American Reacts to Why You Should Move to the UK

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024
  • Submit a video suggestion here: docs.google.co...
    As Americans we don't often hear about what life is like in other countries. Today I am very interested to learn about some of the best reasons why you should consider moving to the UK. If you enjoyed the video feel free to leave a comment, like, or subscribe for more!

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @kevintwine2315
    @kevintwine2315 9 месяцев назад +406

    Videos like this make me feel a lot more grateful that I don’t live in the US

    • @fionagregory9147
      @fionagregory9147 9 месяцев назад +35

      Yes and less likely to get shot.

    • @mojojojo11811
      @mojojojo11811 9 месяцев назад +16

      Facts!

    • @paulgreen758
      @paulgreen758 9 месяцев назад +15

      agreed mate

    • @LB-my1ej
      @LB-my1ej 9 месяцев назад +14

      Totally agree

    • @ritaboes
      @ritaboes 9 месяцев назад +20

      💯% as a early teen I thought the USA was all i wanted. Until we got our social study's at school learning all about the other countries. Meanwhile we have our own bleached buffoon who luckily for us has way less power then his orange big brother. So I still believe we are better off, even though the Netherlands isn't a utopia I'm very lucky to be born here. 😊

  • @alanmoss3603
    @alanmoss3603 9 месяцев назад +162

    In the UK you will often find managers coming up to you and say - you have 9 days holiday left so you have to take it (and they give you dates)! They are literally telling you to take a holiday. Also when you leave a job you get paid for the holiday time not taken.

    • @alanmoss3603
      @alanmoss3603 9 месяцев назад +9

      @carlsagan3806 Nope. I just changed jobs and got paid for holidays I hadn't taken!

    • @jillosler9353
      @jillosler9353 9 месяцев назад

      ​@carlsagan3806That depends who you work for.

    • @grahamlivingston6691
      @grahamlivingston6691 9 месяцев назад +6

      @@alanmoss3603 you only get paid for holidays you haven’t taken if you’ve earned them, I got deducted money from my final pay once because I took too many holiday days in 6 months than I had actually earned or accrued

    • @xxSydneyFox
      @xxSydneyFox 9 месяцев назад +10

      ​@carlsagan3806 An employer must pay their employee 'in lieu' for any untaken statutory holiday entitlement they've accrued when they leave. This means the employer pays the employee holiday pay, instead of them taking the holiday.- ACAS

    • @cookielady7662
      @cookielady7662 9 месяцев назад +2

      I just don't understand this. Many jobs in the US offer you "flex time" which you can use however you like. It usually accrues by how many hours per pay period you work. Some companies pay you for time not taken if you leave, and some don't. But what I don't get is why you should be forced to take the time off if you don't want to. I don't want the government (or a corporation) micromanaging my life. Most Americans I know want smaller government and want them out of our way. Forcing time off seems like another government interference to me.

  • @jaccilowe3842
    @jaccilowe3842 9 месяцев назад +221

    We don't have 'benefits' - we have workers' rights. We, and the rest of the non-US world, have fought hard for every right we have.

    • @SevenEllen
      @SevenEllen 9 месяцев назад +36

      100% agreed. Americans have been conditioned to believe human rights are 'nice to haves', not violations of their base human rights as human beings.

    • @nolajoy7759
      @nolajoy7759 9 месяцев назад

      Yes..Americans seem to brand any workers' right as "socialism"..which, to them, is a scary and undesirable thing.

    • @rohnnyjotten3985
      @rohnnyjotten3985 9 месяцев назад

      If you mention 'workers rights' in the US you are called a communist.

    • @EdgyNumber1
      @EdgyNumber1 9 месяцев назад +12

      Our current government does not believe this should be the case and the 'Retained EU Law Bill' has been designed to aid in the removal of workers' rights, amongst many others, without parliamentary scrutiny, or even public consultation. The point of the bill was to strip away EU laws that the government deemed 'unnecessary' and these include rights such as paternity/maternity pay, holidays and pay, disability rights and most importantly, health and safety.
      Rules may change without warning and many will become automatically untested in court leading to laws being retested to see where new and many existing rules go. And ALL without scrutiny. The executive (government) can ride roughshod over the legislature (Parliament.)
      It was this fact that turned me against Brexit, knowing how much secret control it handed to a government. The point was not to provide better rights and regulations to benefit us and beat the EU but to remove them in order to suit the (much) higher ups.

    • @jaccilowe3842
      @jaccilowe3842 9 месяцев назад +2

      Looks like the unions are going to be busy@@EdgyNumber1

  • @alisonanthony1228
    @alisonanthony1228 9 месяцев назад +80

    A couple of years ago, I wanted to see a band that was on tour at the time (Nick Mason of Pink Floyd). I couldn't get tickets to any UK concerts except one in London. Travel to London and a hotel for the night was over £200. So I flew to Amsterdam for the night instead - return flight to Amsterdam, from my local airport, was £34 and a hotel near the gig was £45 bed & breakfast, so it was less than half the price, plus I got a few hours to wander around Amsterdam. Bargain!

  • @barrymiller3385
    @barrymiller3385 9 месяцев назад +131

    My wife and I once got stopped by the police because we were walking along the side of the road in San Diego. They struggled to believe we were walking to our destination less than two miles away!!

    • @danielgrimes4597
      @danielgrimes4597 9 месяцев назад +20

      This happened to the author Ray Bradbury in the 1940s. He then penned the short story “The Pedestrian” & then the novel “Fahrenheit 451” both based on his experience! Enjoy!

    • @sjchan3199
      @sjchan3199 9 месяцев назад

      Surprised you didnt get thrown on floor hancuffed and chucked in prison

    • @SM-cz5od
      @SM-cz5od 9 месяцев назад +16

      I was shocked when this also happened to me whilst on holiday in USA some years ago.

    • @ront2424
      @ront2424 9 месяцев назад +10

      Happened to me in Jackson Hole with some badged dropkick demanding ID because I was out walking.

    • @ShizuruNakatsu
      @ShizuruNakatsu 9 месяцев назад +10

      Wow. I go out for walks every day. Usually at night. I prefer walking in the dark when there's no people around. I'm often out alone at 3am and 4am. I've never been attacked, or robbed, or stopped by the police. This is in Ireland by the way.

  • @tecteam
    @tecteam 9 месяцев назад +183

    As a U.K. business owner I can say that my attitude is happy employees equals loyalty and productivity.

    • @bakersmileyface
      @bakersmileyface 9 месяцев назад +5

      A lot of business owners say that, however few make it happen.
      Not like I blame you for it. It's just that your thoughts and your management's thoughts might not be in line. If you're really committed to having happy employees, it would be good to see how everyone works once and a while and to speak to some of your staff that you usually wouldn't get an opportunity to speak to.
      If you get the time that is.
      And also you'd be surprised that sometimes the people you least expect would have some good ideas for improving production or your business overall. So speaking to them might give people an opportunity to be heard. At the very least it will make them feel heard and feel important, which will make them happy.

    • @fridarey
      @fridarey 9 месяцев назад

      @@bakersmileyface I totally get all our work experiences are different and we've all worked for arseholes at some point, but I gotta back up @tecteam here. My entire plan for my team is to create a workplace where they can be as successful as possible. Good people are incredibly valuable and will get offers to move for a few % more all the time - if I can give them something better (support, development & a lack of bullshit) then there's much more chance they'll stay with me for longer, and acquire new skills. Everyone wins.
      It's easy to think this only works with high-skill employees but many companies have shown that, when done well, it can work for all workers.
      You're absolutely right about looking for improvement advice from everyone, I've had skilled frontline employees point out issues and solutions where wastage could be 25% before!

    • @fridarey
      @fridarey 9 месяцев назад

      100%

    • @Jacob29nufc
      @Jacob29nufc 7 месяцев назад +4

      This is rare. Can I send you my CV?

    • @alexanderevanska4274
      @alexanderevanska4274 2 месяца назад

      Yeah but, America is a land ruled by greed. You may be the exception but too many employers in America take too much from their employees.

  • @scrappystocks
    @scrappystocks 9 месяцев назад +64

    Brits literally travel the world on vacation. Common destinations outside of Europe include India, Australia, New Zealand, Thailand, Vietnam, Japan and of course even the USA. You can't travel much farther than those from the UK. I lived in California for a while and my wife is from there. The reason why US Americans don't travel much outside of their own country is probably mainly down to the pitiful time they're allowed for their annual vacation.

    • @Greenwood4727
      @Greenwood4727 9 месяцев назад +3

      i think another reason we travel so much is its engrained in us, we ran the world and went everywhere, but now its for its own thing

    • @Thundrbolt-tj4qk
      @Thundrbolt-tj4qk 9 месяцев назад +6

      There’s so much to see in the US too, that’s another reason why Americans don’t travel outside the states when there’s so much diversity in the landscape and scenery. After all, the country alone is larger than the entirety of Europe

    • @cookielady7662
      @cookielady7662 8 месяцев назад

      The US is multicultural and huge. If you lived in Cali, then you only got a tiny taste of this. In a comment on another video someone said the US only has one language. That's laughable. Almost a third of us speak Spanish. We have no national language, so many are spoken, although English is the most common. In my small town of around 7,000 three languages are spoken. Each state is almost another country. You will find food, festivals, holidays, and traditions different in many of them. My dream is to visit every state, but I'm not young anymore so it probably won't happen. This is much more important to me than running around all over the globe.

    • @Wesley_semeniuk96
      @Wesley_semeniuk96 5 месяцев назад +1

      Britain is also full of different terrains & full of history

  • @carolineskipper6976
    @carolineskipper6976 9 месяцев назад +177

    What is it with Americans and not thinking the UK has beaches? I've heard this time and time again. We're a freaking collection of ISLANDS for goodness sake!!!!!
    Not all our beaches have golden sands- but many of them do!
    And she didn't even mention 'free at the point of need' medical care.

    • @Le7emeChat
      @Le7emeChat 9 месяцев назад +18

      Because "beach = hot, sun" and "UK = cold, rain" in the perception, so associating UK with beaches just don't happen.
      (I don't say it's true, just it's what people think)

    • @M24RV_F
      @M24RV_F 9 месяцев назад +9

      I can't get my head around it either

    • @capitalb5889
      @capitalb5889 9 месяцев назад +9

      But likewise not many British people would associate Japan with beaches.

    • @M24RV_F
      @M24RV_F 9 месяцев назад +13

      @@capitalb5889 what?! If we think of Japan a beach is not the first thing we think of but it's literally an island... I have never met a single richest person who has ever thought Japan would never have beaches...

    • @capitalb5889
      @capitalb5889 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@M24RV_F I think you misunderstood me somewhat. Most people are aware that Japan is an island and therefore, where the land meets the sea, there are likely to be beaches. And while I doubt that you have checked this with every single person you've ever met, or even one of them, I expect this is what they would say.
      However, I'm talking about things we associate with a country, not whether they literally exist or not. If Japan was on Pointless, or Family fortunes, I think the chances of "beaches" coming up would be quite low, unlike if it had been Greece, Spain or Thailand.

  • @LumpyMoose
    @LumpyMoose 9 месяцев назад +112

    One of the biggest reasons to live in the UK is healthcare, I would literally be dead twice over if I didn’t live in the UK or at least bankrupt through health costs.

    • @davidz2690
      @davidz2690 6 месяцев назад

      Why? Affordable healthcare is global

    • @goldfish2379
      @goldfish2379 5 месяцев назад +4

      @@davidz2690 ha ha ha!!! What total abysmal ignorance.

    • @pierre-de-standing
      @pierre-de-standing 5 месяцев назад +6

      @@davidz2690 Believe it or not, there are people who cannot afford to pay for even the most trivial aspects of healthcare. The NHS is probably the thing we are most proud of, even though it is being run into the ground by the Tories.

    • @thefiestaguy8831
      @thefiestaguy8831 3 месяца назад

      @@davidz2690 You win "Tell me you are American, without telling me you are American".

    • @davidz2690
      @davidz2690 3 месяца назад

      @@thefiestaguy8831 huh?

  • @callummackinnon2900
    @callummackinnon2900 9 месяцев назад +29

    38 is a lot in the UK, but we do have more than USA; we're legally entitled to 4 weeks (up to 28 days) then generous employers may give more.
    Maternity leave is actually better than she described because it's technically called parental leave due to the fact that you can split the time between the mother and father so you're not forced into gender roles with your new baby.

  • @staffler9620
    @staffler9620 9 месяцев назад +34

    Also here in the UK we have a minimum wage, so everyone is paid at least about £10.50 an hour, obviously this increases in certain jobs. That is why we don't always tip when we go out for a meal or for a drink as the staff will be paid at least the minimum wage and don't always rely on tips.

    • @G36645
      @G36645 9 месяцев назад +3

      I think the states had it but i does it’s different from states

    • @101steel4
      @101steel4 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@G36645 in some states, but not for waitresses 😂

    • @jasonchamberlin1532
      @jasonchamberlin1532 9 месяцев назад +1

      It’s going up in April to £11:44

    • @G36645
      @G36645 9 месяцев назад +4

      And you wonder why we all mock your “land of the free”

    • @tenniskinsella7768
      @tenniskinsella7768 4 месяца назад +1

      I tip sometimes

  • @painfulltruth5551
    @painfulltruth5551 9 месяцев назад +27

    It seems to me like Tyler should get himself a flight booked to the UK .

    • @brigidsingleton1596
      @brigidsingleton1596 9 месяцев назад +4

      ...and... Once he's here... That's a video or set of videos I'd be interested in seeing exactly how Tyler would cope in visiting the UK... The beaches, rocky, shingle and sandy, plus the enormous wide bays at Weston-Super-Mare, or Portmeirion, Viking Bay (Broadstairs), Morecambe, etc... Seeing Tyler try driving and negotiating roundabouts and driving in the left etc ... Oh so many adventures for him to experience ... I wish he would really consider planning a trip to visit 'us' Brits - asap !! 😊 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🇮🇪❤️🇬🇧😊

    • @hedycampbell586
      @hedycampbell586 4 месяца назад +3

      @@brigidsingleton1596 definitely something to consider for it would lead to plenty of new, entertaining videos. but you can't drive to Europe from U.S. Maybe that's the reason not many get to Europe.

  • @kerouac2
    @kerouac2 9 месяцев назад +84

    I can't speak for the UK, but in France the legal work week for everybody has been 35 hours for about 20 years. This said, many people work 40 hour weeks but all of the extra hours are given back as compensatory time. My own office worked 36.5 hours a week, and I ended up with 10 weeks of vacation a year by the time I retired. Five weeks vacation is the minimum in France, but many companies have already moved on to 6 weeks, with more time off coming with seniority every year.

    • @wyterabitt2149
      @wyterabitt2149 9 месяцев назад

      That;s not part of the law from anything I have heard. The only thing they have to do is pay slightly more for the overtime for the first 8 hours past 35 (which covers most people) - and even that overtime amount amount has been reduced since it started.
      And part time workers in France work on average more hours than the rest of Europe.

    • @kerouac2
      @kerouac2 9 месяцев назад

      @@wyterabitt2149 Yes, but you only get paid for overtime if you want the extra money. If you prefer the compensatory time, that's what you get.

    • @peterjackson4763
      @peterjackson4763 9 месяцев назад +1

      In the UK the amount is determined by your contract. I always had 37.5 hours as my contracted hours. For a period in my 20s I worked over 100 hours per week and made a lot in overtime. Later the working time directive came in that limits work to 48 hours per week, but I always opted out. I wanted the freedom to work longer should I chose to do so. Usually it involved being on call over a weekend, and normally not getting a call.

    • @DarrenPrice333
      @DarrenPrice333 Месяц назад

      My full time employment is 37hrs a week

    • @DarrenPrice333
      @DarrenPrice333 Месяц назад

      And not forgetting the bank holidays we have

  • @nigeldewallens1115
    @nigeldewallens1115 9 месяцев назад +27

    In the early sixties and up to the late sixties! when I grew up! My mum and dad took me and my sister, all over Europe and it gave me a chance to appreciate Europe such that I have never forgotten Venice! Even at such a young age it made me love it! We have been ever so lucky to live in the UK and see Europe!

  • @EmilyCheetham
    @EmilyCheetham 9 месяцев назад +13

    Also you should move to the UK because of the NHS (no getting into debt due to illness or injury).

  • @alisoncauser2955
    @alisoncauser2955 9 месяцев назад +17

    I was really ill/ needed chemo ill. They told me to take 6 months off work on full pay, I could take another few months on half pay. On my return to work they gave me my full 6 weeks paid leave and insisted I took it, although I chose to take 5 weeks and they gave me an extra weeks pay to make up for the week leave I didn't take.

    • @pppp67567
      @pppp67567 3 дня назад

      Wow that's a great company. You must've meant a lot to them 💛

  • @AHVENAN
    @AHVENAN 9 месяцев назад +19

    Yes the traveling helps us learn about other places, but even people like myself, who have rarely been outside the closest neightbouring countries from where I live, know alot more about the rest of the world than most americans seem to do, because our education systems actually teach us about world history and we frequently get news reports from allover the world on all channels. While in the US it seems like both the education system and the media is extremly US-centric

  • @ronturner9850
    @ronturner9850 9 месяцев назад +41

    One added travel benefit from London is Eurostar, a train that takes you under the English Channel to Paris in just over 2 hours. Worth a video reaction all of its own!

    • @wyterabitt2149
      @wyterabitt2149 9 месяцев назад +11

      I don't think any country on Earth considers being connected to France a benefit!!!!!
      (maybe joking . . . . maybe).

    • @Whippy99
      @Whippy99 9 месяцев назад +6

      An easy gateway to the whole of Europe. I’m British but also a proud European 🇪🇺🇬🇧🇺🇸

    • @Whippy99
      @Whippy99 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@wyterabitt2149😂😂😂😂😂

    • @grahvis
      @grahvis 9 месяцев назад +6

      I have travelled by train from the coast of Mid-Wales to Cologne.

    • @Joshua-fi4ji
      @Joshua-fi4ji 9 месяцев назад +1

      The thing with the Eurostar is it is only really useful if you live in/around London or are travelling from the EU. It's still not necessarily cheaper than a flight and due to train timings into London, it can force you to have to spend a night in London to get the train the next day. This costs more money and wastes a day of your holiday.
      Wish the UK operated night trains. 1 or 2 going through the night would make everything so much easier.
      Since I live in Portsmouth, the Portsmouth-St Malo ferry is really good and allows me to take a car over.
      Unfortunately the prices of these and the Eurotunnel have shot up since Covid.

  • @wholelotoflaughs
    @wholelotoflaughs 9 месяцев назад +41

    I am a nurse for NHS and am very grateful for the benefits, excellent pension, 41 days holiday, 6 months full sick pay and then 6 months 1/2 pay and 1 year maternity. I think we take it for granted in the UK how good we have it compared to some countries. I can’t imagine having 5-10 days holiday, I get over 8 and still want more 😂!

    • @derekporter7658
      @derekporter7658 5 месяцев назад +2

      Are you NHS England? I'm NHS Scotland and I got 33 days annual leave after 10 years service, plus we work the 4 public holidays, and get the day back to take whenever we wish plus it is paid time and a half. Although we have this agenda for change programme in NHS Scotland, they're trying to cut our hours from 37.5 to 36! It's a bloody mess by messing around with the contracted hours 😕. However I read you're a nurse, I'm in pharmacy stores, so maybe contract hours/annual leave will be obviously different.

    • @williamsimpson5808
      @williamsimpson5808 2 месяца назад +3

      And you still go on STRIKE

    • @wholelotoflaughs
      @wholelotoflaughs 2 месяца назад

      @@derekporter7658 I’ve been with NHS over 10 years so get the additional A/L.

    • @wholelotoflaughs
      @wholelotoflaughs 2 месяца назад

      @@williamsimpson5808 ‘I’ have personally never striked however just because I’m happy with the benefits we have, doesn’t mean I think we get paid what we should for years of studying, debt and level of responsibility we have. I however choose to do this as a profession and don’t do it solely for the money because if I did, I would have chose another line of work. All different industries strike, train drivers and their basic pay is way more than a nurse? So what’s your point? The fact you have one, tells me you earn less than I do with less benefits and come across slightly bitter but as this was my choice, your job choice was and is yours? NHS staff among other ‘professions’ had no pay rise for years, nothing! No minimun wage increase and it got to the point where newly qualified nurses were getting a couple of pound more than someone who works at Tesco for example. How is that fair and how does that encourage people to come and do this as a profession? At the end of the day, we work for money. My daughter has just got a job at Sainsbury’s standing at a self service checkout for £12 an hr, she’s 18. A newly qualified nurse is on £15.38, I’m sorry but no one can convince me that that is fair. Nurses, doctors, police also get paid way more in other countries than this country. In the US the average wage for a registered nurse is $82,750, which is nearly £65000, in the UK the average is £35000-£38000. So going back to your original comment, yes we do and are entitled to STRIKE!!!

    • @steve_and_lolas_hikes
      @steve_and_lolas_hikes Месяц назад +4

      And yet you lot are always whinging.....oh and striking.

  • @samkenyon4522
    @samkenyon4522 9 месяцев назад +50

    9am - 5pm (7 hours a day plus 1 hour for lunch) is the norm for most people in the UK, especially those doing office jobs. 28 days paid holiday (5.6 weeks) is the minimum legal entitlement here for anyone working 5 days a week, but many people get more than that. Lots of us also get paid Bank Holiday leave on top - that's not a legal requirement and it can form part of your holiday entitlement, but is potentially an extra 8 days off each year whether paid or unpaid.

    • @seldom_bucket
      @seldom_bucket 9 месяцев назад +6

      I've worked plenty of jobs and have never even heard of anyone having a 1 hour lunch break.

    • @Raven44453
      @Raven44453 9 месяцев назад +11

      ​@@seldom_bucketReally ? I ve always had an hour dinner wherever I ve worked

    • @Zatnicatel
      @Zatnicatel 9 месяцев назад +2

      You don't get paid for your lunch hour ofc. Plus these days, 9am - 5:30pm is more usual

    • @carltaylor6452
      @carltaylor6452 9 месяцев назад +2

      My employer has also introduced something they call 'wellbeing' days - two days p.a. - which you can add to your annual leave. It's for if you get stressed out and just want some time to chill. I haven't used them; very often I don't use up my full complement of annual leave by the end of the year (we can carry five days over). I can't recall what what my leave entitlement even is, but it's > 30days.

    • @painfulltruth5551
      @painfulltruth5551 9 месяцев назад +4

      Some jobs also let you buy holidays. I normally buy an extra 5 a year to cover the school holidays. It gives us enough hoildays between me and my wife so we don't need to use child care.

  • @DougBrown-h1n
    @DougBrown-h1n 9 месяцев назад +71

    I guess our shared language makes the UK that much more attractive to potential US emigrants, but I think most European countries offer a better environment in which to simply enjoy life and bring up a family - not forgetting Canada, Australia and New Zealand.
    I've passed through the States a few times though never lived there - but I'm aware of so many fundamental issues which I'd find "difficult", that I can say with certainty I'm very happy to have not been Born in the USA (apologies to Bruce Springsteen).

    • @nathanbrown7346
      @nathanbrown7346 9 месяцев назад

      Springsteins track is about being born in the USA, brought up to several America and then sent to die and kill other people in Vietnam

    • @MsGbergh
      @MsGbergh 9 месяцев назад +10

      Bruce Springsteen's song was critical of the USA.

    • @DougBrown-h1n
      @DougBrown-h1n 9 месяцев назад +6

      True - I guess not many realize it.@@MsGbergh

    • @MsGbergh
      @MsGbergh 9 месяцев назад

      @@DougBrown-h1n I've heard that The Marines considered using The Village People's 'In the Navy!' for a recruiting advert!

    • @terranaxiomuk
      @terranaxiomuk 9 месяцев назад +4

      They have their perks, but no. The UK has Amazing wirk life balance. Those 5 weeks are our right. A decent company will add more. I get 38 days holding with full pay. That doesn't include statutory sick pay, maternity leave and much more.

  • @t.a.k.palfrey3882
    @t.a.k.palfrey3882 9 месяцев назад +30

    It's great that you've steadily become more humorous as your channel has grown, Tyler. Occasionally, you also succeed at British/Aussie/Canadian-style sarcasm. 😂 Btw, what is a typical, ordinary American these days? Do you carry an AK47 going shopping at Walmart, driving your Dodge RAM with MAGA stickers and a 6ft flag fluttering from the cab, while eating a double Big Mac and a sack of fries, and wearing Levis, high-top sneakers, and a muscle shirt, as you escort eleven kids (named Elmer, Dolly, Eli, Dwayn, Dakota, Tyler Junior, etc) to the orthodontist or to cheerleading practice??😂

    • @kaybray1434
      @kaybray1434 9 месяцев назад +3

      😂

    • @helenagreenwood2305
      @helenagreenwood2305 9 месяцев назад +2

      😆😆😆

    • @Dazza5007
      @Dazza5007 9 месяцев назад +1

      😂😂😂

    • @thefiestaguy8831
      @thefiestaguy8831 3 месяца назад

      They're American, they're called Lindsey, Marty, Tyler, Martin, Steven, Luke, Jeffrey, Emily, Winnipeg, Bernardo and Hugo.

  • @shirleykimber2330
    @shirleykimber2330 9 месяцев назад +13

    40+ hours is pretty normal here with 28 days holiday usually including Bank Holidays, so she's on a good package! Let's face it she would have to have a good incentive to move here!

  • @trailerman2
    @trailerman2 9 месяцев назад +16

    Tyler good video and reaction. A few years ago a friend of ours was staying with his friends in Texas, they lived in a sprawling suburb: he went for his usual early morning walk only to be stopped by a cruising police car and asked 'what he thought he was doing'..... it was only when he opened his mouth and his English accent convinced them he was 'just out for a stroll' that tension eased lol.....he said afterwards he was terrified he would get shot!! (typical British stereotypical view of US police lol)

    • @vermis8344
      @vermis8344 9 месяцев назад +7

      Second comment I've seen here where the US cops stopped someone for... walking. This is wild to me. What did _they_ think he was doing?!

  • @jamesdignanmusic2765
    @jamesdignanmusic2765 9 месяцев назад +6

    I know it's a touchy subject to a lot of Americans, but I'll mention it anyway - safety. Sure, there's crime anywhere in the world, but your likelihood of being shot in the UK is 1/60th of that in the US. And the police in the UK are helpful and friendly and know that their job is to serve the public. If you're pulled over by the cops you're not in fear of your life.

  • @vrenak
    @vrenak 9 месяцев назад +14

    It's the norm everywhere else that benefits like pension is tied to a percentage of your pay, how many hours you work is completely irrelevant, since there's no such thing as NOT getting pension payments. same goes for just about any benefit, whether it be employee discounts, vacation days etc. This prevents employers exploiting employees like they do in the US by giving almost fulltime and then swindling people out of all the benefits.

  • @robertdraper5782
    @robertdraper5782 9 месяцев назад +12

    Due to injuries from some unpleasantness in 1989 I'm no longer able to drive but have had no problem holding down jobs using public transport. I was recently advised to walk at least an hour a day to alleviate my chronic back pain so I've take to walking to work which is just over an hour away on foot. Not only is it quicker than my old two bus journey but as my route takes me through two large parks and a really pleasant tree lined area of large Victorian houses it's actually a pleasure.

  • @ianbrook7793
    @ianbrook7793 6 месяцев назад +5

    Do you know that the US is the only western country that doesn't have all these things.

  • @marycarver1542
    @marycarver1542 9 месяцев назад +5

    I have an English friend in the US. She only got 2 weeks maternity leave. Inhuman.

  • @missharry5727
    @missharry5727 9 месяцев назад +38

    She didn't mention sick leave. That is unrestricted, though statutory sick pay is only available to employees who earn at least £123 a week, and only lasts for 28 weeks. If you are still unable to work after that perio you may be able to claim state benefits.

    • @capitalb5889
      @capitalb5889 9 месяцев назад

      She did mention stick leave

    • @keithparker5125
      @keithparker5125 9 месяцев назад +4

      What she didn't mention was that if you got sick during your vacation, you are re-credited with the days you are sick.

    • @UnknownUser-rb9pd
      @UnknownUser-rb9pd 9 месяцев назад

      I'm not sure what you mean by "unrestricted" but I have worked for companies in the UK where you will be reviewed if you exceed certain sick leave levels. And my last company began the process of managing you out of the company if you exceeded three weeks sick leave in a year if it was made up of multiple periods.
      They have to go through various reviews and HR steps but if the sick leaves continued without good reason (i.e. no long term underlying condition) people were made redundant. And even if you did have a long term underlying condition they often still invoked the employee health insurance and you left the company with a percentage of your pay paid by an insurance company because you could no longer carry out your duties.
      I have also worked for the public sector and their conditions were six months on full pay and six months on half pay.

    • @missharry5727
      @missharry5727 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@UnknownUser-rb9pd There is no statutory limit on sick leave. It is up to individual employers. But they run the risk of an unfair dismissal claim if they dismiss an employee on inappropriate grounds. Our employment law is complex.

    • @UnknownUser-rb9pd
      @UnknownUser-rb9pd 9 месяцев назад

      @@missharry5727 Thank you, that makes sense. When you mentioned "unrestricted" I interpreted that as unlimited sick leave.

  • @doobiedootwo3517
    @doobiedootwo3517 9 месяцев назад +9

    You need to check out british beaches - we also have several long distance coastal path walks - also worth looking at 🥰

  • @EmilyCheetham
    @EmilyCheetham 9 месяцев назад +41

    You should also move to UK for: the history- we have castles, historic houses, ruins, sites to see where famous people lived/worked/did things, you can visit movie locations easily (like a tour of the Harry Potter studio or a guided walk around a town/city seeing all the locations where a movie was filmed).

    • @karlg9354
      @karlg9354 9 месяцев назад +1

      Exactly not forgetting Beamish open air museum

    • @EmilyCheetham
      @EmilyCheetham 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@karlg9354 there are several open air museums in uk. That kind of comes under “the history”. I couldn’t put everything I just referred to a few things.

    • @marycarver1542
      @marycarver1542 9 месяцев назад +4

      and citizens dont carry guns, by Law ! neither do the police on our streets.

    • @EmilyCheetham
      @EmilyCheetham 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@marycarver1542 well most police don’t but there are a small number of special forces (& military at major events) who do.

  • @susanleeson1832
    @susanleeson1832 9 месяцев назад +7

    I finished working full-time in 2007. I worked 38 & half hours a week. 30 days annual leave & 8 bank holidays (national holidays). If I was ill for less than a working week (5 days) I would just phone my boss to keep him updated. After that, I would get a doctor's certificate (sick note). Generally, I always received full pay. I did have pneumonia once and had to take off 6 weeks. I may then have received statutory sick pay which nowadays is £109.40 for 26 weeks but I don't remember. However, I do remember the flowers they sent to me!!!

  • @marvinc9994
    @marvinc9994 9 месяцев назад +5

    And if you happen to like the sea (or The Ocean in _Americanese_ ), Tyler - never forget that _wherever_ you are in the UK, you're never more than 70 miles from the coastline - which is over 11,000 miles long! Just sayin'...😊

  • @steviep7706
    @steviep7706 9 месяцев назад +7

    I worked 30 yrs on railway maintenance and worked a 35hr week based on 4x10hr days, 4 days off, 4x10hr nights, 4 days off. I then got 28 days paid vacation. Long term sick was 6 months at full pay, then 6 months at 50% pay, then onto state benefits. I would take 14 days off giving me a 30 day period off and I'd vacate in the USA for 21 days .... and still have 14 days off for the rest of the year. Even taking 4 days vacation meant due to 4 on 4 off that I was off for 12 days.

  • @meentje568
    @meentje568 9 месяцев назад +8

    As stated in a video of Jovies Home: in the states it's the employers, the companies that have more rights than the people working in them. But in Europe (I live in The Netherlands) it's the people who have more rights than the companies, because it's the people who are more important and makeup the workforce of those companies.

  • @elizabethadracul120
    @elizabethadracul120 9 месяцев назад +9

    Hey Tyler hunni the one thing you said about how weird and difficult you would find it to walk around all the time here in the UK, was mirrored by an American friend of my family who came over a year ago now.
    We are a family of walkers and we walk everywhere, only using transport over long distances.
    And they found it a wee bit tough to keep up at first, so we did plan stops and rest bites for them at cafes and coffee shops on our routes.
    But after a week of being here in the UK they were fine with walking 8 to 9 hours a day site seeing, with breaks inbetween of cause.
    And on the good side they even carryed the walking up when they went back home to the USA, which in turn has helped their health and lose weight.
    But they do get wierd looks and get asked why are you walking to the local shop by stranger's like you said.
    Perhaps if you ever come over walking everywhere might have the same effect on you hunni?

    • @kathryndunn9142
      @kathryndunn9142 9 месяцев назад

      He's married so you have to take him and his wife for that pint

  • @Isleofskye
    @Isleofskye 9 месяцев назад +8

    Just FIVE weeks? In London in the Late 1970s/1980s,I worked for a Government Industry and got 6 weeks plus the "compulsory" week of "sickies" that most employees took. In special circumstances, when I went to the USA/Canada in 1979, they allowed 7 weeks with one week brought forward .. Lunch was one hour but often we had more, positioning our "offshoot" office next to a Pub and we,once a week, had 2 hours in the local Sports Centre, even one lunch, went on a River Boat trip in London. 10-minute morning and afternoon break and, naturally "fiddled" FLEXITIME and got a £350,000 Pension for paying in £8,000 and a generous redundancy in 1989 that could have paid off the mortgage.Halcyon Days😀

  • @peterfhere9461
    @peterfhere9461 9 месяцев назад +7

    Most people in the UK regularly fly to Europe for weekend breaks, or for our holidays. Having several weeks of paid leave helps us to do this! Until COVID, my wife and I would regularly have three or four holidays in Europe per year.....

  • @johnsimmons5951
    @johnsimmons5951 9 месяцев назад +6

    I’ve worked for a company that had a 30hr week (ie that’s full time).
    In my last job The standard was 30 days paid vacation, with the option of buying a further 5 days.
    If you don’t book holidays you may get a warning from HR, and if you don’t take heed of the warning you could be sacked for not taking a holiday,

  • @youraveragejoe1
    @youraveragejoe1 9 месяцев назад +6

    Full time normally means spending 40 hour a week at work (42.5 for me). But the 1 hour daily lunch breaks aren’t generally counted in this working time as they’re unpaid. Hence “35 hour work weeks”

  • @ftroop2000
    @ftroop2000 9 месяцев назад +5

    I've had female colleagues that have a year maternity. Come back for a few weeks, and then back off for a 2nd and even 3rd child😂

  • @josephturner7569
    @josephturner7569 9 месяцев назад +6

    I was a train driver. 35 hour 4 day week. Averaged over the timetable. If you worked more hours, you got the overtime. If under, written off.
    Oh yeah, we have conditions of service too. No more than 12 hours on duty, minimum 12 hours rest.

  • @peterfhere9461
    @peterfhere9461 9 месяцев назад +9

    Some jobs also offer "flexitime" where you can work extra hours during the week and then take that time off, and often you can vary the actual hours you work if it suits the business. It is usual to limit the number of "flexi" hours to say one or two days a month, and sometimes it is coupled with having to work "core hours" e.g. 10-4

    • @Phenotypek
      @Phenotypek 9 месяцев назад

      Thanks 🙏! Canadian moving to the uk and applying for jobs I didn’t know what flexitime meant.

    • @pppp67567
      @pppp67567 3 дня назад +1

      ​@@Phenotypek some companies offer slightly different forms of flexible working. Some may be a bot cut down, so e may be a bit better. Best to check what an individual company's policy is on it (if they offer it - also not to be confused with the legal right to request flexible working if your circumstances require it e.g. if you begin caring for a relative) so you don't get caught out by assuming as I have. Generally though most company forms of flexible working are pretty great.

  • @lisa_loves_scarlet
    @lisa_loves_scarlet 9 месяцев назад +12

    The vacation days are absolutely correct here in UK. We usually get a certain number of days per year that are fully paid, plus we get certain public holidays off too (depending on whether the company is open on the public holiday or not).

    • @wobaguk
      @wobaguk 9 месяцев назад +3

      Lots of places also offer flextime, where you can work up extra days off from longer hours on top of the contractual days off.

    • @marydavis5234
      @marydavis5234 9 месяцев назад

      That is not many vacation days, before I retired in 2017, I have 8 weeks of paid vacation, plaid holidays and 110 hours a month for sick leave, plus a few bonus’

  • @interghost
    @interghost 9 месяцев назад +2

    We do a lot of walking here in UK. Its strange to think inthe US you wont walk up your own street? Weird.

  • @ftroop2000
    @ftroop2000 9 месяцев назад +5

    I do 28hrs a week, with a minimum of 2hrs voluntary overtime every day (completey my choice).
    I get 2 days off a week for 2 weeks, then I get 5 straight days off. No Sunday working.
    5 weeks annual paid leave a year.
    Long term sick is 6 months full pay, then 3 months half pay.
    It's also so much harder to be fired in the UK than it is in the States. There has to be proof of intentional gross misconduct, as opposed to "Your face and views don't fit".

  • @JohnResalb
    @JohnResalb 9 месяцев назад +8

    Happy weekend Tyler.
    Yes, if you're going to places like Paris, or Amsterdam, for the weekend (even Scotland) the car won't be much use to you - you need to take the high speed trains through the tunnel under the sea (which resembles flying in an aeroplane at ground level).
    Of-course you can also fly to anywhere in about an hour.
    I've done it myself for even just the day !!!!
    So, there's no limits, when you come over.

    • @danielreed5199
      @danielreed5199 9 месяцев назад

      I tried to fly to somewhere an hour and a half away in an hour, it didn't work.

  • @chrissmith2544
    @chrissmith2544 9 месяцев назад +5

    Hi Tyler!
    Love your work and find it so intriguing watching you learn about the UK and this video in particular seemed to make you “click” with one or two things.
    You should check out a town in Scotland called Cumbernauld. It was built in the 1960’s as a “New Town” and was hailed as a massive success while trying to deal with the Glasgow slum overspill problem. As much as the town is dated now, it showcased the fact that its residents could literally walk from one end of the town (10 miles or so) without having to cross any roads along the way. This is now a town of around 55 thousand people still living to those principles.
    Check it out 👍🏼
    Keep up the good work!
    Chris from Cumbernauld, Scotland

  • @jose_fr78
    @jose_fr78 9 месяцев назад +4

    Hello, I am french. What she said about. UK applies to France , too. It might be even better in France , actually . Unlimited days off when you are sick, a few days off when your children are sick, all that paid. With time, it's even improving, giving more paid days off to fathers, not only to mothers to take care of babies. Also health care system is much better than in USA. Of course, moving to UK for americans would be easier because of the common language.

  • @LB-my1ej
    @LB-my1ej 9 месяцев назад +11

    I would imagine life almost anywhere would be better than worrying about whether you’re going to get shot just by going about your daily business or going to school. I’m so grateful I live in the UK for so many reasons.

    • @ebbhead20
      @ebbhead20 9 месяцев назад

      To me England is way too dangerous and aggressive. So to danes the UK is what the US is to brits...

    • @LB-my1ej
      @LB-my1ej 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@ebbhead20 are the Dane’s not dangerous and aggressive, remember the Vikings?

    • @ebbhead20
      @ebbhead20 9 месяцев назад

      @@LB-my1ej not to the extent that we have teen gangs that rob everyone blind when i lived there in the 90's. And i had to fight with 12 year old boys when i went down to the chippy at 9 in the evening. That was a first to me. And the girl gangs that raped men in London was so out there that it seemed weird as fuck. Had about 15 bad things haooen in the 6 years i stayed there. And had 2 other scandi friends that got knocked down by brits whilst walking around kings cross. We where told by a policeman that ran the Y to be very careful around kings cross after 7 in the evening so not that strange it seems. But there was so many that got fucked up at that time. And not just Scandis. 4 brits from the italia conti school got all their money and credit cards and phones stolen in soho at the time i lived in London. And a Norwegian ballet dancer got knocked unconscious when he wanted to get some cash out. They tool 300 quid from him and ran off.. But he was very flash with the cash and liked flaunting it. So im guessing they saw him coming. Im the only one that stayed for almost a decade without anything but i has dealings with kids that i told to fuck off. But they did have chains as belts and they where 12 or younger so that was a new experience for sure. Had 2 incidents happen where a bunch of 17-19 year olds threw bottles at me. First time in 97 or so at the roundhouse housing estate, then again when on holiday when i stayed at the euro tower in 2009 or so.. They was just like the movie Warriors.. Jumping out from a park and going bonkers.. Never knew posting a letter at 2am could be dangerous. But there you go..
      But yeah the UK is so nuts compared to here. No kid would dare to even talk to someone 10 years older in the 90's. If you was 10 and a 25 year old bloke came walking by you wouldn't say anything. Its bodybuilders in cars thats the problem here or Hells Angels. Not kids.. They didn't even get knives here until 2010. No kid would walk about with chains or metal pipes like we got up north all the time. My brother lost 11 phones in one summer so his mum wouldn't get him a new phone for ages in the 90's. Alk that stuff was foreign to me. Its coming up now though. Small kids with attitides. Just took a bit longer. Still not quite as young though. But DK is like a quaint library compared to the streets of England. Manchester had 900 shootings it seemed in the 90's and most inside the Hacienda. We dont really have gunfights in nightclubs here. 😏

    • @diablo.the.cheater
      @diablo.the.cheater 8 месяцев назад

      @@LB-my1ej Wasn't the UK occupied by vikings for a time? I guess all the violent ones remained in the UK and later migrated to america.

    • @LB-my1ej
      @LB-my1ej 8 месяцев назад

      @@ebbhead20weren’t the most violent Vikings Danes?

  • @petereastwood1
    @petereastwood1 9 месяцев назад +22

    The biggest culture shock I got in the US back on a trip in 2000 was how difficult and slow it was to get across junctions on foot. It took an age, and so I could understand why everyone drove.

    • @G36645
      @G36645 9 месяцев назад +3

      Simple it’s the social stigma around walking and taking public transport

    • @101steel4
      @101steel4 9 месяцев назад +2

      When my English cousin lived in Florida, they thought he was crazy walking to work. Even though it was only about 10 minutes away.

  • @JohnResalb
    @JohnResalb 9 месяцев назад +4

    Hi Tyler,
    I've popped out for coffee (not Starbucks) and I have further info. for you which I forgot earlier.
    In Europe, they get more time off than in UK.
    The French lunch literally means most businesses closed between about 12 and 2pm, including museums, and tourist places.!!
    So, fais attention.!!
    Saturday and Sunday opening hours vary a lot from country to country.
    But in UK you can get anything you want on a Sunday, (but within slightly reduced hours).

  • @wightwitch
    @wightwitch 9 месяцев назад +3

    People seem to forget that more paid time off is actually better for the economy too. The more people have time and money away from work the more they are spending in the local economy, which keeps it moving.

  • @timothyallan111
    @timothyallan111 9 месяцев назад +3

    On the subject of public transport, yes, it is great compared to the US, but in many areas (mine included) you really do need a car if you work because the bus services are inadequate and/or unreliable - you would probably get fired if you had to rely on the buses where I live to get you to work (that's assuming the bus route actually goes near to where you work)! But if you are a tourist/visitor or just getting about for leisure, then the public transport is great. London is a completely different world when it comes to public transport; it is absolutely incredible, not to mention crazily cheap compared to the rest of the country.

  • @marycarver1542
    @marycarver1542 9 месяцев назад +2

    its all true Tyler ! If that is unbelievable, how about women get 12 MONTHS paid leave when they have a baby.
    Husbands are also entitled to a week off at that time too.

  • @Si_Vert
    @Si_Vert 9 месяцев назад +4

    My friends and I stay at a hotel opposite Graceland and there was a bus every half an hour. You could literally see Graceland out of the front windows. It was a 4 min walk and the Hotel Staff thought we were weird when we walked there.

  • @JD-gc7lt
    @JD-gc7lt 9 месяцев назад +2

    The funniest part is the UK's average holiday time is actually on the low end compared to the rest of europe and most of the developed world, it's not a joke when the rest of the world looks at the USA like it's a 3rd world country hellhole with how it treats its citizens lol
    When's your visit to the UK then Tyler?

  • @Frank-cw2eb
    @Frank-cw2eb 9 месяцев назад +3

    As a UK resident there is a place in the UK you should google.the isles of Scilly....I go once a year .it quiet but so lovely and beautiful..and very few overseas visitors know of it's existence.look it up and see ....

  • @canonndaleguy3658
    @canonndaleguy3658 9 месяцев назад +2

    Talking of islands, Scotland has over 700 with almost 100 inhabited.

  • @nrnexusrising
    @nrnexusrising 9 месяцев назад +12

    While I enjoyed the video, it was informative and entertaining, it also made me a little sad, because I was never able to have that life that she has had. I’m a U.S. American who finally emigrated to another country, but it was only Mexico and due to circumstances I’ve never left the Americas. 😢 don’t get me wrong I love Mexico, I don’t love the USA, that’s a long story, but I’m retired now on a fixed income that is minimal, so jetting off to Europe or Asia is something I’d have to weigh heavily. I wish I’d been born in another country somewhere more progressive and liberal and I know the US isn’t the worst, but it’s far from the best, but life is mostly the luck of the draw and you make the most with what you were dealt. Still I have some of what she talked about in my Mexican home; walkable cities, beautiful and varied landscapes, some ancient ruins, people walk a lot which I’ve always done and there is more so I’m happy. Have a beautiful day every one😊!

    • @PhillipDavison-iy2gh
      @PhillipDavison-iy2gh 9 месяцев назад

      Similar to you I retired age87, really lucky born in UK not rich but comfortable in retirement even now still travel across Europe . Travel elsewhere is difficult now due to insurance. Have travelled extensively 7 times States, family in NZ, Aus, Sth Africa, travelled often. Umpteen cruises to Indian Ocean, Africa, Caribbean, I often wonder how retired people in US get on in retirement

    • @lizsavage1178
      @lizsavage1178 9 месяцев назад

      @@PhillipDavison-iy2ghI can’t really speak to how people from the US travel or get on in retirement except the few I personally know. Most of my family never left the states if they didn’t serve in the military and I have seen news reports of people who sadly worked until they were almost dead, because they couldn’t afford to retire and maintain their lifestyle. I would be in the same position if I’d stayed in the states, a friend even suggested that I get a part-time job to supplement my income so I could remain in the states, I chose to leave the states instead that was a more attractive option in my mind. I’ve seen very depressing stories of people living in their cars at age 80 and still working part time because they couldn’t afford their apartments. Of course this isn’t everyone, but too many people in the US go through life barely making ends meet, never able to save and working jobs that either don’t pay into social security or they don’t get a pension or they never put much into either plan and this happens a lot more than anyone wants to talk about. So yeah, the land of the free is not so free if you ask me.

    • @PhillipDavison-iy2gh
      @PhillipDavison-iy2gh 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@lizsavage1178 Hi Liz, Thanks for your reply,must be terrible having to work in your old age to have to work, glad everything worked out for you. I every country there are people for whatever reason finding life hard but should not be like that In later life .

    • @lizsavage1178
      @lizsavage1178 9 месяцев назад

      @@PhillipDavison-iy2gh true and it’s because most of the wealth is in the hands of a few billionaires, at least in the US, which is supposedly one of the wealthiest countries in history, so consequently you have a lot of people who have very little and the government has little to no safety nets for people in difficult financial situations, also mostly due to greedy billionaires so you end up with homeless people, people who are medically uninsured, people who can’t get healthy food, etc. I could go on forever, but I won’t it’s just depressing. Have a lovely day!

  • @paulbromley6687
    @paulbromley6687 9 месяцев назад +4

    My Mum & Dad were in the states in 1979 he walked to a store near to where they were staying and the police asked him if he was okay. Very odd as we walk a lot.

  • @jillybrooke29
    @jillybrooke29 9 месяцев назад +3

    In 2001 we (me and my young daughter) went to Portugal, Spain, Gibraltar and Morocco and in 2015 New Zealand for a month to visit my relatives, and then Gibraltar for a week for a Wedding in 2016. When I was younger we went to Portugal every year. 2008 Egypt for a 10 day trip up the Nile and in 2009 Rome for a week. Also France for a day for shopping every year.

  • @bigaldo246
    @bigaldo246 9 месяцев назад +3

    My last job was a truck driver in UK. I worked a 4 day week and had accrued 32 days holidays over the years. That worked out at 2 months paid holiday 😎🥳🤩😁. Oops silly me? I forgot to mention paid sick leave with no threats to sack me✌️👍

  • @drcl7429
    @drcl7429 9 месяцев назад +3

    when you talk about access to benefits as a "full time" employee, we really have no idea what you are talking about. What benefits do you think an employee needs or wants from their employer in Europe?

  • @charlestaylor3027
    @charlestaylor3027 9 месяцев назад +2

    We don't have sick days - if you are ill you stay off work until you are better.

  • @annedunne4526
    @annedunne4526 9 месяцев назад +4

    The employment laws around working time, paid holidays, sick leave and parental leave are standard in EU countries too.

    • @G36645
      @G36645 9 месяцев назад

      Yep that’s why we left so that government can scrap them

  • @stuartfitch7093
    @stuartfitch7093 9 месяцев назад +2

    It's not everyone in the UK that has the luxury of working 35 hours a week and 38 paid days off per year. Every video on this subject presents the UK as rosy.
    For a start the legal minimum of paid days holiday per year is 28 which is what I, and most people in my town get. Then most people I know work at least 40+ per week, this includes myself on an average of 42.5 hours per week on a rota system that works 24/7 365 days a year. Yes this means it includes such as Christmas day if I'm scheduled to do it.
    As I heard it described recently there is two Britains. A lot of these videos just focus on people who have the combined benefits of office work or working from home and get more paid time off than many people in other areas actually do, they also typically live in cities such as London where they've great integrated public transport networks such as Transport for London.
    The other side of the coin you never see is the typical northern English town like where I live where the jobs are almost exclusively manual labour jobs that can't be done from home or an office, there's no skilled professional jobs for graduates of universities or people with recognised skills so you have to attend a place of work but at the same time, the town has virtually none existent public transport whereby there's parts of town that don't have any buses at all because the buses are run by a local private bus company who won't run routes they deem as not profitable enough so your reliant on your own car to get to work for a 12 hour shift at 5.30am on a Sunday morning if your scheduled to work that day.
    This second side of Britain is not often shown and yet there is big areas outside our cities that are like the second example. Too many of these videos throw blanket terms and and make it sound like everything is uniform across the whole UK.
    You should watch a video on the north/south divide to start with. The after that you can find plenty of places on the south of England where there pockets of poverty and very poor public transport.

  • @Mike-lb1hx
    @Mike-lb1hx 9 месяцев назад +3

    The last place I worked had 6 months full pay maternity leave and a further 6 months half pay. There was also 6 months full pay paternity pay. Its not usual though.

  • @richardpoynton4026
    @richardpoynton4026 4 дня назад +1

    Yes, but….
    freedom, FrEdOm, FREEDUMB 🇺🇸
    Don’t get me wrong, America is great and Americans are very friendly, it’s not the average Americans fault that their government and employers exploit the hell out of them!

  • @elfishmoss1457
    @elfishmoss1457 9 месяцев назад +3

    Context for what I'm about to say: I walk quite a lot relative to most people on the UK.
    I walk on average about 18000 steps a day, my lowest number of active minutes (minutes spent running/swimming/working out/exercise that significantly raises heart rate) last month was 53 per day, with the highest at 175 (a weekend), it surprises me that he wouldn't even walk to the end of the block, sadly its becoming more common to just drive everywhere in the UK too :(

  • @danielreed5199
    @danielreed5199 9 месяцев назад +1

    If you are brought up being told that most the other countries in the world are dystopic, the chances are you are already living in one.

  • @Whippy99
    @Whippy99 9 месяцев назад +3

    Americans are always welcome in the UK. Their work ethic is phenomenal ❤

  • @gamingtonight1526
    @gamingtonight1526 2 месяца назад +1

    To be fair, as a Brit, I lived in Houston, Texas for 7 years, and I LOVED that I could have a weekend in Florida or Las Vegas, including rental car and hotel for 2 nights, for under $100!

  • @sistermarynutcracker
    @sistermarynutcracker 9 месяцев назад +4

    In Canada, I received about the same working hours and vacation days for most of my working life. Sick days were often 1 day per month and can be accumulated in many companies. Maternity leave is also generous for both parents, who can apply for unemployment insurance payments.

  • @02danhaz
    @02danhaz 9 месяцев назад +2

    Its crazy to us that the majority of Americans never leave the country. I hope these videos inspire you to get a passport and travel

  • @lordylou1
    @lordylou1 9 месяцев назад +3

    5.6 weeks of holiday allowance is mandatory in the UK. 52 weeks of maternity leave is also mandatory, with paternity dependant on certain criteria (length of service etc). In my old job I had 12 weeks holiday but that's pretty extraordinary. An example of travel opportunities, we went to Paris last weekend. We flew out after work on Friday and came back late Sunday.
    Something which should be noted though is it's not unusual for Brits to emigrate to Australia and New Zealand because the work/life balance is even better there.

  • @DorisKaltsas
    @DorisKaltsas 3 месяца назад +1

    Hey, I am watching this from Greece, I have lived in Greece for the past 30 years, BUT , England is a wonderful place,, we have the lake District and the southwest Which is where I am from, Devon and Cornwall is really something to see. I do miss the southwestern coastline

  • @PhilipShand
    @PhilipShand 8 месяцев назад +1

    Face it....... Living in the US is NOT living.....it's existing,& ,for many,not very well. I'm in Australia,74,retired,chronic health problems,age pension is my only income. Health care is free,drugs are heavily subsidised,car reg is free,public transport is free or heavily subsidised,a pension card gets many freebies & discounts.I don't live like a king but I'm doing a bluddi site better than your workers on a slave basic wage. I get $650pw....not taxed.Oh,AND I don't tip or pay extra tax at point of sale. Britain does similar things.

  • @jonntischnabel
    @jonntischnabel 9 месяцев назад +2

    I work 9 hours , 4 days a week. 36 hours a week. If i do overtime its double time(£36ph). Unless i do it on a Sunday, then it's triple time(£54ph). I'm a printer) I get 26 days holiday, plus bank holidays. So 34 days off a year, or 8 amd a half weeks. At my first print job , i got 46 days paid holidays a year. It isnt insane, its normal, the USA is the insane one! You guys cant enjoy your lives. No wonder you dont have passports. 😢 Its NOT the land of the free. Put it this way, this year alone, ive been to france, Switzerland, belgium, norway, and sweden, and none of the flights cost more than £100. I once flew to Biarritz for £5, and Poznan Poland for £22

    • @frankdux5693
      @frankdux5693 9 месяцев назад

      You'd be better off if you start printing money.

  • @brian5154
    @brian5154 9 месяцев назад +1

    UK is pretty well at the bottom of the totem pole in Europe. Most countries in the EU are better than the UK.........most of Europe is better than the USA, 4-8 weeks vacation in Europe, universal health care, cheaper or free education, great infrastructure,....it goes on........

  • @karenchristinewise7833
    @karenchristinewise7833 9 месяцев назад +1

    The UK has just announced that holiday time and pay have decreased. This is because they have repealed the EU Directives on work, health and safety and holidays. The affected workers are minimum wage, gig and zero-hour employees. It affects both full-time and part-time jobs. Brexit means that the protection offered by European Union and the UK are diverging. The Tories want to have the US model to make their wealthy donors and members even richer at the expense of the working class. These reaction videos will have to use newer material.I suggest that you watch A Different Bias and Maximillian Rospbierre for up to date information.

  • @MercuryCircuit
    @MercuryCircuit 9 месяцев назад +1

    This woman has a really good package. We aren't all as lucky. I drive Petroleum Tankers and I get 30 days off paid per year. 8 of those are Bank holidays with 22 you can book to suit.

  • @mikedignum1868
    @mikedignum1868 8 месяцев назад +1

    I've been told on numerous occasions by my boss that I have five days left of my 2023 leave allocation and I have to take it before the end of March...Then the 2024 allocation starts. I have a motorbike so every year I take the ferry or train over to mainland Europe for a two-week trip to all sorts of places.

  • @anotherthez7598
    @anotherthez7598 9 месяцев назад +1

    I was saying: yep, it'll F blow your mind. So many Americans relocating to Europe bc they are learning that the land of the free isn't actually located in North America..

  • @JoannDavi
    @JoannDavi 9 месяцев назад +1

    You liven a huge country and think it’s all like Evansville, Indiana - barely over 100K people surrounded by fields of corn.

  • @thegingerwitch322
    @thegingerwitch322 9 месяцев назад +1

    We are an island! OF COURSE we have beaches! Down here on the south coast we have very nice beaches AND islands.Have a look on a map

  • @ianplatt1375
    @ianplatt1375 9 месяцев назад +1

    I'm self employed in UK unfortunately and work 60 hour's a week with 10 day's vacation 😎 😮😢

  • @helenroberts1107
    @helenroberts1107 9 месяцев назад +1

    I think you’d be better moving to Europe somewhere rather than the UK talking as someone who is from the UK. If you try and drive in London, you’re not going to get anywhere very fast. You need to walk or take public transport

  • @terranaxiomuk
    @terranaxiomuk 9 месяцев назад +1

    Worth noting that a decent company like mine adds more holiday. I get 38 days. That's not including statutory sick pay. I'm on a salary anyway.

  • @brucehowe194
    @brucehowe194 7 месяцев назад +1

    Yes that's why the USA 🇺🇸 is the land of the free and the greatest country in the world 🌎 when come's to workers rights and free health care 😅😅😅😅

  • @JoannDavi
    @JoannDavi 9 месяцев назад +1

    British people don't think about British beaches.
    Notice that she didn't mention that the water off the beaches and islands is warm. Why? Because it's not.

  • @AnnaBellaChannel
    @AnnaBellaChannel 9 месяцев назад +1

    US has a bad work-life balnce and companies do not treat their workers very well at all.

  • @gtaylor331
    @gtaylor331 9 месяцев назад +1

    Yet so many people shout out that the US is the greatest country in the world......dear God........

  • @hl6876
    @hl6876 9 месяцев назад +1

    It varied basically anything over 30 hrs a week standard, but 35 hours is probably average

  • @cerliezio
    @cerliezio 9 месяцев назад +1

    It is the norm in every country in Europe. I live in Italy 5 weeks paid holiday is mandated I repeat mandeted by law. Unlimited sick time.. Let s face it you live in the third world

  • @Ghhft33
    @Ghhft33 9 месяцев назад +2

    I really hope you get to visit us over here sometime and vlog it. Loving your videos, your reactions have me in fits😂

  • @nolimittolearning4414
    @nolimittolearning4414 9 месяцев назад +1

    By law, we get 28 (including national holidays) paid, working days off per year

  • @Deb-vu7gk
    @Deb-vu7gk 8 месяцев назад +1

    National Health Service pays for your Healthcare from Wages.

  • @clivenewman4810
    @clivenewman4810 9 месяцев назад +2

    As a UK postal worker,in 2023/24 I will get 9 weeks holiday.