Does Gloom have Malaysian DNA?
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- Опубликовано: 29 авг 2024
- In this Professional Genealogist Reacts, I watch "I Got My DNA Test Results Back..." by @Gloom
Check out the original video - • I Got My DNA Test Resu...
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I find it absolutely shocking that a person who says her Malay ancestry is so important to her & she so deeply connects to it has no concept of the history of Malacca or the Malay people. If she did, her results wouldn’t surprise her. They make PERFECT sense given the history of the Malay Peninsula. This was absolutely tragic to watch. It was physically hard. (Not your part Jarrod, but how little she knows & how much psychological damage she inadvertently inflicted on her parents.)
Asia in general has a rough history, just like most of the globe, of invading, conquering, and subjugating different population groups resulting in a LOT of DNA mixing. The Iberian heritage makes sense. Beginning in 1511, Malaysia was a Portuguese colony. Then the Dutch, then the British. In 1941, Japan colonized Malaysia. Both China and India have a long history of settlements in the Malay peninsula as well. Most of those living in what is modern day Malaysia (a modern concept really… having been established post WWII) are culturally Malay & genetically, mostly Chinese & Indian.
@bobrzycapola I have watched some where people understand their results and even tell about the history of their countries. Unfortunately, they're in Spanish, otherwise I would have sent them to Jarrett to react.
I think they are not pretending. The sad reality is that the average population has no knowledge about the history of their countries.
>.4% Iberian "I'm Spanish"
>2% Chinese "Im not Chinese?"
Nonsense lol
Her video made me so upset! she caused a family ruckhus... aaarrggghh
I was about to have a heart attack from all the misinformation she was giving away!!
Edit: another thing: nationality does not necessarily mean genotype.... genotype can not change where you were born in, or denies the culture you were raised into ... period (sorry... lol her video has me upset lol)
Ok, I've calmed down now... I just hope that she changed and learned something after investigating properly the information she received.
Having said that I would not want to see another of her videos 😛
This video was honestly worse and more frustrating to watch than the video “Latinos take DNA test” on “Pero like.”
I find most of these people who take these tests absolutely ignorant and frustrating. I feel you brother
I believe the best test kits for her Malay ancestry would be FamilyTree DNA or Myheritage DNA. It is always difficult to distinguish between Malay, Filipino, and Indonesian DNA because they all share similar Austronesian roots. That's why they usually grouped together. Having Austro-asiatic admixtures such as Thai and Cambodia are also fairly common in Malay DNA due to previous mixing. Also, many Malays have admixtures of the Indian subcontinent and Chinese ancestry, as a result of past and present migrations.
We should send this reaction video to her so she can learn a bit more
What was said at 17:07 is one of the most important points folks should keep in mind, I think.
This was the worst video i think I've seen yet, and some others were infuriating.
Firstly, even though i know there is a big link between Singapore and China i think it's in the West don't seem to realise how big Asia is compared to Europe or North America, it's massive.
The fact she said her grandma didn't know anything about her parents means that there could be some Chinese ancestry but everything she said lined up with her results, half South East Asia (which could be Malay), and 50% European, mostly Italian and Southern European and British/Irish.
Calling up her parents to tell them what they were based on her results was i think the worst thing I've seen in a reaction video of yours. It was cringy and as you pointed out so inaccurate.
She, and her bf, seemed really nice people, but i think they, like nearly every reaction video you've done, expected exact percentages to give them answers without having to do any genealogy whatsoever, and when they did get their results back she totally misinterpreted them.
I can only think the Persian she kept mentioning at the end, which weren't in any way in her ethnicity breakdown was probably due to her haplogroup, which she took as being from there without realising that these trace the route your ancestors came out of Africa and to get to the Malay peninsula they'd have likely had to go through Iran (Persia) and India.
I'm getting to the point of wondering if i should even watch these videos, they're starting to get a little old. Maybe if you're doing them do then on more recent videos that easy at least the sites, population groups, and number of people who have tested make it easier to comment on.
I think she was a jerk to her boyfriend. She mocked his ancestry… something he didn’t choose. He even pointed out that he wasn’t taking responsibility for her racist comments. (About himself or her.) I wouldn’t be surprised if they’re not together anymore. I will never understand how people fail to realize just how diverse Europe is… just how big and diverse the US or Canada are. Honestly, it’s getting annoying.
Gloom is Malay not Malaysian or 25 percent Malay
@@stephanieperry1119 Thanks for pointing this out. To someone not very familiar with the region or it's people but having read your comment and looked it up many might think the term Malaysian and Malay are interchangeable, which I didn't think they were, but they aren't.
From what I gather the Malay race, ethnic group or culture is spread throughout Southeast Asia, obviously a large % of Malaysians are Malay (57% is stated on Wikipedia), but the definition of Malay (and I hate definitions often defined in the Victorian era by European colonists who didn't really know very well what they were talking about and had prejudices and agendas aimed at putting people groups into boxes to legitimise European rule) seems to be mainly people of the Malay peninsula and archipelago who are Muslim, Malaysian Malays at least, who have a constitutional standing in the country from what I've read.
I would guess the term Malay can mean a lot of things in a lot of different contexts and the history of the region is fascinating in itself, but getting back to the video if Gloom's grandma doesn't know the background of her parentage then a number of possibilities are possible and her results don't seem very odd to me in that regard.
I don't know how many people in this region take DNA tests, I wouldn't think that many if the tests are mainly aimed at Americans, and because of this I would expect that the results can't pinpoint exact people groups and locations/countries because of this, hence why she just got a large reading of Southeast Asia, which to me confirms her thoughts, maybe it will become more accurate with time as more people test.
Yes I was also mocked for my Western European ancestry by an American that suddenly said: you must be pink and looking like a pig... and I was like... what? XD. All I know is that people think Europeans look the same. As if we don't know how diverse people can look and cultures around the world. We know very well how big Asia is or Africa. I don't get the point. Are you personally offended or something? @@Chaotic_Pixie
You were talking about the high percentage of French & German, my mom's maternal grandfather's father was born in Quebec and his mother in France, so this is what 23andme said for her British & Irish 79.6%; French & German 17.8%; Broadly Northwestern European 1.2%. For me, British & Irish 87.8%; French and German 7.6%; Broadly Northwestern European 3.5%. My mom is British other than the French. My dad's mother was born in Scotland and his father born in England. You also mentioned about the older generation stuck on their ethnicity, I have a funny story. When I was about 12, and it was St. Patrick's Day, I said to my extremely Scottish grandmother, why aren't you wearing green, I got a lecture about her being Scottish not Irish and the difference. She also had a very thick Scottish accent. She died in 1987 (born in 1902), I started doing Genealogy in about 2009, Scotland's People is a great site for Scottish research. I found an 1891, with her father and grandfather and it said her paternal grandfather was born in Ireland. How ironic. From the information I have found I think they went to Scotland during the Irish Potato Famine.
Thank you for explaining the trace percents. I had 0.02 or 0.03 Chinese East Asia at the end of my 23andMe results. I saw other relatives of mine with trace results in Asia as well. I was unhappy though that 23andMe reduced my dna results from my other dna tests except for 2 of my dna results. But 23andMe did find a dna result that the other companies didn't show. So that was interesting.
If you are Malay, there is a huge chance that you will have Chinese or Indian or Middle eastern genetic in you. Malay is not really a homogenous race. They live in a place that connected the east and the west.
Gloom? The pokemon?
You beat me to it!
I thought it was the Doom clone. ;)
My Results:
23and me: I am 97% French-German in 23andme haha. I had 2, somewhat % English and Scottish and 0,1 % North-African trace ancestry which my dad also had. and 0,1% Wstern European broadly. (The Netherlands, Belgium and German with Lower saxony and Bavaria.
My Heritage : 81.8% North Western European (mainly Netherlands from one specific province even which 23andme also found, Belgium). 16.8% English and 1,4% Scottish Irish and Welsh
MyAncestry: 57% Germanic Europe, 28% England and Western European, 11% Norway, 2% Denmark & Sweden, 2% Scottish
I have found mainly Dutch people in my family tree all from (The Netherlands)North-Brabant province. I have a lot of family members already added and I did find a German from 1830 that moved to North-Brabant, but I have yet to find an English or Scandinavian person in my family haha. My haplogroup maternal is: J2a1a and Paternal is: G-Z37368 which is apperiantly less common.
She beyond clueless about her DNA results and how they work
Hmmm, my dad had 1.5% Philipino/Malay with 1.0% Inuit in My Heritage. That was suprising. Considering all he knew is his parents were from Mexico.
Inuit can be misinterpreted Mesoamerican.
@alexandracruz5243 thanks, you know my dad had 2 dna tests done and both tests showed Mesoamerican, and Inuit. I thought that was interesting. A gentleman told me the other day my dad has the skin coloring. My dad is very brown.
@@user-pw3uh5zn2r Native Americans came from Asia, so...
Both Mexico and the Philippines were Spanish colonies.
This video is a mess lol
XD
This woman is insufferable.
I don’t think it’s that big of deal
Seriously? DNA don't work that way darling. Educate yourself before you run off at the mouth.