The true marker of a Taswegian is calling mainlanders, mainlanders ... in casual conversation, as in "look at that bloody mainlander'. As a 'Queenslander' you will find that we all already know that you'll go back, it may take 10, 20 or even 50 years, but you'll eventually betray your Tassie-mania. Be glad, that we tolerate that type of behavior!
The joke goes that true parochial Hobartians from the 'right' side of town wouldn't be seen dead north of Creek Road. The really hardcore not only eschew Burnie, Devonport, Launceston and the like but also foreign hellholes far beyond the line, such as Sydney, Paris, New York, etc.
How the hell would we know (if we even cared) that you were a Queensland error (sorry, my tablet self-corrected to that when I typed Queenslander)? Signed, the Tasmanian who's moved to North Queensland and is finding it more bogan than home. I mean that NQ doesn't have a wall of vaginas, just a bunch of ...
I'm from Sydney. I absolutely appreciate Tasmania. I moved to Launceston 2 years ago and will never return to live in Sydney or anywhere else.The people here are very down to earth,relaxed and sociable. Sydney is aesthetically ugly and fast paced place.I have nightmares that I'm driving down Liverpool rd or Parramatta rd and then wake up relieved that I'm not in that shit hole. I was born and raised in Balmain before globalization and Tassie reminds of how simple life use to be.
@@HousesForSaleCairns I’ve already been there and done that.Ive moved around a lot and I’ve never been more at peace.I honestly can’t see myself anywhere else soon.I hope you find your niche because I know I’ll be sitting by the fire place this winter with my family and dogs feeling blessed.
So dayem right, local councils and state government is a joke. I love asking someone why they voted for so and so, "oh hes my counsins best friend's brother" or some shit. It's so dumb.
I will never get over when visiting Tasmania, a Woolies cashier said we couldn't use our QLD rewards card because it was from 'overseas'. We just stopped and stared at them until the realisation of what they had said hit them. Absolutely priceless. Tasmania had Frequent Shopper Club at the time however this has since been replaced as of 2020 with Everyday Rewards in line with every other state who has had it since 2008.
Lived in Hobart, Tassie for two years. Told some friends of ours we were driving to Devonport to visit some retired family and casually mentioned we’d be leaving around 6 in the morning and would be back about 7 in the evening. The extremely surprised response was, “you’re doing the trip in one day?” For the entire two years we lived there we were introduced as this is X and X, they’re mainlanders. Seriously considered changing our name to Mr and Mrs Mainlander.
Jimmy, soo funny. You got it in one. We were living in Hobart in 1989 when the Labor Greens had the minority Government, and it was a fiasco. On the ABC the reporters were out in Hobart asking people out and about when they thought of the problem, and one man answered - "Don't know mate, were here holidaying from Australia." His wife hit him, and said, "We are in Australia, you idiot". It was on repeat for years. Cheers, and stay safe.
Loved it…& I’m a Tasmanian, although living on the ‘mainland’ for many years. So pleased you didn’t bring up the 2 heads joke. It’s so old & have no idea where it came from.
as a tasmanian too I can tell you, part of it was because we have no iodine in the soil, so people living off the land used to end up with swollen, damaged thyroids that looked like 'second heads'. mainlanders saw this affliction and thought it was due to inbreeding
@@frankvalentich5410 I actually did know this but thought the explanation would take too long & only Tasmanians would get it. It was the scar left from the thyroid removal op that was taken as being where the 2nd head was removed.
It's because of the notion that a lot of them are related to each other and so when they have children they're born with a deformity - 2 heads, remove one and have the scar to prove it.
I actually quite like getting that stupid joke from visitors because I get to nail them with “It’s true. We used to have two arseholes too… but we sent all our spares to Victoria.” 🖕🏻
As a Tasmanian bartender, I am not ready for any of my cousins to turn 18 after watching this video, but I have seen 1 family member every day this week coincidentally, I’m not ready for more of my family members to be at my workplace.
Moved to Tasmania from Sydney 50 years ago and wouldn't be anywhere else. Much of the video is comically true ........ visitors come and thankfully go.
As a Tasmanian living in the far northern reaches of NSW this is absolutely hilarious and 100 percent accurate. When I first took my now wife home to meet the family the first question she and her parents asked was “do we need passports” and “Does Tas use a different Timezone and currency to Australia”……for context they are from southern inland QLD
I can so relate! I got a call at work in Hobart one day "this is... (company... name) from ... Canberra.... A u s t r a l i a" all spoken very slowly so I could understand her language!! I just laughed at her and I said "you know, Tasmania IS part of Australia in case you don't know". She was really flustered and said "oh, oh, yes, I'm sorry". The education system over "there" in Canberra must be SO BAD. 🤣 Talking about nepotism, when we moved here from Perth in 2020 I worked in a Govt Dept and was amazed at how much Tassie is still so "connected" to its colonial past. It wasn't your ability and skills, it was all about who your grandparents or great grandparents were in Hobart's history, and what side of the river you lived on. What's THAT all about?! Bizarrely Hobart indeed.
Wait. So the passport my mother in law gave me when I moved to Tassie isn't legit? Damn, been using it for over a decade. In all fairness, Pizza Kom does do a decent slice of pizza after a night at the dirty Mersh.
Are you in the Tweed shire? I've been all the way up to Airlie beach and all the way down bit past Cygnet TAS and I still think the Tweed shire from Brunswick heads to the NSW/Qld border is the best spots in Australia. 👍. Yes, I'm being a bit biased having lived in the area most of my life but I also love skiing and there's no snow there but I still love the beaches.
Tassie has upgraded a little. We drink Gin and Craft Beer now(: Last winter I saw a few people stepping out in a variety of coloured puffer jackets. As for dating, we have a loop hole here. We are classed as remote, so people from all over the world can work here and get residence in 12 months. Ah gene pool solution!!!! Not good for jobs and housing, but you can date with peace of mind now.
15 years ago I went to Tasmania from Victoria for a school camp, first day back at school my best friend asked whether we had to change our money before we left or when we got there. After recieving a puzzled look from me, she quickly asked me not to tell anyone what she'd said. Yeah, there was no way I was keeping that to myself, so it didn't take long before everyone knew. And I've brought it up a few times since to make sure she knows I haven't forgotten!
I used to volunteer in a museum. We had a lot of people surprised that we took "Australian" money. The amount of people who didn't know they hadn't left the country was amusing and somewhat concerning. This one time we had this couple in their early 20s all excited because they were from Victoria and Tasmania was their first overseas trip, they got passports for the first time, were banging on about how easy it was getting through the border at the international airport in Launceston (It's not an international airport) My boss and I had to let them down as gently as we could. I still remember the look on the lady's face she was so disappointed. But if we hadn't told them they would of been in for a shock. Seeing it was a museum on the history of the area, including information on Lachlan Macquarie, John Batman and their roles in Australian history. Better they found out before the tour than during it also they were heading to two other museums which also talked about stuff with links to mainland Australia.
I grew up in Tasmania... had to have a good laugh at this one. I got out as soon as possible - nothing like accidentally going on a first date with a second cousin to make you realise you need to spread your wings.
Me and a mate visited Tasmania. Tbh, I loved it, but he did hook up with a girl who looked so identical to him we called his father and asked if he had ever been to Tasmania. The answer was yes and it all fit her timeline. To this day we aren't sure if we say he slept with his sister as a joke or because it's true.... It's gotten so awkward we have all silently agreed to just not talk about it.
Actually it looks like a vulva, not a vagina. That’s why Tasmanians are sick of hearing the vagina comparison. Because it’s incorrect 0:24 Likewise, it’s a wall of vulvas. Not vaginas 0:28
I moved to Tassie in 2000 and yes, while it is a bit parochial at times, it's still the best State to live in, I think. The air is clean. it's a beautiful place and I love it here. It has its quirks, for sure, but so do other States, but the good far outweighs the bad. I'm still amazed however, about how many "mainlanders" don't know that Tasmania is actually part of Australia! Seriously! I was shocked. I'm not sure where they went to school, but .... I would not want to live on the West Coast here, whoa, that is another world. The locals there call Queenstown "Mordor"! The Gordon River cruise is definitely worth the trip and Strahan is good, but a trip to Trial Harbour is a lesson in true isolation. (Need a 4WD and a satellite phone to live there!). The feel of the place is freaky. Along the lines of Jimmy's appraisal, people who live on Bruny Island call TASMANIA "the mainland". I got chatting to a couple of locals in Zeehan on the west coast who told me they were "going to Australia tomorra". I kid you not! They were serious. I told friends in Victoria and it's become a standing joke "when are you coming to Australia to visit us again?" 😆 I must admit you do almost need a passport to visit the West Coast. It is a beautiful State though, the jewel of Australia. My Victorian friend is here right now actually, for a visit, to breathe the fresh air (and wear her puffer jacket 😆).
The "going to Australia" is a Tassie in-joke. If people say they are going "up north" they mean up north in the state. Going to the mainland is "going to the big island".
@Blue Wren Yes, I guess it takes a decade or two to understand the hidden meanings. I overheard a workmate say on the phone one day, "mainlanders don't understand us". I bit my tongue, but I was thinking "you got THAT right". I was sitting 4 feet away from her and she knew I had come from the "mainland". I just let it go, what else can you do?!
@Blue Wren Yes, agree. What can you do when they tell you SO proudly that their ancestors came over in the first fleet, (albeit in chains and in the hold), and then they were given prime accommodation in Port Arthur. Nothing beats family history and legacy does it? 🙄
@@janined5784 My husband's family came over in the second fleet, yep, in chains. My family came as refugees in the 1960s. They came on a plane. Shame we didn't have kids, because they would have had some good genetic hybrid vigour 😂
100% agree. I moved to Victoria for uni and was so surprised no one was aware that they were Mainlanders and the easy public transport over cramming multiple friends and cousins into the back of the Ute to get anywhere 😂
😂LOVE IT! Hilarious - and I consider myself an honorary Taswegian as you have to be dead 20years to be considered a local hehe! Just kidding #love ya TAS - Now safely spoken in QLD hehe
The line I've heard is that only after your family has been in Tasmania for four generations are you allowed to apply for the consideration of being called a Tasmanian. It 'might' be accepted, might need to wait another four generations...
Moved to Tassie and lived there for 3 years. Moved back to the mainland. Absolutely nailed it with Bridgewater. Was given keys to a rental property to look at. Saw car bodies on the nature strip and every 2nd house had a new front door. We didn't even park the car. Bridgewater kids would start grass fires and when the firetrucks turned up they would throw stones at the fire trucks. The servo and police station had bullet holes. Wife worked 2 hours at the servo and then was relocated to Moonah, by her request. Glenorchy have Norffgate. Clarendon Vale a fellow resident had a bad day getting a hatchet thrusted into them. Bit other than that, friendly people, gorgeous bit of country and seriously, Tasmanians hate driving long distances. We drove Hobart to Launny and we were asked where we were staying the night. "At home in Glenorchy...?"
My Mum was born in Tasmania. Early 1980's flying either Ansett or TAA from Sydney to Tassie to visit Grandparent's.. I remember they only had the two TV Channels. the ABC and 7 or was it 9 🤔 Can't remember. . Then I remember when the TV in Sydney played the National Athemn at midnght and then it was the Test Pattern. Honestly Tasmania is a really beautiful and if for some reason I couldn't live in Sydney anymore , I would choose Tasmania.
I've moved to Tassie. I gets fairly hot for a month in summer, so I wear shorts. People smirk when I wear shorts. I get the impression they're considered ' little boy's' pants here.
i moved from Sydney to Tassie 7 years and I'm still considered a "blow-in". This is scarily accurate except for the wine part; where I am the choice of bevvy seems to be JD and coke premix in a can! Keeping it classy!
@@temptationsailingteam8480 I remember telling someone that I wanted to look at a map of tassie as a child and they took it wrong and told me I have one that I can look at whenever and I was super confused 😑…. Didn’t refer to Tasmania as “tassie” for a long time after I found out what they were referring to 😂😬…
Mate, I work out of the Bridgewater Library every week. A fair percentage of their streets have skid marks. I take it you've been to Bridgie too? Our boys remember you as Jimmy Giggle when we lived in Sydney. They love you even more now! Love your work. Keep us smiling! 👍🏼😁😂💕
We haven't had brown water in Queenstown since they upgraded the treatment plant. That said they did shutdown the water at the hospital because of high lead levels.
I spent 3 nights in Tasmania, if it wasn't so cold I'd probably consider moving there. It's beautiful, and there's no hassle and bustle. The produce is amazing too (except for chocolate)
If you're touring Hobart city you can try your luck spotting the local platypus around 7:30pm, he lives near Cascade Gardens at the end of Linear Park, there's a concrete dam he visits to look for fish. Also there's potential snow forcast for Mt Wellington on Wednesday.
@@tinfoilhomer909 ohhhh, lovely, will keep a look out for the platypus, and bring on the snow! I can't wait to experience the cooler temps a bit earlier this year! Looking forward to the holiday!
The not driving more than 20 minutes away from home thing is so spot on 😅😂
Same for darwin
That "absolutely never" hurt me. They don't even call me a Queenslander. I'm just a Mainlander.
The true marker of a Taswegian is calling mainlanders, mainlanders ... in casual conversation, as in "look at that bloody mainlander'.
As a 'Queenslander' you will find that we all already know that you'll go back, it may take 10, 20 or even 50 years, but you'll eventually betray your Tassie-mania.
Be glad, that we tolerate that type of behavior!
The joke goes that true parochial Hobartians from the 'right' side of town wouldn't be seen dead north of Creek Road. The really hardcore not only eschew Burnie, Devonport, Launceston and the like but also foreign hellholes far beyond the line, such as Sydney, Paris, New York, etc.
How the hell would we know (if we even cared) that you were a Queensland error (sorry, my tablet self-corrected to that when I typed Queenslander)? Signed, the Tasmanian who's moved to North Queensland and is finding it more bogan than home. I mean that NQ doesn't have a wall of vaginas, just a bunch of ...
@@tvctaswegia497 I thought those people were scared to go past the post office on Elizabeth St :P
@@tvctaswegia497 No. the flannelette curtain has definitely migrated north of creek road. Maybe even as far as Hopkins Street.
I'm from Sydney. I absolutely appreciate Tasmania. I moved to Launceston 2 years ago and will never return to live in Sydney or anywhere else.The people here are very down to earth,relaxed and sociable. Sydney is aesthetically ugly and fast paced place.I have nightmares that I'm driving down Liverpool rd or Parramatta rd and then wake up relieved that I'm not in that shit hole.
I was born and raised in Balmain before globalization and Tassie reminds of how simple life use to be.
You would like Geelong.
@@rsinclair6560 😂😂😂
They'll screw you over sooner or later
Yeah… for about 5 years then you’ll wake up. Been there done that
@@HousesForSaleCairns
I’ve already been there and done that.Ive moved around a lot and I’ve never been more at peace.I honestly can’t see myself anywhere else soon.I hope you find your niche because I know I’ll be sitting by the fire place this winter with my family and dogs feeling blessed.
So damn accurate. Especially the nepotism. It's how most politicians got in despite not even being remotely qualified for the job.
So dayem right, local councils and state government is a joke. I love asking someone why they voted for so and so, "oh hes my counsins best friend's brother" or some shit. It's so dumb.
Australia wide
@@_QA_ some didn't even finish primary
I will never get over when visiting Tasmania, a Woolies cashier said we couldn't use our QLD rewards card because it was from 'overseas'. We just stopped and stared at them until the realisation of what they had said hit them. Absolutely priceless.
Tasmania had Frequent Shopper Club at the time however this has since been replaced as of 2020 with Everyday Rewards in line with every other state who has had it since 2008.
is overseas mate
OMG, seriously? Haha, visiting Hobart 1st time next week & expecting to be able to use my card in Woolies there!
We refused to swap over to the rewards card for years because the frequent shopper card gave better points value per dollar lol
This happened to me as a Tasmanian on the mainland lol
@Becster Brisbane You'll be right, we won't send you to a penal colony!
This is fantastic. As a born and bred taswegian, this is spot on and bloody hilarious 😂. Well done Jimmy 😊
I'm Tasmanian and found this hilarious. (like the previous episodes)
Harmless banter, great stuff Jimmy!!
Glad you like them!
@@JimmyReesComedy Not like, love them mate!
Yes I was so worried, but luckily it's not slanderous, just funny and even accurate compared to most banterous content
Lived in Hobart, Tassie for two years. Told some friends of ours we were driving to Devonport to visit some retired family and casually mentioned we’d be leaving around 6 in the morning and would be back about 7 in the evening. The extremely surprised response was, “you’re doing the trip in one day?”
For the entire two years we lived there we were introduced as this is X and X, they’re mainlanders. Seriously considered changing our name to Mr and Mrs Mainlander.
Haha! I was born in Sydney but moved to Tassie when I was 6. I live in Devonport now!
I live in Launceston
Your cousins here to pick you up 😂😂😂
This was the best one Jimmy 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👍🏻
I just realised he didn't say the "cousin is here to zip you up" (in the puffer jacket)
@@siobhanhunt1749 Puffer jackets are called 'Tassie Tuxedos'.
Cuts so deep, absolutely nailed it. Savage!
Another brilliant video.
Cut so deep. Every.Single. Time.
Another brilliant one. Thank you Jimmy :)
The health system joke was too true.
Jimmy, soo funny. You got it in one.
We were living in Hobart in 1989 when the Labor Greens had the minority Government, and it was a fiasco. On the ABC the reporters were out in Hobart asking people out and about when they thought of the problem, and one man answered - "Don't know mate, were here holidaying from Australia." His wife hit him, and said, "We are in Australia, you idiot". It was on repeat for years.
Cheers, and stay safe.
Do you have a video link? That sounds amazing!
@@Hinzmana Sorry no. It is a while ago, and the internet was not what it is today.
The Black Box joke was perfect :) Satirical and subtle all at the same time!
Errol Flynn...lol...thought he was the most famous ...I must be getting old!😄
This makes me want to go & visit Tasmania! Great work Jimmy!
I moved to Zeehan a year ago because land is cheap. It's absolutely beautiful country, but it's a bit quiet.
You will see the real Tasmania in Ouse.
@@rsinclair6560Snooze you mean 😁
@@rebeccamccoy7294 Springfield, Jetsonville, Stonor.
Please come! It's awesome! 😊
As born and bred Tasmanian.. can confirm all is accurate haha
The Parochials slaughtered me
Loved it…& I’m a Tasmanian, although living on the ‘mainland’ for many years. So pleased you didn’t bring up the 2 heads joke. It’s so old & have no idea where it came from.
Tasmanian Census
as a tasmanian too I can tell you, part of it was because we have no iodine in the soil, so people living off the land used to end up with swollen, damaged thyroids that looked like 'second heads'. mainlanders saw this affliction and thought it was due to inbreeding
@@frankvalentich5410 I actually did know this but thought the explanation would take too long & only Tasmanians would get it. It was the scar left from the thyroid removal op that was taken as being where the 2nd head was removed.
It's because of the notion that a lot of them are related to each other and so when they have children they're born with a deformity - 2 heads, remove one and have the scar to prove it.
I actually quite like getting that stupid joke from visitors because I get to nail them with “It’s true. We used to have two arseholes too… but we sent all our spares to Victoria.” 🖕🏻
As a Tasmanian, love this... that part about people not wanting to travel 20 minutes to catch up... so true :P hehe
As a Tasmanian bartender, I am not ready for any of my cousins to turn 18 after watching this video, but I have seen 1 family member every day this week coincidentally, I’m not ready for more of my family members to be at my workplace.
Moved to Tasmania from Sydney 50 years ago and wouldn't be anywhere else. Much of the video is comically true ........ visitors come and thankfully go.
@Sanctus Paulus 1962 I've only been here 18 years but since I'm dying here within the next year or 2 I've been granted the title of honorary local.
As a Tasmanian living in the far northern reaches of NSW this is absolutely hilarious and 100 percent accurate. When I first took my now wife home to meet the family the first question she and her parents asked was “do we need passports” and “Does Tas use a different Timezone and currency to Australia”……for context they are from southern inland QLD
I'm from southern(ish) inland Queensland and I don't think that way!
I can so relate! I got a call at work in Hobart one day "this is... (company... name) from ... Canberra....
A u s t r a l i a" all spoken very slowly so I could understand her language!! I just laughed at her and I said "you know, Tasmania IS part of Australia in case you don't know". She was really flustered and said "oh, oh, yes, I'm sorry". The education system over "there" in Canberra must be SO BAD. 🤣
Talking about nepotism, when we moved here from Perth in 2020 I worked in a Govt Dept and was amazed at how much Tassie is still so "connected" to its colonial past. It wasn't your ability and skills, it was all about who your grandparents or great grandparents were in Hobart's history, and what side of the river you lived on. What's THAT all about?! Bizarrely Hobart indeed.
I've been asked by mainlanders about passports and also if we have our own army down here! 😆
Wait. So the passport my mother in law gave me when I moved to Tassie isn't legit? Damn, been using it for over a decade. In all fairness, Pizza Kom does do a decent slice of pizza after a night at the dirty Mersh.
Are you in the Tweed shire? I've been all the way up to Airlie beach and all the way down bit past Cygnet TAS and I still think the Tweed shire from Brunswick heads to the NSW/Qld border is the best spots in Australia. 👍. Yes, I'm being a bit biased having lived in the area most of my life but I also love skiing and there's no snow there but I still love the beaches.
I think that was your best one yet!
How do you start a family in Tasmania? Nepotism.
I nearly died.
Eventually, so will their gene pool
Shannon Noll and his Tasmania map beard 🤣🤣
Lol my cousins live in Tasmania so if I ever holiday over there (which I doubt) they'll pick me up but only if its under 20 mins from there house....
Tassie has upgraded a little. We drink Gin and Craft Beer now(: Last winter I saw a few people stepping out in a variety of coloured puffer jackets. As for dating, we have a loop hole here. We are classed as remote, so people from all over the world can work here and get residence in 12 months. Ah gene pool solution!!!! Not good for jobs and housing, but you can date with peace of mind now.
15 years ago I went to Tasmania from Victoria for a school camp, first day back at school my best friend asked whether we had to change our money before we left or when we got there. After recieving a puzzled look from me, she quickly asked me not to tell anyone what she'd said. Yeah, there was no way I was keeping that to myself, so it didn't take long before everyone knew.
And I've brought it up a few times since to make sure she knows I haven't forgotten!
I used to volunteer in a museum. We had a lot of people surprised that we took "Australian" money. The amount of people who didn't know they hadn't left the country was amusing and somewhat concerning.
This one time we had this couple in their early 20s all excited because they were from Victoria and Tasmania was their first overseas trip, they got passports for the first time, were banging on about how easy it was getting through the border at the international airport in Launceston (It's not an international airport)
My boss and I had to let them down as gently as we could. I still remember the look on the lady's face she was so disappointed. But if we hadn't told them they would of been in for a shock. Seeing it was a museum on the history of the area, including information on Lachlan Macquarie, John Batman and their roles in Australian history. Better they found out before the tour than during it also they were heading to two other museums which also talked about stuff with links to mainland Australia.
Loved this, so accurate 🤣
Most creative inbreeding jokes I’ve heard in a while! 😂
As a Tasmanian, I can’t attest that this is 100 percent accurate and correct. Your research is impressive.
Thank you for your funny videos! I really appreciate them
Loved this one Jimmy, thanks Cuz
Blooming Marvellous 🤣
Absolutely spot on!
Boxing match aside, Pizza Kom is a life saver after a night of sticking to the floor at Launnie's. Plus the taxi rank is right there...
I fucking love this guy
As a kiwi who's been to tassie this was the funniest yet!
I grew up in Tasmania... had to have a good laugh at this one. I got out as soon as possible - nothing like accidentally going on a first date with a second cousin to make you realise you need to spread your wings.
@The Aussie Family I bet people in the US ('Sweet Home') Alabama would be loving it 🤣😅
@@TheMelbourneHeart at first... but we have stayed close friends (with no funny business involved lol)
@The Aussie Family Only in the morning.
Me and a mate visited Tasmania. Tbh, I loved it, but he did hook up with a girl who looked so identical to him we called his father and asked if he had ever been to Tasmania. The answer was yes and it all fit her timeline. To this day we aren't sure if we say he slept with his sister as a joke or because it's true.... It's gotten so awkward we have all silently agreed to just not talk about it.
😂😂😂😂
Hahaaaaa, as an old girl new to Tasmania 😍 I've only lived here for 23yrs.....this is hilarious.
Thanks for the laugh 🤣❤️
Family WhatsApp Group😂
Tazzie national dress is identical to Invercargill'!!!!
This was achingly accurate.
🤣🤣🤣. I wish I'd known half of this before I moved here from "the mainland" 🤭
I love this video so much 🤣
Actually it looks like a vulva, not a vagina. That’s why Tasmanians are sick of hearing the vagina comparison. Because it’s incorrect 0:24
Likewise, it’s a wall of vulvas. Not vaginas 0:28
I think Tasmania looks like pubic area.
Launceston got a mention!
I feel personally attacked 😂
Boony! Puffer jacket and shorts - I like it!
I moved to Tassie in 2000 and yes, while it is a bit parochial at times, it's still the best State to live in, I think. The air is clean. it's a beautiful place and I love it here. It has its quirks, for sure, but so do other States, but the good far outweighs the bad. I'm still amazed however, about how many "mainlanders" don't know that Tasmania is actually part of Australia! Seriously! I was shocked. I'm not sure where they went to school, but ....
I would not want to live on the West Coast here, whoa, that is another world. The locals there call Queenstown "Mordor"! The Gordon River cruise is definitely worth the trip and Strahan is good, but a trip to Trial Harbour is a lesson in true isolation. (Need a 4WD and a satellite phone to live there!). The feel of the place is freaky.
Along the lines of Jimmy's appraisal, people who live on Bruny Island call TASMANIA "the mainland". I got chatting to a couple of locals in Zeehan on the west coast who told me they were "going to Australia tomorra". I kid you not! They were serious. I told friends in Victoria and it's become a standing joke "when are you coming to Australia to visit us again?" 😆
I must admit you do almost need a passport to visit the West Coast. It is a beautiful State though, the jewel of Australia. My Victorian friend is here right now actually, for a visit, to breathe the fresh air (and wear her puffer jacket 😆).
The "going to Australia" is a Tassie in-joke. If people say they are going "up north" they mean up north in the state. Going to the mainland is "going to the big island".
@Blue Wren Yes, I guess it takes a decade or two to understand the hidden meanings. I overheard a workmate say on the phone one day, "mainlanders don't understand us". I bit my tongue, but I was thinking "you got THAT right". I was sitting 4 feet away from her and she knew I had come from the "mainland". I just let it go, what else can you do?!
@@janined5784 Yep, there are pricks in Tassie too! As Tony Soprano would say "watcha gonna do?"
@Blue Wren Yes, agree. What can you do when they tell you SO proudly that their ancestors came over in the first fleet, (albeit in chains and in the hold), and then they were given prime accommodation in Port Arthur. Nothing beats family history and legacy does it? 🙄
@@janined5784 My husband's family came over in the second fleet, yep, in chains. My family came as refugees in the 1960s. They came on a plane. Shame we didn't have kids, because they would have had some good genetic hybrid vigour 😂
100% agree. I moved to Victoria for uni and was so surprised no one was aware that they were Mainlanders and the easy public transport over cramming multiple friends and cousins into the back of the Ute to get anywhere 😂
The toothbrush was invented in Tasmania. Anywhere else and it would have been called a "teethbrush" 😁
Just visited Tas a few weeks ago. Absolutely loved it 😻
But thanks for the laugh anyway 😂
Love it! Thank you
It’s not a puffer jacket.. it’s a Tassie tuxedo lol
😂LOVE IT! Hilarious - and I consider myself an honorary Taswegian as you have to be dead 20years to be considered a local hehe! Just kidding #love ya TAS - Now safely spoken in QLD hehe
The line I've heard is that only after your family has been in Tasmania for four generations are you allowed to apply for the consideration of being called a Tasmanian. It 'might' be accepted, might need to wait another four generations...
So clever!😂
Moved to Tassie and lived there for 3 years. Moved back to the mainland. Absolutely nailed it with Bridgewater. Was given keys to a rental property to look at. Saw car bodies on the nature strip and every 2nd house had a new front door. We didn't even park the car.
Bridgewater kids would start grass fires and when the firetrucks turned up they would throw stones at the fire trucks.
The servo and police station had bullet holes. Wife worked 2 hours at the servo and then was relocated to Moonah, by her request.
Glenorchy have Norffgate. Clarendon Vale a fellow resident had a bad day getting a hatchet thrusted into them.
Bit other than that, friendly people, gorgeous bit of country and seriously, Tasmanians hate driving long distances. We drove Hobart to Launny and we were asked where we were staying the night. "At home in Glenorchy...?"
Living in Launceston the weirdest thing I ever saw was Xi Jin Ping walking down my street.
It was worth the wait! Hahaha!!! 😆😆
This is just so true and gold 😂😂😂 #tasmanian
Saw this classic sign in Tassie years ago... 'Don't stop, the beer's hot and the food's cold' 🤔
The Pizza Kom one nearly killed me 😂
My Mum was born in Tasmania. Early 1980's flying either Ansett or TAA from Sydney to Tassie to visit Grandparent's.. I remember they only had the two TV Channels. the ABC and 7 or was it 9 🤔 Can't remember. . Then I remember when the TV in Sydney played the National Athemn at midnght and then it was the Test Pattern. Honestly Tasmania is a really beautiful and if for some reason I couldn't live in Sydney anymore , I would choose Tasmania.
I've moved to Tassie. I gets fairly hot for a month in summer, so I wear shorts. People smirk when I wear shorts. I get the impression they're considered ' little boy's' pants here.
i moved from Sydney to Tassie 7 years and I'm still considered a "blow-in". This is scarily accurate except for the wine part; where I am the choice of bevvy seems to be JD and coke premix in a can! Keeping it classy!
As a Tasmania I have never once heard anyone call the island a vagina.
You're too young. Before it was clear-felled by Brazilians the map of Tassie was slang for female public hair.
@@TheMelbourneHeart i live in canberra lol
@@temptationsailingteam8480 I remember telling someone that I wanted to look at a map of tassie as a child and they took it wrong and told me I have one that I can look at whenever and I was super confused 😑…. Didn’t refer to Tasmania as “tassie” for a long time after I found out what they were referring to 😂😬…
I live in Tassie…. This is so funny because it’s true
we also have party in the paddock.
ironically enough at the same site that agfest is held.
1:58
Nepotism 😂
You know you’re Tasmanian when you go to a family reunion hoping to meet your future spouse.
Sounds like Alabama.
You know you’re Tasmanian when you’re on your 3rd marriage but still on your 1st set of in-laws
@@ChiefTiff HAHAHAHAHA :D
😂😂
Mate, I work out of the Bridgewater Library every week. A fair percentage of their streets have skid marks. I take it you've been to Bridgie too? Our boys remember you as Jimmy Giggle when we lived in Sydney. They love you even more now! Love your work. Keep us smiling! 👍🏼😁😂💕
Tasmania was my home for 34 years. It ain’t backward or stupid, it’s just small. And thank goodness it is. You can breathe there.
Happy Hobartian here. Loved it!
One of those 20-30yr old exports along with most of my year 12 class
As a Tassie my self, all facts😂
Is it cold there
@@JannaAnderson-ol4gs the same as Melbourne
You really should have worked for Lonely Planet! (R.I.P.)
Lived here for 3 years, so true😆😆😆😆
Okay but the Pizzakom line was a deep cut, how does Jimmy know about Pizzakom???
"How do you start a family in Tasmania? Nepotism".
I lol'd!!! 🤣
Hit the nail on the head.
We haven't had brown water in Queenstown since they upgraded the treatment plant. That said they did shutdown the water at the hospital because of high lead levels.
Thanks!!!! BTW did you know there is a Poo museum at Richmond?
There is but it was started by a woman from Adelaide and it's woeful so we deny having anything to do with it! 🤣
Me: what do mainlanders like most about Tasmania? "The cool crisp fresh air"
Shut up Tasmania 🎤 😂
Tasmania is not the 'Meg' of Australia, that would be W.A or Waagh for short.
mm kay. Pretty much nailed it, although I’m speaking as someone who migrated to the mainland when I was 32.
Don't forget the neck scar...
The Thai restaurant next to Pizzakom is quite nice.
Love this
I'm the true first 👏
upside of one parent being from overseas is im only related to half of tasmania instead of all of it
Hey Jimmy,you forgot to mention for fashion puffer jacket and thongs or UGG boots 😁
I moved to Tassie a year ago, God help me!
Go to Springfield and spend some time with the Amish people?
I spent 3 nights in Tasmania, if it wasn't so cold I'd probably consider moving there. It's beautiful, and there's no hassle and bustle. The produce is amazing too (except for chocolate)
This is 100% true!!! You forgot the national female dress of flannel shirt with tights everywhere no matter your size or the occasion 😂
Errol Leslie Thomson Flynn - one of the biggest ever stars of Hollywood, is spinning in his grave.
*furiously taking notes for trip next week*
If you're touring Hobart city you can try your luck spotting the local platypus around 7:30pm, he lives near Cascade Gardens at the end of Linear Park, there's a concrete dam he visits to look for fish. Also there's potential snow forcast for Mt Wellington on Wednesday.
@@tinfoilhomer909 ohhhh, lovely, will keep a look out for the platypus, and bring on the snow! I can't wait to experience the cooler temps a bit earlier this year! Looking forward to the holiday!
@Sanctus Paulus 1962 Not going to Launnie, but you have me curious. Don't leave me hanging!!
They probably saw you on taskmaster and thought whose this Muppet
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣pure gold
Home school got me
gota love the boat people ,barb,,,lol im a taswejian
Bloody mainlanders!
Brilliant😂😂😂
Ouch this hurt and Ive never been to Tasmania