D1no Bless their hearts.
I think they've been watching too much TV 😂😂😂
Evelynwashere 1 too much hallmark 😂
THANK YOU!!!
In America, we hate anything that has to do with an american acting like they are higher caste.
David Roberts Half the country hates him and due to his corruption we are trying to get rid of him.
David Roberts lmao so many of us hate him tho?
That's just it, in America we have a caste system not a class system. It's more race based than socio-economic based...
David Roberts Donald Trump is our Brexit. The only difference is that Trump did not win the popular vote and Brexit did.
@TYRESE MOORE That was voted into office..
The whole sincerity part is an illusion. To Brits Americans can seem sincere, but Americans can see right through it to the bs because we grew up with it.
Also, Americans have a lot of sarcasm, but we try to avoid being sarcastic around people we just met or when we are trying to be polite, especially with foreigners. At least that's how it is with me.
Yeah.
same. Also, some people just don't get sarcasm/dry humor sadly. but that could be a preference thing or a culture thing. Either way, i feel sad that they aren't able to appreciate it
I think maybe because our culture is so service/sales based, and so many of us have worked in those jobs, there's a sort of performative extraversion that people become accustomed to showing to strangers and acquaintances. It's your "public face".
Same, im so mean to my friends but if ur a stranger ill be the nicest person on earth 🥰
Yes!!!
I love how Joel accidentally explained thanksgiving 😂😂😂
Fun fact: I was literally taught in elementary school to "treat the janitor as you would a CEO and vise versa." And I know many people who literally were taught the same, which I enjoy (not to say everyone is taught that though).
I agree
YES! We all play an important role. The Top wouldn't be what it is if it wasn't for the hard work at the bottom.
My mother taught me to treat all people as equals. She didn't like class prejudice.
Ok kids, listen up: Todays lesson is "How To Get Fired"
~Treat your company CEO like a Janitor~
Kindness transcends all classes, that's for sure. 😃
Wow, his theory about Americans making friends being due to them arriving on “Plymouth Rock” and needed to meet people, made me laugh out loud. Our parents encourage us to make friends as children. Some of us are introverted, but we are encouraged to be open and friendly. So even those of us who are fine not talking to others, aren’t annoyed when a stranger speaks to us.
Love your enthusiam guys but gosh, it shouldn't require 25 minutes to drone through 5 items - but Kudos all the same - (Us Yanks appreciate it ☆)
In some ways he isn't really wrong. in the settlers days both early, and manifest destiny, there had to be a heavy instance on unity in community because you needed the whole town to work together to literally not die. it's a very ingrained behavior, even if it doesn't really extend to people who aren't in a particular community or culture.
Honestly it probably had more to do with the capitalistic aspect of American society.
@@johntrojan9653 so...I don't get that overly friendly attitude either. And I'm american. I just am used to big cities. Where you do what you need to do and don't bother people.
It's still slightly creepy, if not a bit annoying when people in rural areas are acting like your best friend. When you just met them. And are busy. Like really...
@Cats 2079 ""READ J'AH"" 😉😉😉
Joel’s theory of why Americans are good at making friends is so adorable and funny 🤣🤣 he said bc the pilgrims had to make friends that made me laugh so loud
Because, of course, the spacious luxury cruises that gently drifted over here were, I’m certain, polite and dead silent... except the vomiting maybe?
There were many peaceful settlements. Natives were called "savages" because they would attack settlements in the night, burn everything down and throw babies into the air and spear them with pitchforks. Confrontation is natural among all humans.
@@YumumsThe Europeans were where they didn't belong and best believe if it was the other way around , the Europeans would've reacted the same way.
Yea,not really accurate...lol...lol
@@cincybest well Americans are blamed 100%, the natives are given bo blame ever for fighting, even Laura Ingalls Wilders name was removed from a literary award that was made in her honor because as a girl she states she was afraid of native Americans.
When I lived in NYC, I dated a girl from Germany, and she was always amazed when I struck up a conversation with the bartender serving us, which, because I was a bartender, I thought was just being polite. She would ask when we left," do you know him."
I'm dating a Russian girl right now and it's a similar thing. I say a couple words to some dude in the deli or standing in the subway or wherever and she always asks me "who was that? Do you know them?"
Nope, never met, just saying hi to em.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
"Nowhere like England cares about class."
India: laughs in caste system
India
I had the SAME THOUGHT.
I just commented the same thing!!
You're right, but you know where it came from right? From the English occupation.
That was my first thought!
My parents taught us that you can and should learn something from every single person you meet in life no matter how short the encounter. Everyone has something to teach you. The other point is that you should try to get along with everybody and treat people the way you want to be treated. Sometimes it's easier to talk to a stranger that a friend.
Andrew Galindo the Golden rule! The essence of America and being American.
Andrew Galindo, that’s excellent advice!
well said
Then, Andrew, you were blessed with great parents.
@@PAPAMOZO Thank you, I was indeed.
Asking the Native Americans to be friends when the Spanish first arrived... yeah that’s not how that went down
Andrea Stone As a full blood Native American, I wholeheartedly agree.
@@michaelshields7777 the spanish did to the natives what the natives did to the Anasazi. The ancient ones were wiped off the face of the earth.
Talking about Americans, not the Spanish: The history of Thanksgiving isn't a myth, other than a few specific traditional foods not having been present.
Still a decent theory.. but Yea!
Like these two but some things dragged on a bit...I did like it though..
I visited the UK last year in and around London and when my southern states accent came out, English folk really opened up. Everyone I spoke to were very kind and engaging. It was a great visit. Ready to go back.
That's London for you .
Similar experience, went to visit my family there back in 2018 and my cousins invited some friends for a night out. The first 30 mins was just them (the friends) sitting in the pub amused at how i talked and said certain words lol i have a thick accent. It was a good time haha.
American hairdressers LOVE to talk to their clients. I’m always the awkward client that keeps quiet.
I shave my head now, but when I used to go to the barber, I would always have a conversation if they started talking to me, but I would never start one - I know what it's like to be stuck with a chatterbox while you're trying to focus on what you're doing.
Same
For real ALWAYS talking
me too!! Im just thinking, please don't talk to me just do my hair lol
I hate getting my hair washed because I don’t know wether to close my eyes or not.
"A Spanish person just bumped into a Native American and said 'hey, do you want to be friends?'" Oh Joel, sweet Joel, if only that's how it went down.
Yeah, I was thinking the same thing too, if only these poor innocents really knew.
I grew up in San Juan Bautista CA where there are actual missions where the Spanish lived and had native Americans basically live as slaves.
He hasn't got a clue!
Joel, my sweet summer child...
Christian K. Not too far off at least not until 90% passed away bc of smallpox
In america the norm is for a person to have a relationship with their hair dresser. They are underpaid therapists xD
I thought this exact same thing! The woman i go to know one another very well. Family live, work life, and on
@@kathy6713 My hairdresser knows me better than anyone! It's half a hair appointment and half therapy!
I spend 10 hours with my hairdresser sometimes 😭😭 we’re weirdly close now.
My Bartender is my Therapist - (He's also Stock Broker and my Marriage Councilor- Lol !)
Yes I love talking to my hairdresser. We just don't stop talking even when my hair is being dried.
Americans are sarcastic af. The major difference is that American sarcasm usually brings everyone in on the joke. British sarcasm doesn’t and often leaves people wondering if it was a joke or not.
I can’t wrap my head around the notion that hairdressers don’t like to chat!
Every hair stylist I've gone to here in the US is chatty. Wish they weren't. I just want my hair cut/ styled and be on my way. I'm an introvert and small talk is not my thing.
Love chatting and catching up with my hairdresser! How boring if she wasn’t chatty-it takes 1.5 hours for a cut with highlights.
Mary Willson Bizarre, huh? We have great convos in the salons.
My hairdresser is practically my therapist 😂
Jamie Rhea Fr lol 😂 and I’m practically hers!!
My hairdresser talks OVER the hair dryer! 😅 -Midwest USA
kelsey jordan That’s annoying. 😐
I was looking for this reply ws soon as they came to that part.
American hair salons are low key therapy providers 💇♀️🥰
Yea Hairdressers and Barbers are therapists.
Ayyy, Illinois here
A stranger is a friend you haven't met.
Love this !!! 👍😊
A stranger is also when you sit on yer hand to make it numb and then.....
A friend is a stranger waiting to stab you In the back
As long as they dont show up in a white van with the words free candy on it
@@getoutim07 in the hood
Austin, TX here. I'm loving this series of videos on accents and funny things Americans do. We are definitely encouraged to wave and be friendly and meet new people as children. I encourage my boys to say hi when then meet new people, shake hands (pre-Covid), and have the confidence to not shy away from new experiences. There are plenty of painfully shy people in America, so not everyone is friendly and chipper. But a lot of us are!
Waving is such a huge part of my daily life. When people drive down my street and don’t return my wave, I get suspicious. I’m just really Southern, I guess. 😂
I’m American and I live in SoCal. Most of Hollywood is a dump!
greenblood64 all the liberals
That’s where all the homeless people stay because it’s just better for them. It’s just the movies and Universal Studios and stuff that makes it better
Jensen Anderson you said it! It’s horrible. I never watch any of the award shows anymore because I can’t stand when they take this opportunity to take the podium and start whining and shoving their beliefs down our throat. I respect an actor/actress until they make this mistake (in my book). Ricky Gervais was the best thing to happen to the award shows. He went in there and gave them what they long deserved. I loved every minute of it. I can’t remember when I laughed so hard and felt so good!!!
Yeah hollywood has turned into a total dump lol
Mia C so overpopulated
1. The Americans unofficial motto is "Hold my beer".
2. Music. American music is so diverse because they adopted and adapted music through our melting pot society.
3. You can have Hollywood.
Amen to Hollywood. Nothing but whiny sjw who think they're suppose to tell us how to think and act.
@@immar1075 Oh, you poor little ❄
@@dougs7367 Triggered much ? I didn't tell you how to think, I gave my opinion on Hollywood. I still do have a right to an opinion in this country. Sorry if you're offended. I don't like anything about Hollywood.
@@helenholt1161 Now it's "poor thing" if you have an opinion? Snowflake? LOL
The song "hollywoods not america" is perfect
While you're talking about America's contribution to music, I'm over here screaming Motown!!! but you can't hear me. LOL
and Elvis, and C&W, et. al.
LOVE Motown
Same!
Yes!
Kathleen Jackson exactly! Screaming here from Detroit!
Sarcasm is my next language. Americans sarcasm can be so good that people don’t pick up on it 😂
Mean more like
The secret of confidence, we don't care what you think. It's very free-ing. Balls out.
Texas .
(yup, that theres a one-word reply that speaks volumes)
Desty Richards. Amen. We The People Of The United States haven't had to give a rip what Brits think of us since 1776.
America... F*ck Yeah!!
@@johnmcdonald9304 amen
Tell it, Desty! We're real. More informal.
Speaking to someone, is just an acknowledgment that other person exists.
I am a hairdresser in the US. We mostly talk the entire appointment even during the blow out. Most clients do not like silence and expect conversation.
Omg really. I hate it when my hairdresser talks like get the job done and stop talking lol and yes I'm British!
I think the "talk" during a cut is why we choose a particular "Stylist /Barber" etc...
Another Brit here! I, too, hate constant hairdresser/manicurist/masseuse chat. For me, these appointments are a chance to be tended and pampered, not relentlessly chat-chat-chatted to. Oh, how I dread that "Are you going anywhere nice on holiday this year?" opening gambit. I try to respond as monosyllabically as possible without being outright hostile, but an overly talkative "pamperer" never gets a second chance with me.
@@annalieff-saxby568 yes! A fellow Brit who agrees to the T! 👍🏽
David Roberts I cut my own hair cause I never know what to talk about with my former Barber. Real cool guy, but we have nothing in common outside of cutting hair.
I honestly thought that Britain was completely over the class system. Wow.
I did too until I found out that they still judge each other's regional dialects. And their North is considered similar to our South. A lot of it's their government's fault. The North understandably resents the South, especially Londoners because they get a lot less funding. Way more poverty up North (in general). As a result, a lot of people from less fortunate/working class "postal codes" have to show a sense of pride in where they live so that they're not looked down upon.
@@jenniferrada1099 from a brit this is pretty accurate
@@jenniferrada1099 Its more complex than that . There are cultural differences, there have been for thousands of years .
They are wrong. Hindus are obviously much worse about it. (Or any other non-Sikh Indian (excluding individuals), probably.)
Americans value freedom of speech even if we are on opposite sides. Civil Americans agree that we are all allowed to agree that we can disagree😎
Almeta Jones truth 🙌🏽
So true
Yep in England you get belittled for having a different opinion causing inadequacy. This is why there is confidence problems in the UK
What America are _you_ living in? If you don't tread the leftist party line, you don't have free speech and nobody is allowed to disagree.
@@BigDogCountry Yup! Open-mindedness and free speech is a one-way street for most American leftists. Just look to see how well Ben Shapiro is received at most leftist venues! Need further proof? It's "in plain sight."
13:18
Them: Americans are non-sarchastic
Me: allow me to introduce my sister, mother, father, uncle, grandma, my cousin, my OTHER cousin, my best friend, my friend, my teacher, my neighbor, my classmates who just want school to end, that one kid at school that's just done with life, that one korean kid that moved to America when she was 4, that one guy-
Joel's story about American making friends is the most adorably niave theory I've ever heard in my life
Well, he isn't exactly wrong. There isn't much of an invisible class system.
I literally sat next to a girl basically the first day my freshman semester of college and started talking to her I pretty much said do you want to be friends she's the absolute sweetest and prettiest person I've ever met and we're still friends I'm currently in my second semester of freshman year! Almost over though!
Especially the comment about Native Americans.
Yes! The story about the Spaniard and the Native American sure was friendly 🥲
There is a less of a class system in the U.K.. Though many working class behave in a certain way, eat crappy food and get drunk on cheap beer or cider. Stop behaving like that then
"We're old, but not as old as our viewers" I choked and I wasnt even eating or drinking. 🤣 I'm also 50 so theres that..
As an American I will talk to anyone. I just feel like others add so much to our lives.
Lol. I posted and then saw you pretty much said the same thing. Greetings friend.
Agree. What were we all put here for?
I'm from the South and it's just ingrained!
I feel like Bundy's victims said the same thing.
@@Uhtredrag1080 How many victims did he have compared to the gazillions of random friendly encounters that have happened for centuries? May as well never get out of bed, since the odds of something happening to you are about the same or even more likely.
Bless your heart. You don't think we are sarcastic.
Bless your heart is a southern slight for your stupid.
😂
That's adorable. :)
Well, isn't that special?
Right, I thought they have traveled to the US a few times. The sarcasm must of went over their heads.🤣 No way they did not encounter any. Bless their hearts indeed.
Sherlock Holmes is sort of a super hero, with his amazing powers of deduction and reasoning.
THANK YOU -- Mr. Holmes is a "variation" on the superhero concept. Batman is a combination of Holmes, James Bond and The Lone Ranger.
Holmes was also extremely physically strong.
@@slardebard I don't think the original Holmes was supposed to be any stronger than the average man but his ability to pick up on the tiniest details would reveal his opponents weaknesses and he could play on those weaknesses for an upper hand. At least that's what I deduce. What say you Watson?
@@wynn4578 in one of his older storys one of his assailants bent an iron poker into a loop as a demonstration of his superior strength. Once he had left the room Holmes took the poker and bent it straight again. He commented "he will find my grip no feebler than his own". That's what my comments was based on. It was a good story and a long time ago. I could be wrong.
1958Shemp Batman was an inspiration from Zorro and Robin Hood.
Don't y'all have Dr. Who
They DID...😉
@@Allan_aka_RocKITEman I stopped watching Dr Who 40 years ago.
Mr. Bean too 🤣
Isn't Dr. Who the longest running TV show ever? It's been over 50 years! I love Dr. Who and am still watching it. I started with the 3rd Doctor and got to see reruns of Dr 1 and 2. Been watching ever since, as often as I could find it on American TV.
Oh god that crap?!
I feel like Americans are very sarcastic, we do have some sincerity. However, I feel like sarcasm is used much more in the day to day.
They don't sincerely envy sincerity, were they sincere, no envy would be necessary. They were being sarcastic, and more than a little smug in their cleverness.
Americans have sarcasm, we just use it more targeted.
I use sarcasm to EVERYONE. And, I lose no sleep over those who don't like it.
I wish my American people were more Humble. Humility is beautiful and rare in USA.. Evan the homeless think they are all that!
@@todd9016 Plenty of people are humble, humility is not the same thing as self-loathing, and Todd you sound SUPER arrogant, so how about you start your humility campaign with yourself.
Yep, like our Government
Chandler
"I love how Americans are so confident and can just strike up a conversation with anyone"
Me, an American with crippling social anxiety: "Haha, yeah, totally"
Hi there lets talk!
@@ericspecullaas2841 who are you
@@superchill363 your next door neighbor 😭
Most of us don’t have social anxiety
Your American license has just been revoked.
I'll never forget having fish and chips in a crowded little restaurant in London when an older British couple picked up their food at the counter and were looking around trying to find a vacant table. There were only two at our table, so I motioned with a flourish of my arm that they should sit down at our table. When they did sit across from us, the lady said, "You have to be Americans!" When I asked how she knew since we hadn't spoken a word yet, she replied that no British people would smile at strangers and invite them to sit down at their table. And I have found that this is true of most of the other Northern European countries I've visited.
Wait your hairstylist don’t talk to you much?? I’ve never had a hair cut in my life without having a conversation the entire time
Probably the #1 reason why I don’t go to the salon. I don’t want to have a conversation with someone pawing through my hair. :D I worked in a lab where I didn’t have to speak with anyone.
@@spunstricken9065 just get your hair cut by a straight dude
i sit in silence the whole time -american
You are a strange human
Yea, like, sitting through a hair cut without a conversation would just be awkward af. When I walk out getting a hair cut I'm happy for two reasons. 1. I have a fresh cut, and 2. I just had a mood lifting conversation
“The queen is our superhero” that was the most british thing you could’ve ever said
Everyone loves the Queen even if she has no power over us.
What if that was somewhat sarcastic
Lol and here I’m thinking queen= Freddy Mercury 😂
Can you imagine the queen of England with super hero powers?
I and basically everyone I know is very sarcastic. I think it’s more of an American trait than you guys may think
Mostly old white people
Yes! Most people I know are sarcastic.
Sarcasm is very common in the US. I also believe insincerity is pretty common but maybe less so than in England. Can't say tho, cuz I haven't visited yet.
Most iconic: Bless your heart......
Americans have sarcasm, but compared to the British? It's like comparing 3.2% (near) beer with Navy-proof rum--you don't even know you're finished before you hit the floor.
I like how Joel is always trying to get to the root of things. He's always figuring out how things started or where they came from. Its fun to watch the hypothesis form!
Sorry. There isn't anything we envy of Brits. We're Americans. We don't envy anybody else except other Americans.
See, we can be sarcastic, too.
The only Americans were the Indians. Go back to Europe
@Chris Spencer cant believe people still bring that argument up lol
Yeah we're sarcastic. I think the better way to describe it is that Brits have a more dry sense of humor and sarcasm.
STOP ! Don't be nasty
Nope. Would rather finish off the Indians to shut up idiots like yourself.
Many years ago I moved to England when I was 22. I had the biggest shock of my life! I was so outgoing and I felt like everyone was invisibly holding out their arms saying go back! lol. I did realize something about myself and how I grew up though. I really settled into the English culture. It was a relief to me that I didnt always have to be this outgoing person always starting conversation and having control over everything. I love, love, loved England. I lived in East Sussex for five years. I read many English novels. And tons of poetry. Those were the days of no cell phones or computers!! The english countryside is so enchanting!
I honestly believe I was born in the wrong country simply for this reason. Being outgoing is not who I am and yet I feel I'm surrounded by people who want to strike up a conversation.
I went to Europe and lived in Ireland for a year. I found people trying to talk to me
More then me trying to talk to them. I was fine with it.
Wow how wonderful. I bet it's nice and green and fresh over there. I'm an extremist and can be very outgoing or very quiet and reflective. I'm not particularly fond of small talk like lots of American who want to tell you about their house or new car part or electronic piece they have. I'll talk sports or politics or something interesting. Americans like to talk about the new hardwood floor or entertainment system or fuel injection in they're car or the all time worst how much their home as increased in value... I'm like cool now tell someone who cares.😂😎💯
Bless y’all’s hearts 😂 the Jamestown settlers did not come over and say “hey let’s be friends” it was more like “hey, give me your land”
No, that's not how it happened. They came here and settled, no harm intended, at least with the early British and Dutch settlers. It was later that greed rose to the top and then it became a matter of taking land.
@@jimmyboy131 Wrong.
Badboy4evr no he’s correct they came in all nice and friendly but they eventually kept taking more and more land
That's absolutely wrong. They were confronted by indigenous people immediately and made treaties. The natives didn't even believe in owning land.
I think it was more like that with the Spanish
Don't want to talk to strangers? Hell, I am NOT a big fan of talking to my acquaintances!
😊😊😊😊
We have enough confidence to start revolutions 😂
I'm dieing reading this comment haha can't believe you wrote that lol.
what revolution? do you mean the millions marching against violent systemic corruption in our justice system or the couple hundred fascists that hate that we voted for the other corporate oligarch and thus expressed that we shouldn't vote and just let there be a pathological liar dictator? because both failed because everybody can't grip that we need to get off the TV news and join up vs the two oligarchy parties that keep taking turns taking our rights. UK, send help, please.
@Bryan Bradley I can't because they shut down my job and i can't make enough money on the starvation wages to afford it, you'll help?
well maybe the UN could, or maybe in conjunction with a populist, non-partisan effort by the people together with the UN and the oath keepers? This two party corporate scam has gone too far, perhaps more than the oath keepers will turn, the vets, as long as we're divided we're weak but the marines and green berets would help us if it was clear there was no dichotomy in our want to abolish these two parties, they're beholden to the constitution which also says we're supposed to not let this happen...and we tested waters and it's bad. We can fight about wedge issues once we get the oligarchs out, and man, maybe russia and china will be our liberators, haha and the UN will let us have the Germany deal, updated, better version of our constitution.....but the Uk alone? no, it'd have to be a pretty large coalition including a rebellion within
@Bryan Bradley yea great idea brah, i would fuckin love to but this authoritarian pro-wrestling gov't made it so i can't because once i had in my possession a piece of a plant from mother earth's bounty that is widely accepted as safe legal therapy throughout the world, and it was literally the size of my fingernail on my pinky. They took me to jail, stole my car (had pay more than it's value to get it back) took my blood and said "there's thc in your blood, derp derp, that's a dui" well unless you're a complete idiot you know that THC stays in your blood up to 2 weeks and in the end it cost me 7 days in jail because of "communication oversight" 13,000 in losses over 5 years of getting jerked around and i'm through ARD and fines are paid but still paying off my lawyer, but most importantly, canada, is not allowing people from America into their country that have gotten a dui, and last I heard they're having a "the left is right" kinda issue too so fuck you, get me a plane ticket to europe or dont tell me to leave, because it's not that fuckin simple, look at the southern border, imagine ppl "the cartel wants ti kill my family" cool, so get in this cage"...you ppl with the "just leave then" have no idea what the world is actually like and must have never had to struggle. Honestly, I guess I'm glad for you but help us poor ppl who never got a break and quit being selfish.
Not having a " hollywood" with it's over-hyped narcissistic people isn't a bad thing. Not all of them, but most think too much of themselves.
Sadly, So do the vast majority of people who live outside Hollywood. Far too often, Fools who work at the mall or Starbucks or the bank in smaller cities or even random small towns now have that awful attitude. Social media and internet has only magnified the worst in people to make 80% of Americans now insufferable!!
The most arrogant and frivolous people on earth.
@@Bmwguy2011 I've taken to calling it Hollowood.
I mean, "Hollywood," as the place where stars live, is actually Beverly Hills.
@@BWolf00 Hollyweird
American confidence comes from a few things, the revolutionary war, being a world superpower, being a free people and being able to own arms (the 2nd amendment), our constitution, and believing we can accomplish anything.
Nailed it
Years of people saying that the US is #1.
@Absolutely Fabulous - Free people can own arms, slaves cannot. Plus Europeans do not have true freedom of speech.
@Absolutely Fabulous Quite a lot of us Americans don’t understand it, either. 🤨
And the only nation sent humans to the Moon FIFTY years ago.
My hairdresser I've been with for 17 years now. We've literally grown up seeing each other, I adore her as a close friend.
Most big Rock Stars, like Elvis, were getting their styles and music from the USA black people at the time. The black people's music were not being played on the radio back then, so young, white, rebellious music players and singers, were playing black people's because it was more fun and because it was taboo at the time.
David Thompson “African-Americans”
agree 100%
Yeah. Little Richard the real king of rock.
@@benjaminremsbecker1445 I think African American is more of a derogatory term. I have to be some sort of pseudo-american if I'm black?
Yup, so just thank our wonderful african americans who we enslaved and then proceeded to steal music from and pretty much any other non-white musician. Plus many other thing.. I wish people would do more shows and books about white americans who stole ideas and things from other people and things. Like: "How History Really Happened". I would watch those obsessively! Music is like my #1 in life so I'm truly thankful that we have so many cultures here even if the circumstances for which they came here/how they were treated when they arrived was an absolute atrocity. And I hope we will someday (at least the majority of us) treat other cultures and people with respect and acceptance and truly show our appreciation for what they add to all our lives.
Have you never heard of Southerners saying "bless his heart" meaning it's so good he/she/they can function even though they're mentally challenged. Sarcasm is our jam.
John Parisi sugar coated sarcasm especially. 🤣
I've heard "bless your heart" as an implied FU.
Bless your heart is not always meant sarcastically
John Parisi omg. That was my response regarding sarcasm. It’s a southern saying that is so common.
John, come on, half the time it means just that, bless their heart. Right?
I even start up a conversation in the grocery line. My mom always told me that I never knew a stranger! Cheers from Texas!
Sabra Maxwell yes, I’m from Texas too. We talk to everyone and acknowledge people that we pass. It’s also a southern thing. It’s called having good home training. Lol
Native Texans are generally a friendly bunch. My mama's from Dallas :)
I’ve traveled all over the country and lived in Ohio, Mississippi, Southern California, northern Virginia, where I spent my teens and 20s (the part around Washington D.C., not to be confused with actual Virginia... I’ve lived in Central Virginia as well), North Carolina, and now Indiana.
Everywhere I’ve lived... north, south, east, west, Midwest... it’s definitely a smaller town thing too. Once you’re outside of a metropolitan area, people are much friendlier. There’s more sincerity (I’m generalizing!), more active listening & genuine interest, more eye contact, even more physical contact (touching someone’s arm while in conversation, handshakes are more firm and longer, pats on the shoulder or back, even hugs). That generally didn’t happen in the D.C. area, Chicago, Miami, Tampa, L.A., New York...
There’s a lot more friendliness in southern cities, but people are definitely, by degrees, more open and friendlier the further you get from a large metro area!
Whatever state you put me in, please let it be an area of fewer than 100,000 people! Growing up in a metro area of 5 to 6 million people sucked! Rudeness and “me first” everywhere.
Same in North Florida. We are swapping recipes at the deli counter and you know your cashier well enough to ask how their mom is.
England gave us our Scarlett O'Hara, Vivian Leigh, after dozens of American actresses auditioned for and failed to get the part. Vivian also starred in, "A Streetcar Named Desire" where she once again spoke with a very convincing Southern accent.
Cary Grant.I love me some Wallace and Grommet.
Many people were very upset that a British actress got the part of Scarlett.
love Vivien Leigh ❤
The Southern Plantations were mostly established by the "spare heir" to the British upper class. The eldest son inherited everything under British Law, and for a few thousand pounds could send his brother(s) off to America. Southern accents have frequently been compared to simply a slowed down English accent. Some of the phrases are actually out of both rich and poor British English. Vivian actually spoke a bit too fast for the part (rapid delivery rather than a more measured approached) but her smile and regal approach made up for it. Remember too that the 2nd sons were also from Scottish and Irish landowners (her "father" telling her to keep the land (Tara as in the hill of the Irish Kings) no matter what).
When we get our hair done in the USA we just get louder when the dryer comes on.
😂😂😂
Right 🤣
YAAAAASSSSSS!!!!!!
😁😁🎆🎇🎆🎇😂😂😂😂 U.S.A
Exactly!!!! lmao
Elvis gave birth to Rock and Roll 😂 That's Chuck Barry and Lil Richard laughing.
Berry.
@TJZ hahahhahhhahahh stop lying who was before chuck berry ?...muddy waters.....big mama thortan that did the sound you ain't nothing but a hound dog go look it up before you become the laughing stock of this channel.....whites embraced it the most like everything else they embraced
Franco C still American
Rock and roll is a mix of black music (blues, R&B etc) and white music (country, rockabilly, etc). Chuck Berry realized that for crossover appeal, he needed to incorporate white styles of music into his repertoire. His hit “Maybelline” was a reworking of an old country tune called “Ida Red”. This crossover appeal is what propelled him to fame. Elvis had crossover appeal as well, as well as sex appeal.
@TJZ LMAOOOO bitter much??
Joel, I think your theory about the talking to strangers thing is really plausible!! It’s sort of ingrained in our DNA!!
I live in Seattle. We don't talk to strangers either. It's a southern/midwest thing. One thing that Brits don't envy but should is freedom of speech. We don't have cops visiting our door because they don't like what we said on facebook.
Except not so much Plymouth Rock. It's more the later mass migrations of Germans, Italians Eastern Europeans and Southern Blacks all moving to big cities almost all at once. We were facing strangers every day. So we would get politely friendly.
@@Dragon-Believer Brits have freedom of speech. US does not have monopoly on it.
Live in southern Pam lot of us talk to strangers. Whether about sports or whatever. Just to be friendly.
@@michellemaine2719 In England Cops will come to your house if they don't like something you said on Facebook. Could you imagine that happening in America? A lot of Brits have expressed concern over their loss of freedom of speech.
Every time, I've been in England, we've always have the people of the B&B sit with us while we ate and chatted, they even insisted we stay up and visit with them, people at the museums, restaurants , always chatted us up after they found we were Americans, they always made us feel so welcome.
Cashless society is not a dream--it is a nightmare! When you no longer have physical control of your money, there will be no way to stop the government from controlling all you do by limiting your ability to spend, purchase, save, give, etc. It will be a new form of fascism where even what you eat or where you live can be managed totally by the government. Managing your own money is empowerment and freedom.
Jerry Adams I’m I hate to burst your bubble, but physical money is fiat and can be worth less than the paper it is printed on. You can buy gold and silver like
I do, but they can take that too like they did during the Great Depression. Money is not ours the government controls it all. Might as well realize that one now.
donrainesoh That is so extremely beside the point. He's talking about being able to freely spend money, not the inherent value of it.
One of the things I miss most about America when I'm traveling overseas is the ease with which you can just say anything to anybody anywhere. I'm not sure it's confidence, per se, but it's just one of those things. I can do it without thinking about it, but only in America. Anywhere else, you have to be careful because banter with strangers is not welcomed in most places. In America, you can say the silliest thing to a total stranger standing in line at the grocery store, and they'll one-up you in a second.
Then again, when a Spaniard first encountered a native, I highly doubt he said, "Wanna be friends, buddy?". It was most likely, "Off with his head!!!!"
In terms of your comment about music - absolutely! One of the benefits of being a melting pot is the blending of musical styles that never actually results in a final product, but keeps morphing into newer forms all the time. I contend that America's greatest contribution to the world has been music - no other country even comes close. A by-product of this is the most ubiquitous musical instrument on the planet, the electric guitar.
For a nice look at how American music developed, Ken Burns has a great series called Jazz. Highly recommended watching.
"Americans are so sincere and not sarcastic. If they say we must meet up soon, you know you are going to meet up soon." OMG, it is just so sweet and naive, it's adorable. I was laughing for a good minute.
Yea, USAmericans say it all the time and they rarely mean it. "It was great to talk to you. We need to get together soon!" Soon never comes.
I've stopped being sarcastic actually because most people thought I was serious or being mean. "It's not funny to be hurtful! =(" etc. Maybe Americans like sarcasm in comedy they watch, but in my experience more just don't get it. At least that's how it is in my neck of the woods. If anything Americans are more blunt and literal than cheeky sarcastic. Many also don't appreciate it because it isn't 'honest'. Which I can get, used to be sarcastic with my friends. Got tiresome if you do it too much, or people start questioning if this is how you really feel if you act this way all the time. Boys...always taking things farther than it needs to go haha.
Yes, sarcasm and superficial flattery and friendliness exists in much of America.... BUT many other Americans are also genuine and sincere and mean what they say!!
As an American I can say with complete confidence that we are actually the exact opposite. We are total BS’ers!! We are just better at faking it I think and there is a cultural expectation to load on the syrup.
I mean..I still mean it (for the most part) whenever I say "Let's meet up soon" but the opportunity to do so does not always come, in fact most of the time not, which is unfortunate.
We definitely gave the world rock n roll, but you guys took it to a whole new place! You gave the world the Beatles, The Who, The Rolling Stones, Queen, Radiohead … so many great bands!
Americans may not have sarcasm, buy we have “SHADE”. 😏
Nah we have a ton of sarcasm
We definitely can be sarcastic but southerners have the capability to be very condescending.
Honestly, Brits invented “shade” (anyone can find shade in Shakespeare) but we were first to call a specific kind of sarcasm by that name.
Hello Marty. Ok, maybe you are correct that Brits invented shade. Let’s explore what shade I found in 2 of Shakespeare’s plays: 1) Ghost King Hamlet threw shade at Claudius like “Yo, Guess who killed my ass?” 2) I believe when Juliet’s nurse burst into Juliet’s room to tell her that Mercutio was killed, she could have told Juliet straight away, but the nurse was being a little shady by not getting straight to the point. There is shade in all of the plays, but let’s talk about Shakespeare. At age 18 William started off doing shady stuff...Ann Hathaway was pregnant months before they were married. In America, we call that a shotgun wedding. (That was my version of shade) 😘
@@yallitsfay But sound really nice about it
"Oh, honey..."
"Bless your heart."
You can have Hollywood. I'll put it on the curb and hang a "Free" sign on it.
I love Hollywood I just hate the pedos and stuck up bastards within it. Without them it'll be great 👌
LOL, Agreed. Hollywood is a trash propaganda machine. Please take it!! 🙏
Amen bro
EXACTLY. NASTY PLACE.
Oh god excuse me while I retrieve my eyes that just rolled on the ground., be sure to attached yourself to it. Billions entertained, hundred thousand of jobs and culture contributions wiped out because the internet says its bad. Sure you and your hive mind can do better.
We Americans strike up a conversation with people in the grocery store. That's just what we do. ;)
Yes we do and I LOVE doing so!❤❤❤🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲
I love meeting new people. Besides, grocery store lines are so boring that I love a good conversation and joking around.
And when you work in one it’s pet of your job
I'm mixed, half-British, half-American, raised in America, and have lived and worked in both places in both urban and rural communities. So, I feel somewhat confident in saying that Americans can comfortably strike up conversations with strangers because there is literally no class, status, wealth and education communication barriers in day-to-day life in America. While the concepts of class and privilege and monarchy have been strongly entrenched in British culture since the Roman era, they have still not gotten much traction in the USA.
Interesting.... 🧐 I never thought about it. Being American and never really leaving the US... We were taught not to talk to strangers, but time and place factor in.
I'm from the South in the US and talking with people you don't know like in the grocery store or just while out & about is So natural. But in the North I know it's not as common. "Southern Hospitality" is our term for it.
What your describing is pretense to display good behavior in public. True southern hospitality is not pretentious as you warmly welcome ppl into your arena - your home, space, town, etc, and generously give to them. May be food, shelter, kindness, a sense of family, etc.
Ohh Meredith Ellen, my apologies, I admit that I misread the one piece of your comment that first seemed to describe using pretense when offering kindness and good behavior with ppl you don't like or know. Thought I read "talking with ppl you don't like" ha ha ha, and of course, your actual comment does describe an aspect of genuine kindness that comes from most southerners.
Love Southern hospitality
People in the North are definitely still friendly Meredith.
@@mikemarkovich69 Hi, Mike. Yes, Northern people are friendly lol. My whole family is from Michigan and they are all lovely.
I think that “Hollywood” thing is the Hollywood of the past.
Yeah now you got crackheads, weirdos and douchey street “performers” dressed in Spider-Man clothing
Hollywood is nearly as bad as Venice Beach these days. They are obviously referring to just the studios and not the city because the city is a dive.
They arrived at Plymouth...."oy you?"..........The Pilgrims that arrived specifically at Plymouth were English......ya know? From England?...........
As Americans, we are taught to be friendly, wave and be polite. We also like to smile a lot. "Hi, how are you"? is very American. I hear in Russia they don't smile much.
Don't forget about the bold personalities people had to have hundreds of years ago to set sail for the new world 🤔🤗💕🇺🇸💕
Mary Hall some people didn’t want to come to the new world they were forced.
And how cold hearted they had to be to wipe out 96% of Native Americans in cold blood. Men women and children massacred en masse but yeah. Yay America 🇺🇸
@@J_131 yay propaganda!
@@215blasian yes, sorry about that fact.... it is awful
@@J_131 that too is a cold hearted fact
So many Americans are sarcastic just not with people they don't know that well
Not necessarily true especially with stupid people
DENVEROUTDOORMAN that’s the exception to the rule.
Yeah. I think because you don’t want to offend them if they don’t know your type of humor yet
Americans can be very sarcastic once they get used to you.
We are taught that sarcasm is impolite in the US, but we can be blatantly or sarcastic in the nicest possible way.
Rock wouldn’t exist without Chuck Berry let’s be honest here
Thank you. I may or may not have yelled that at my phone...
Rock wouldn't have existed without a bunch of people. But Elvis sure as hell ain't one of them.
Elvis more than Chuck.....Buddy Holly, and many folk singers who brought country music into rock - pop music
@@tommaika9121 I recommend a trip to wikipedia for an overview of the roots of rock and roll.
I cringed when they said Rock wouldn’t be what it is without Elvis Presley. That’s like saying Rap wouldn’t be what it is without Eminem.😒
LOL if you think about it, Americans are basically defectors of Britain. They left because they were being oppressed religiously and they didn't want to be, so of course, they're going to value being able to practice whatever religion they wanted. This probably naturally led to being able to be more opinionated and expressive of their values. This is also probably where individualism first took root. It makes sense. Not only that, we realize that we're a melting pot of a country and we respect that. We're used to talking to people from all sorts of backgrounds.
People think we're stuck up and selfish, but honestly, Americans are pretty charitable and selfless people. We have the most charities in the world, and we're usually the first responders to global natural disasters. Foreigners say we have a Hero Complex, but honestly, if we didn't have a Hero Complex, we wouldn't jump at responding to global disasters. It gets rocky once you try to tell us what to do though. We don't like being told what to do. We value our freedom of choice, which is why we are respectful of other people's opinions and can agree to disagree. At least usually.
Wait! Americans are NOT sincere when we invite you to lunch “sometime soon!” Lol
I think it depends on how well you know them. If it's a good friend, it's sincere.
I always mean it. I have no problem letting people know I never want to hang out with them, if that's the case.
Thiiiis
@@tanyasmith2173 I think most people mean it. It's more about whether things fall through the cracks or not.
Especially in Hollywood. "let's do lunch" is not an actually plan for lunch.
You got Sherlock Holmes. He counts, at least for me.
Don't forget Poirot!!!
@@chasgerding5258 I thought of him, but he is technically from Belgium, no? I guess it doesn't matter though. I mean Superman is from space...
@@Akashi505 I see your point, but he was created by Agatha.
And Bond. They have Bond.
And Doctor Who!
Was I the only one internally screaming “Harry Potterrrrrr!!!” when they were mentioning British super heroes? Does that even count? I say it does! 😂
Don't forget Doctor Who
My generation admired Bond, James Bond!
I was thinking The Smiths and Margaret Thatcher, Elton John?
Are you ten?
I was thinking Bond. Actually, the Brits have a number of spy heroes. But I can't think of any caped heroes.
I'm English girl and I've huge confidence I can talk to anyone. I make friends very easly
"Because it's like a nation of immigrants from other countries all coming to America they had to talk to each other." - too bad we didn't learn to listen to each other...
Apparently they did.
preach!
I live in the south, and we couldn't imagine going somewhere and not speaking to strangers, it's just a natural thing, if someone doesn't say anything, people assume they are having a bad day.
Elvis Presley was born and raised in Tupelo, Mississippi. He hung out with the black community and learned their style of music. Much of Elvis’ music is a mixture of black music and gospel music.
Alas, now you have to explain what Gospel Music is to them. Maybe even Black music, since they don’t get nearly as wide a set as we did. They probably thought Hip-hop was the earliest Black music, or maybe as old as Big Band.
in america white people threw black music in the trash can in briton the white kids took it out and said WOW and then the Beatles the stones the kinks the Who the Yardbirds the Animals black sabbath led zeppelin deep purple Elton john david bowie Queen and on and on Thank you BLACK AMERICA....You see black lives do really matter.
Another lunatic theory about Elvis
Gospel and rock n roll and blues/jazz all come from English and mainly Scottish and Irish folk.
Wrong, please learn American history. All of the music that is viewed as American is quintessentially African American
Yup! Americans talk all the time. Extroversion is highly valued. Having lots of acquaintances, who we call friends, is the norm for many Americans - and then on the other hand, it’s common to have only a few very close friends, “best friends”.
Enjoy you two.
But careful with the cashless society idea.
That gives an awful lot of control to government.
yeah, cause the government controls how i spend my money off my credit and debit card. tin foil much?
1369Stiles How about an example for you.
England has socialized health care.
So with a cashless system they could either raise your individual co pay or deny treatment all together based on your food, tobacco, alcohol etc purchases.
They’re globalist who think the State knows best. Numbskulls
Convenience is king, I always keep cash on me for emergencies but I use my debit card for everything. It's just quick, easy, and done. If the banks had to openly disclose all data to the government I'd be more concerned, but the USA ain't China. Of course, maybe the NSA does do that. Too late now I guess...
Y’all have clearly never heard of the Trail Of Tears...
Really you should learn about the Trail of Tears.
Yea my maternal ancestors the Lenape knew all about it.. what about it thunder?
Yea, I was thinking, that's not how that worked for the native americans.
Or the Navajo long walk
Yes, I have, but you really need to educate yourself on what the Spanish did bringing Slavery and stealing all the gold and silver they could get their hands on, destroying some of the world's most advanced civilizations. Please do some research!
When a society goes cashless, each and every transaction is electronically recorded. That means each transaction can also be monitored and taxed. The privacy that cash affords a person means that you can sell something to your buddy, that you no longer need or want, and only two people are involved - the seller and the buyer. Imagine the money to be made, if there was a "fee" (tax) on each and every single transaction, worldwide - now can you imagine banks, big business and governments saying no to that?
The bankers ( owner class ) would love a cashless society ... The RFID chip is what is being pushed ...everyone will have a chip implant with your data from finances to your health ...no buying or selling without the chip...some employers are now seeking to get their employees to get chipped instead of an ID card... That to me sounds like the proverbial 666 mark
@@xadam2dudex A couple of businesses have chipped their employees. It works for payments as well as your entry key into the building.
@@3DJapan yes I know ...it works for ALL your info .. It is the doorway to tyranny .. Anyone that does not conform to the corporate state can be cut off
'@@xadam2dudex not RFID ok for the products however cashless buying is already in china where its The Phones that are used "We Chat " and (RFID simulated comm)
A no-brainer.
New Yorkers are extremely sarcastic, so much so that people outside the city are often offended by what we say. We love dark, sardonic humor and don’t really care if anyone else “gets it.”
Spanish conquistador - “Hay do you wanna be friends”
Native American - “not really”
Spanish conquistador - “murder intensifies”
Spanish conquistador- "I guess we have to kill you then"
Pilgrims- “hey do you wanna be friends?”
Native Americans- “Not really.”
Pilgrims- “Here, have some “innocent” blankets.”
😅😬💀
😂😂😂
Spanish Conquistador: Do you follow the Cross?
Native Americans: what?
Spanish Conquistadors: KILL!!!!!!!!!!
I'm dyinggg omg haha
There has been a beautifully romantic relationship back and forth across the pond between the USA and GB. British legends like the Rolling Stones, the Beatles, Led Zeppelin, etc. were heavily influenced by American artists like Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry and Everly Brothers...John Lennon said he picked up a guitar because of Chuck Berry. And then the entire wave of legendary rock bands from Britain in the 60's inspired a great wave of American rock bands in the later 60's and 70's, then you had the Brit pop acts of the 80's, and most recently America has inspired a wave of original British hip hop acts. And you have American bands coming out saying how much bands like the Arctic Monkeys and Oasis inspired them. And then the Foo Fighters sell out 3 nights at Wembley, and Adele sells out every show she puts on in the USA. All of us win!
Very much in many ways
Phillip Aubin never
If you ignore individual artists and look at entire communities, with the exception of country music (of the genres mentioned in the clip) every single style of "American" music comes from the African American community, or the Latino American community. The ethnic mix of this nation is its greatest strength.
I had a few friends visiting from Essex and I remember one day while we were walking around the city, they kept remarking how everyone was so friendly. I honestly had no idea what they were talking about at first. To me, someone saying, "Hi" was unremarkable, unlike a full conversation with a stranger. They really were trying to explain to me that yes, saying hello to a stranger on the street is something absolutely no one does at home.
When I visited Paris on 3 business trips, I noticed strangers would say a quick "Bonjour" to me as we passed each other on the sidewalk. I thought that was so nice of them. I picked up that habit immediately. I used it particularly when I inadvertently made eye contact, as averting my eyes seems so rude.
In think the Americans confidence is also a way to break social anxiety, when your standing about with others you kinda get a little anxious, saying a simple hello helps to break the tension, rather the conversation continues or not, your just like I'm ok now thank you!
Oh Bless y’alls sweet little hearts.
Now there's some shade!
Aren’t your precious.
You all need to get up north - I’m from Newcastle and raised in Scotland - very friendly and will talk to anyone.
Well said, I am a chat-to-anyone type as well. I'm from Middlesbrough then adult life in Edinburgh lol
That would be nice! I was in London during the Christmas season once, said something nice to another shopper in Harrods, and they looked at me like I had suddenly grown 3 heads! I have never forgotten it. (Two decades ago)
"...and raised in Scotland - very friendly and will talk to anyone."
Yeah but will anyone understand ya? : )
@@garrett6064 ouch...hope so! I don’t have a heavy accent, but my sis, who was younger than me when we moved to Scotland, does. I can’t even understand her, and I’ve know her since the day she was born! But, she is the friendliest soul you will ever meet, even if you have no idea what she’s saying, you know it’s nice.
@@SJ47668 Friendliness in unintelligible Scottish sounds absolutely delightful ☺️😂 count me in! 🖤
U guys these robes are why people think you’re married 😂❤️
Wait there not married
I'm new. Are they not together?
QueenNoTeetha151 jackups91 No, they’re just best friends!
Oh, so they're like Damien and Jo.
Totally thought they were a couple this entire time 😂
With music it's mainly African Americans who bring all the genres to you beautiful Brits. Elvis's songs were originally sung by Black people. 😊 We just couldn't be on TV in the 50's. So this really good looking White dude brought our music to the masses! Blues, Jazz, Rock & Roll, Soul, Funk, Disco, and Hip-Hop all began with African Americans and we are fiercely proud of that fact. Country music is just the blues for White people. LOL 😄 All the sorrow and and heartache they feel is in there!!
You have Dr Who. He's kinda like a superhero.
AND he's liked all over the world, kind of like a Batman of time-travel!
That's interesting about Britain's class system. I knew it existed in the past but didn't know it still existed. Could you do an episode on just that? What are the classes, how does language vary, etc...
Different places mean different classes and different accents that simple
@@-Zperco got that much already
@@michaelstanley5575 In the US it's more like, "you're a republican/democrat so too bad I'm gonna act like you don't even exist."
@@kylespencer6461 The division in the US has become very bad pushed by the press, social media, and the left. I never thought I'd see the press outright lie to the degree they have. Never thought I'd see social media censor one side. This is not healthy for the US. Its not really a class system though. It's more like the start of tribalism.
I do want to hear more about how Brits are “obsessed” with class! Does that mean you just wouldn’t speak to certain people at all?
"Hollywood" as most people think of it, is less a place than an industry. Long ago, it used to be a place specifically when the U. S. movie industry relocated from chilly New York to temperate Southern California. But the tacky, rundown physical locations in Los Angeles that used to be the collective home of the movie industry, no longer really exists. Now Hollywood is mostly a synonym for the entertainment industry, specifically movies and television, regardless of location.
Nowadays it's also frequently used as a pejorative term for shallow, egotistical, entitled, and over-rewarded showbiz professionals when they get involved in politics.
Lilly B45 exactly. Well said!
Amen! I am so sick of these poorly educated, self centered, overpaid, sanctimonious and pompous fools thinking that we really are interested in their opinions about politics or any subject for that matter! They are actors, basically puppets saying lines that they are paid to say. Spare all of us from such bubble brained idiots!
The problem is that, back at the beginning of the 20th century when Hollywood was just emerging as The Dream Factory, a lot of good looking dumb people in the country moved out there, got married (or not) and started having babies. Then they never left. Not my original idea, but I think a fair assessment over all.