To be honest, Clichy is in a state of ruin and you passed around some dealing points freely and without any problems. Trust me man in France you some places were you couldn’t even enter the neighbourhood. And if you really want to see what real ghetto in France looks like check for the Quartier Nord de Marseille, it’s truly sad to see :/
The people act like uncivilized animals and run their own neighborhoods into the ground. Most are from 3rd world countries. Let in the 3rd world, get 3rd world problems.
For those who wonder what the "93" you see everywhere means, it is the ID number of the département (state, roughly) of Seine-Saint-Denis, adjacent to Paris, where many of the worst neighborhoods in France are located. "93" became somewhat of a badge of honor for some of those who live there, meaning they come from a rough area.
@@FranckRogerDJ we have similar situation here in Moscow. all the hoods outside of historical city centre(which is located inside the garden ring, boulevard periferique equivalent) are basically all housing projects like what you see in banlieue parisienne. and city is divided into 12 "administrative okrug", the word okrug literally means arrondissement in french. these are CAO(centre), SAO(north side), VAO(east side), UAO(south side), UVAO(south-east side) etc. toughest hoods of the inner city are in the eastern and southern parts, so many people here represent it, like having VAO sticker on their car, writing VAO everywhere like 93 in seine-saint-denis or something like that
95 is for rich people like 78 my man what u talking about here ?? 94 is my b boys right there.. yeas its is tuff in 94 but not 95 and all those bourgeoisies ollool @@jimmyfevrier3821
I'm an electrician and I worked in Clichy-Sous-Bois last year in the neighbourhood you showed around the 22:45 mark (called Bois du Temple), didn't go back there and was surprised to see that the vigiks and lights we put are still standing lol (yet atleast). That whole neighbourhood is getting worked on, it used to be even worse than that. Some floors are full of roaches, stairs covered in piss, and every floor has a different stench. Was funny seeing it from your POV, I like the concept. There's plenty of projects that are worse than this in France sadly. You should get a guy from one of those places to show you around to see how it's like and see the difference and similarities between countries Stay safe
This is a man who had his freedom taken away, now that he's got it back he's using it to the fullest. Traveling the world and exploring everything he can. Love your work.
@@nisoshahabibzadeh He would've kept doing what he was doing. He didn't turn himself in. They caught him and put him in jail. When you break the law, you lose your Freedom. None of us "Give it Away". Some run for their lives to avoid being caught. Some places are so poverty stricken due to corruption that they were forced into "Criminality", or Survival Mode. They're not bad people. They're simply doing what they have to do to survive.
LMAO 🤣 a criminal 🤣 labeling things criminal 🤣 is not only a hypocrisy 😂 but hilariously pathetic to a point of straight deflection, what a hating bum 🤣 😂
Like the Billionaires who dont lives in the same Planet and already have a Ticket To Mars with Elon Musk and the Band (at least he's dreaming that he will be part of a Trip ???) He's able to go here and there but pointing finger to someone or somethings, still there's four others fingers pointing at U, No ?
@@nisoshahabibzadehbro the legal system is shyt you get 20 years for weed but 5 for murder or rape tell me how that’s fair? It’s all about who getting their pockets filled PERIOD.
For some context: A lot of those buildings are going to be destroyed so that explains why they didn't fix it up because it would be a waste of money (that's why it feels like they are not even trying, because they are not, they are waiting to destroy it). Also, some buildings you showed are not lived in because they are going to be destroyed/remade. Same for the mall, it's going to be destroyed (to be remade) so it's mostly empty but they still need necessities so that's why you have shops like the bakery and the butcher still there. Sometimes some parts of buildings are not used anymore like the room for trashcans (the one he asked if it's someone's apartment) because now it's outside, in the old days we used to have rooms for those but nowadays we don't really use those rooms. It can also explain some abandoned cars, some people left and didn't take their cars and now they are used for spare parts and such. In the streets you have lots of signs that say, the whole neighborhood is under construction. If you want to see what the new buildings look like, you should look at the buildings that replaced Ronsard tower, its modern white smaller buildings. Very similar to the Gilbert Klein Municipal Conservatory which is in the same neighborhood as the video. Now visually it is a reality but it takes time to renovate a whole neighborhood (you have to relocate everyone and make sure of the security to avoid accidents) and there has been some neglect (also they had the aftermath of the 2005 riots and people take care less of their environment if it's ugly than if it's nice so it's a vicious circle) but it improved greatly compared to before (they got a nice tramway now) and the people who live in this neighborhood are really hopefull about the new plans. It's a shame he didn't get to talk to people to see and understand more the situation.
You can put people in nice, fancy buildings, but it's just a matter of time before those buildings will be run down aswell. Most of this is social housing I am guessing, where people tend to think they don't have to care because they don't own it. Same thing happens pretty much anywhere in Western Europe.
Span…. Your attitude, mannerisms and knowledge from a year ago vids to now is an amazing transformation. You’re at peace with the best life you’ve created for yourself, your missus n sister.. how great is it to feel free to travel the world without worry.. proud of you mate..
speaking the truth ,been around the world 1000 times ,aint no danger in daylight in any hood is there ,but yeah Anthony has freedom that most honest crooks never even dreamed of .ill try to calm down yeah ok.Remember he was only allowed out of Australiabecause he used of a media visa (temporary) let me set the record straight.@@fifilamoore1718
I used to live in one of these neighborhoods (not as violent as this one, though)... the sad thing is that 10% of the population of these neighborhoods are responsible for 99% of the damage and the deplorable state of the buildings. No matter how many millions of euros are invested, everything is damaged faster than it's repaired.
You know, most of thé time the repairs that you so much praise are only paint. Elevator were not repaired, isolation not done, lead in water pipe or paint not solved. Those building were filled with poor and uneducated people. Those who were able to escape povrety leave. Those who not stay and the circle continu until filling those building only with the poorer and helpless.
Worse thing is not living in a those apartments, It is a dirtier place than a nice residence but when you close the door you don't mind (although screams and night "bike life" is terrible) The worse is to go to school there where you can't learn a thing and get to be forced to be with psychos. Millions are not only invested in paints but also in schools, youth Associations and sports fields but end up getting burnt all the same
You should see quartier de la Castellane in Marseille (2nd largest french city, located in south of France) it's way worst than that (the worst in France, even maybe in Europe). You have drugs dealers each 10 meters and they wouldn't let you film. Compare to this it looks like you've been to a rich Swiss private neighborhood
Si tu veut voire ce quartier au cinéma 🎦 Regarde ( les misérables) de LADJ JY Et ( bâtiment 5 ) C’est ici que ça été tourné Les misérables étaient au festival de Cannes
As a French , born and raised in Paris, i'm really surprised no one came to confront you about being there. You don't look like a cop but still usually in those kind of places you need a hall pass from the local kingpin to walk around with a camera.
Well I'm from Paris too and we can all do the same walk in CLichy... IN THE F****** MORNING !!! look at the screen when he buys metro ticket (around 8 AM) !! this guy is fake and nobody realises it haha
@@aviox3664 d'accord aviox3664, tu connais la rue de toute évidence. Merci de m'avoir partagé ton précieux savoir et ton expérience. Tu as clairement raison et ca se sent a ton vécu de campagnard fdp
Bro, I like your videos. I am pretty sure you are showing us the near future of all us on this planet. For me no doubt that as sooner as we expect all people on the world left alive will live like one enormous ghetto even much worse than ghettos you show us. That is why I love your videos, taking them as a preparation and warning what we all will face in the coming days. ❤😊Thank you, bro!
Eshay bah shits fuck3n entichish lad full on. Enjoy your izzapuzz cuzz hope you got the epepereperonish and the thin crust but it's all goods if you didn't cuz you can have whatever izzapnish up to you n that. Take care bruz and enjoy anianspazeere
the only thing i look forward to on youtube anymore is YOUR videos.thank you brother for the journeys,knowledge and risks appreciate your hard mahi 🙌🇳🇿🇳🇿🇳🇿
What kind of a mission is that.... the inhabitants felt insulted. He didn't talk to anybody or asked for context. He simply films places like it's a zoo, and gets views and likes.
I've spend 20 years of my life in Clichy sous bois. You are so lucky to havn't any trouble entering blocks like that. I can't counting how many times i was attacked. Twice i though my time ended. Just walking on the street was stressfull. My mother still live there. Every time i go to see her, it gives me pimples....
Oh man listen I’m French living in Sydney, you clearly went in the morning, too early! If you would have gone there in the afternoon that would have been a completely different video. You see all the blocks where you came in with the sofas are points of sale. Opening “midi-minuit” (midday-midnight). The content would have been maaad! You would have found 5 to 20 people per entry, the sellers completely hooded. These little rooms that you showed us would have been inaccessible (place of prep/count/cut). Imagine if they would have found you here😅. But good job anyway, otherwise we wouldn’t have had all these images. As you said, it’s impossible to film without knowing someone (afternoon). Next time you should try going to Marseille too, beautiful city by the sea with even more bigger/dangerous neighbourhood than that. Love the video!
marseille is not spécially more dangerous it's just built different..... There is more shootout in the surbubs of Paris than there is in Marseille... But he will have good content for sure
I know you don't care and your just out living your best life bruv But honestly. Your an inspiration to anyone who uses drugs and think there is no happy ending. Your living proof, you can get off the shit and go live the best life possible. Huge inspiration brother. Much love and respect. I hope to run into you one day just for a quick hand shake
La France injecte de l'argent dans ces quartiers ,les gens de ces quartiers détruisent tout et ensuite s'étonne que plus rien ne soit fait dans leurs quartiers
Je ne sais pas par quel miracle le gars a eu cette liberté de circulation dans cette zone.. Tu as Livre Noir et le média pour tous qui font ce genre de reportage aussi.. pas en profondeur comme ici, mais qui peut éveiller tout de même les consciences..
Sauf qu'il faut arrêter avec ces copiés-collés qui stoppent immédiatement le débat. Vous savez pertinemment qu'il y a des endroits à éviter et qui sont habités en grande majorité par une certaine population. Tu ne peux pas simplement balancer ça en croyant que ça va résoudre le problème ou même faire changer d'avis le mec. Il y a une réalité, à toi de l'accepter ou de la renier.@@pw6002
This is insane lad. So many thanks aye. Its raw...unscripted..... and that familiar rhythm we know and are engaged in anticipation ......its like we are there with you. Youve nailed it bruh... what this inter- connectedness is all about...youve captured it. We're proud of you. Represent.
As someone who at the age of 14 had to move back to France with my mum who grew up in towers just like these from Sydney it is not always an accurate representation of the people living in them. The media always tries to portray us people in these banlieues as having no life and just selling drugs but in reality you'll find some of the most down to earth and humble people who just want to get out and give everyone around them a better life. Whether you're white, Arab, Black we all understand each other's situations. Thanks so much for sharing this to Australia and showing just how lucky we are to be here.
French Banlieues and Sydney Housos have this connection that most us are unaware of Most us are the same/similar nationalities and we dress very similar
i am 23 minutes in, and you haven't passed another human being! it's weird, like a ghost town, but you just said there are 28,000 people. i like your narration and your upbeat style. great video
These videos are more interesting and enjoyable than TV travel programs, even documentaries can't quite add that personal touch. We can relate to down to earth Spanian who risks his own safety taking us to places no one else would, he has a way of making us feel we are there with him. Fantastic series👍
J’ai grandi à Clichy sous Bois de 1978 à 1989 au Chêne Pointu et c’était vraiment magnifique et j’en ai de beaux souvenirs 😢 L’école Paul Langevin, le collège Louise Michel …… La discothèque l’Echapatoire …. Triste de voir ce que c’est devenu 😢
Je suis vraiment désolé pour toi, mais malheureusement c'est le destin de l'Europe. Même ici en Italie, la situation empire, et l'invasion continue sans relâche. 😢
@@k-bilzen ah d’accord, ça se voyait déjà. C’est pas par accident que ça s’est développé ainsi. Il faudrait un peu étudier l’aménagement urbain pendant ce temps.
@@TheWorld_2099 la région Parisienne est trop peuplée on arrive à presque 15 millions d’habitants et le béton est trop envahissant, la misère est présente avec des personnes mal logées et les incivilités quotidiennes que beaucoup d’habitants ne supportent plus, moi personnellement j’envisage de quitter la région parisienne.
Watched this with my fiancée is French and lived for a while in Paris and she was like “ what are you doing!! Don’t go inside the that room in the flat! It’s for the dealers “ but she also said I hope it shows Australian kids why they should appreciate what they have. . . Great effort doing that bro, not sure everyone will appreciate how dangerous that can be to go there
Yeah the couches are most definitely dealing points. I’ve also noticed at 26:58 there are license plates (“Plaque”) written on the wall to spread the word around “EW968AX Passat” (VW) “EB753SK 308” (Peugeot) and “GD - - - GR Megane” (Renault).Those are probably from unmarked police cars that have been spotted wondering around the towers. They also wrote “BZ le AX” which means “f*ck up the AX” in reference to that VW Passat with the AX number plate and also “f*ck EB SK” for the 308. So yeah proper ghetto I’d say.
It's literally Sydney but on a larger scale? Make's sense considering Paris/France is much more densely populated? Yea, we get it your government treats you all like dogs more than ours do, but surely we shouldn't have had to grow up seeing Junkies threatening each other with guns as well, right?
Big Boy, I appreciate you valued and respected my city and its banlieues (hoods). Extremely creative content, I think you're propelled. I subscribed and be following you. Very f original. Lots of feeling and soul. Very much "spleen de Paris" )) Keep up
I cant believe a year ago I watched the "Bush Manoeuvre" video you made and thought I'd never take any of your content seriously. What a pleasant feeling it is to see such unique and obviously well thought out content.. what an inspiration
As someone that watches your videos for a while and from the banlieue/hood in Paris .Thank you so much for showcasing that part of Paris,seriously people just tryna make a living out there by any means necessary,we are not all bad people.also take the time to speak with kids and people there it’s refreshing to see someone from outside of France,it kinda give us hope and make us dream even more.specially if you tell them your story I’m pretty sure that you’d live a positive mark on their mindset and motivate them.but you got BALLZ for be there too respect for that my brudda 👏🏾🤙🏾🤙🏾 You should go to South of France Marseille “les quartier Nord” it’s more intense I reckon and your viewers would love it
One problem with places like this is that a few ruin it for the many. Some years ago I read some articles about how ambulance personnel and firefighters were attacked by thrown rocks every time they tried to enter some suburbs here in Sweden. And shit like that just puts everyone in danger. Anyways it's very interesting and also sad to see this.
"that a few ruin it for the many". The hell no it's a big majority in many many place. Even the African mothers was stealing with their kids during the riot this years. Those people had a place most of them are living from social social security and so many other help from the state. The majority is totally ok with the drug traffic cause they sent their kids work in the street. Majority are the dregs of humanity
Man. This is your best one.. I know they all say it .. this is the real hood and their are no other clips available apart from French language as far as I can see. Makes Australia look safe even though it’s not… well not the worst. Keep checking these ones pls that other UA-camrs don’t. Reminds me of La Haine the film. 🔥🤙🏽
man this is only like the 3rd or 4th video I have seen from this guy and I can already tell he's gonna be one of my favorite content creators on here 👍👍
Great vid. I was born in Paris and moved to Sydney when I was 3. Appreciate this. You nailed it. A banlieue in France usually describes poorer neighbourhoods which are usually outside or on the outskirts of the city. I remember when I lived in France in my early 20s when I was studying there and I lived next door to massive state housing high rises. My first day moving in, there was a huge skip bin on fire at the entrance of my place. Scared the shit out of me. Haha. After a while just got used to it and made friends with the locals. They were mostly awesome people just in difficult circumstances. Anyway, appreciate your videos. They’re really good. 👏🏼
not exactly. A Banlieue is just an outskirt. Plain and simple nothing more. Neuilly sur Seine is a "Banlieue" and is one of the most top class richest areas in france. But we use the term "banlieue" or "quartier" more as an expression to design these african neighboorhoods.
I love this series. If Span and the team could get a local contact to give them a tour around a certain hood I think that would also be really good content
@thomasnishantha4941 if you put it that way then the content wouldn't be much different from a lot of the other vloggers out there that use guides in there videos
The fact that you look like the average North African (I am from Algeria so no racism here), made it easier for you to blend in and get farther than any camera crew could. Plus your street smarts kicked in and you got a coffee to blend in which is what most of us get in the morning. Great vid mate!
Excellent work! At 14:18 you can see the words "Hashish / Weed / The Street" written in French on the entrance hallway. Looks like you stumbled upon "un four" - an apartment complex that openly sells drugs throughout the day and night. Stay safe and thanks for the content!
Oui c'est exactement sa il a du aller tôt le matin mes encore ceux quartier n'est plus autant chaud que avant vers 2005 2010 avec les émeute des zyed et bouna
I'm from France, from one of this kind of place, though I have it way less worse. It's really nice seeing someone talk about all of these slums, but I suggest, you should definitely visit the Quartiers Nord in Marseille. You won't be dissapointed. +1 sub (btw, the riots from this year happened throughout all of the country)
nikolasha, No Not in the whole country, in the provinces in the countryside it is calm and clean. Immigrants who arrived in the 1970s made these areas this way. 40 years ago everything was correct!!!
@@pitrick7349 Lool, with or without "immigrants", if you dont put any money in the restoration of such area and buildings in more than 50 years, it will look the same. In fact, it could have been worst if people didn't lived there. In the provinces, the ghettos that doesn't look like that it's because they were created later, and because money was put in restoration projects by town halls. Get your facts straight before spreading you stupid racist BS.
@@itsisaaax1932 No, I have 60 years of Parisian suburbs behind me, so I speak with knowledge of the facts because I knew these areas a long time ago which were clean and safe and when we see the reality in 2023, we say to ourselves that foreigners should never have arrived here to disfigure our beautiful France.
Thank you for the video man, I can relate so much to your experience. I'm french and I lived in Perth for some time. I moved in Yangebup firstly. People told me it was the ghetto. I was amazed how clean it looked for a ghetto. A neighbouring Aboriginal family couldn't stop yelling and fighting at each others, but they were all smiling and saying hello to us everydays. We just knew that we didn't want to fall out with them ;). I never ever got in any trouble in that hood, whatever the time of day or night. And I'm a short, skinny, blond haired, video game addict btw
Somehow I think I know the house ur taking about with yelling indigenous hahaha I grew up in yangi for over 20 yrs and my parents are still there. I would love to move back as I really enjoyed it and never any issues!!
Damn, I just found you yesterday and was binging your videos wondering when the next hood walkthrough was gonna drop. Loved the other ones, makes me remember the hood I grew up in.
I love this series! If you can travel to Budapest, Hungary you had to check the Hős utca (Hero steet) or the outer side of the 8th district. The building are built in the late 1800's and the conditions are the same or worse like this place, but the locals are friendlier.
Thats crazy how they got a mall right in the middle of the projects. Coming from America and living in some of the most dangerous places this country has to offer I respect the struggle in France. They going thru real poverty and real struggles there too. Salute from Philadelphia PA!
i'm french , there'sno struggle here , the socialist government give a lot of money and government spend hundreds of billions to renovate theses shitholes every years , the people living there ARE RESPONSIBLE of the shitty situation , all these places were clean and safe before the massive african /muslim immigration from the 70's
As a french i can tell u it's easy to walk in those streets when all rats and gremlins are sleeping dude, it's obvious there is no one here because it's the morning, maybe sunday morning.. Honestly i dont accept what happen in those streets, but if u wanna show the reality next time go in afternoon or end of afternoon and u will see what's going on, deal, drogues and shit that's the reality, and even if ur strong, walking alone in those streets can be dangerous for u.
vous avez juste la mort de pas voir vos préjugés validés. allez dans n’importe quelle cité, tant que vous foutez pas la merde et que vous avez pas l’air suspect personne ne vous fera rien. oui il y a des problèmes dans les cités mais pas que. faire comme si les gens qui y habitent sont une sorte d’espèce différente plus dangereuse ou je ne sais quoi, c’est juste pathétique. j’en connais des quartiers dangereux mais la plupart des cités n’en font pas partie. les problèmes de drogue etc sont une conséquence directe du manque de prise en charge de ces cités, pareil pour leur état dégradé. les autorités ne prennent jamais en charge les logements sociaux ou leurs habitants tant qu’il n’y a pas de drame qui s’y passe.
Je vie en France à Sevran je peux vous jurer que tu viens de 00h00 a 00h00 tu rentre pas sans autorisation surtout pour filmé trop dangereux si tu n’a pas de protection
You are the first person I have seen to do a review on clichy sois bois. In 1977 we lived in clichy in a new apprt, at that time there were no problems, some years later the three blocks of apprts were demolished. All very sad to see a commune in this state. From Paris the direct route is from the metro Bobigny Pantin, then bus direct.
7:58 'banlieues'' just means suburbs. 14:18 ''shit, beuh'' written over the sofa shows a drug deal spot. 14:27 CSB on the wall stands for Clichy Sous Bois
I grew up in a rough area of Sydney as well but man this is insane makes me realise how lucky we are to live in Australia even our worst slums wont compare to this.
Awesome content. Thank you for showing us the true living conditions that's covered up from mainstream media. No one in this day of age shouldn't live in these conditions. Thankyou🙏🙏
C'est eux qui ont rendu ces quartiers sales.quand on sait pas on parle pas tu est pas de chez nous alors ferme ta bouche et mêle toi de ton pays espèce de larve
@@rickreed9525 Nah it's called war in the Gaza strip or Ukraine being more interesting than a shit in an abandoned building, hardly some big conspiracy
No one's life was in danger. If you grew up in hoods like that people don't get killed for no reason, not even money or clothes but people don't like their hood to be filmed like it's a Zoo or something.
@@benlejusticieryou ever watch what goes on in these estates or Paris when people are pissed??? Riots regular. Don’t be fooled. Go to Marseilles on a night time in the less commercial areas!
Great video man, writing this from the Paris suburbs 👍 I like how Apple Maps made the place feel even more isolated lol, tbf the tram could have provided a more comfortable route (+without a long walk), even if it adds a few transfers. As you said Clichy (and neighboring town Montfermeil) lacked a proper train station, so the extra branch to that tram line (T4) was added to finally connect those places to suburban train lines, and that project was in part decided following those riots, although poverty and isolation in that area were already big issues for some decades by then. In the past few years, some buildings have been demolished to make room for newer ones (we can see some of those in this video). Some blocks are still set for demolition or at least renovation I guess, there's a big urban renewal project to make that part of town feel a bit nicer. Finally, a new metro line (line 16, part of Grand Paris Express) with a station serving Clichy is set to open in a few years, bringing with it big changes in the area. Not every issue will be solved by infrastructure projects, but hopefully that's a step in the right direction.
Amazing video man really shows you reality of living in those rough areas not just the lovely crepe area of Paris great contrast ! 26:56 pause and look at the wall the local corner boys / dealers have written the undercover cop car registration numbers & the make of the car on the wall "passat" "megane" etc they defo have that block on lock lol keep up great work bro !!
Great content man keep it up ! :D I'm french and i've seen Clichy sous bois, Scampia and Barcelona videos since yesterday, it's great videos congrats man ! :)
Great series! Clichy is bad, but there are far worse areas surrounding Paris, never mind other spots in France where you definitely couldn’t have just walked in as a stranger. Keep it up!
@@sheddon. la castellane and pretty much every other suburbs/estates in Marseille. dealers literally block the road for cars and inspect them before they enter the estates. its crazy
@@sheddon.aulnay sous bois, clos saint lazare, corbeille, Marseille quartier nord etc. people don’t like strangers or tv filming them cause they feel like being animals in a zoo.
Clichy c'est le quartier le plus délabré a Paris mais c'est pas la banlieue la plus chaude autant délabré ya le parc Coro a Marseille le 143 et le parc Kaliste
Yes yoss -I lived in cumbernauld before the shopping centre was done up -seafar-abronhill-etc-, I know wat u mean - spans content is superb-reckon he'll do Glasgow 1 day soon.🤝
As a french, I can tell you there are places like this in the whole country, in every big and medium city. Streets with zero future, where the only hope you have is to leave the place forever as soon as possible. Clichy is probably one of the worst, the damages done to the buildings are beyond repair. I grew up in a place like this, I just had the chance to leave and find a much better neighborhood. But never forget, 90% of the people libing there are honest individuals just trying to live a normal live honestly. The fact is, who would like to live in a place like this ? The government let places like this literally rot, does nothing at all to better the situation. Most of the shops have burnt, most public services too like schools or else, and companies have left since a long time due to harassment and destructions. That's why all you'll find there now are damaged cars and big rusty buildings. Apart from all that, I think the video was shot in the early sunday morning, as we clearly see two guys entering the church, probably for the sunday morning Mass. Which is why all seems rather empty ; on Sunday mornings in places like this, you just stay in your apartment, there's nowhere to go outside, and nothing to do without transportation. If you return there at midnight... well, don't ever do that. Many places like this in France are no-rights zones and even the cops won't come to rescue you, and even less a medic.
"The government let places like this literally rot, does nothing at all to better the situation." True in this case, now that all hope vanished and the place is depopulated, but the government spent at least 100 billion euros on building, rebuilding and improving the banlieues since 1977 and after last summer's riots it passed another bill to splurge more billions. It's easy to call it a money problem but the reality is that investments don't matter if the inhabitants can't behave, crime has taken over and the kids burn the new facilities to the ground every 3-5 years.
Yes, man, that's France ! But the question is : why do we let the 10% dishonest make the law in these places ? Why not to open a local police station in order to assure security for the people who live there ? No money for this ? But we have a lot of money for plenty of other things in this country. And also the problem with french justice : even if police catch the delinquants, most of the time they are not condemned...
@@FranZzz-Z Ils les utilisent pour construire d'autres cités plus petites ailleurs et ils sont en train de reloger progressivement les habitants. C'est le cas dans plusieurs cités minées par la drogue, une drogue consommée aussi par les plus nantis au passage. A Paris, la bourgeoisie carbure à la coke de Saint-Ouen par exemple. Je parle de la ville où je vis. D'ailleurs, c'est en train de changer par ici. Thierry Marx va y ouvrir un bouillon dans quelques mois ! Il n y a pas que du négatif dans le 93 ! Bonne soirée !
Thank you for sharing, an Aussie had to come to my hometown and show me a corner I have never seen. Thank you for your work and efforts, all the best👏🏻
Good video man! One of the most notorious estates in Paris, It will soon be demolished like most of the infamous ones. It's probably half empty by now. They already demolished and rebuilt an even worse looking one called Les Bosquets which was right next to this one. From the 70´s until mid 2000´s this are (like most of the estates) was absolute hell on earth. No way you, or anyone, would have entered in them days. Keep this series going!
In Marseille there is a neighborhood called Félix Pyat, there they had installed nets at the bottom of the buildings because people were just throwing their trash out the window, once I even saw a refrigerator there.
My mother family went living in on of these places after the war. They were very nice places, very modern at the time, were like small villages, everybody know each others. People were not rich but you had some social mixe, with some people renting while others were owners. My mother family saw all the migration waves, the italians, the polish, iberians etc. My grand father was one of them from yugoslavia. Of course there was sometimes problems with each waves coming in, but overall people all ended up accepted and it was a nice place to lives. But at some point, it was africans that started coming. There was already some of them, mostly from before the decolonization. But after the decolonization things changed. First wave was from maghreb, it started during the 80/90s, then from subsaharan africa late 2000s. And it's from there things changed a lot. Crime, deal, depredation started to grow out of control, people started to flee en masse, even older generation of migrants from africa were fleeing and were upset like anybody else, by the newcomers. Some people will tell you they are left behind or other things, but the state is throwing billions after billions in these places, more money they ever seen in the past, but they will burn down new schools, public facilities etc. When my grad mother die, it was the last time we went there, my sister and my mother went to see my grand mother appartement complexe for the last time and they were followed by some arab men that probably didn't wanted them there. All the friends of our family had also left. There was only african migrants dealing and watching any "newcomers" they didn't know about. What was once my family and friends well maintain and lively place that i loved to go over, is now what we would call a no go zone.
J’ai eu la même expérience que vous, enfant dans les années fin 60 et début 70, j’ai vécu dans une cité de la sorte en Essonne, ma scolarité était dans une de ces écoles de la République à la population d’origines différentes (Algeriens, Portugais...), tout se passait plutôt bien, centre aéré, colonie de vacance, classe de neige. Aujourd'hui c'est une zone de non droit, tous les commerces sont partis, une no go zone avec une faune qui ferait passer un loubard de l’époque (avec sa mob) pour un enfant de cœur. Et puis nous le savons tous, avec la disparition de l’autorité, du sens du devoir, l’armée, l’éducation nationale, le respect, l’ascenseur social, la valeur travail etc etc etc...tout a été laminé, aujourd'hui c'est liberté "je fais ce que veux", dont acte !
Pareil ici, j'ai grandi en banlieue dans une cité du 93 dans les années 70-80 et c'était la belle époque, ce n'était pas le grand luxe certes mais les gens étaient sympathiques, il n'y avait pas d'agressions gratuites et personne ne s'amusait à dégrader les infrastructures mises en place. Il y avait déjà des Maghrébins et des Africains mais c'était des gens qui avaient fuit leur pays lors de l'indépendance parce qu'ils avaient choisit la France, ils aimaient ce pays, sa culture et ses valeurs, et c'était de sacrés bosseurs, rien à voir avec ceux d'aujourd'hui qui viennent pour les aides sociales voir pire pour participer à des activités illégales. J'ai quitté la France en 2009 dégouté parce ce qu'est devenu le pays, la France est devenue un hotel, on y rentre comme dans un moulin, même la nationalité Française n'a plus aucune valeur ils la donnent à n'importe qui.
@abdel-qudus1143alors je ne sais pas si cela a changé avec le temps mais dans ma ville à Drancy il y a au moins 5 écoles primaires, une grande bibliothèque, deux commissariat, 3 collèges, deux lycées (un privé et un public), 1 piscine municipale, 1 centre culturel avec un cinéma, beaucoup de club de sports et culturels avec une aide de 50€ de l'état, 3 terrain de foot de 90 m et dans presque chaque cité il y a un city.... Mais tout cela n'a pas empêché d'y avoir les émeutes et la destruction de l'entrée de notre carrefour et de notre centre culturel.
@abdel-qudus1143y a toujours eu des quartiers pauvres mais jamais aussi sale. Pourtant y a eu du pognon de l etat. Rien justifie une telle crasse. C est de la faute unique des habitants notamment africains. Probleme est qu ils sont pas dans une demarche d appartenance a un territoire donc c est le chacun pour sa gueule. Dans un monde Normal y aurait eu une prise en main par des groupes d habitant pour nettoyer et repeindre. Ici on dirait que aucun veux faire un effort ou payer un minimum de restauration comme s ils etaient pas chez eux.
Bro you bought 8 tickets for 8 people didnt you? Anyways you are fast becoming my favourite channel bro. You and your content is just so addicting once you start watching. Keep up the great work brother.
Love the content Spanian! Great tour of Clichy Sous Bois. I'm really enjoying your hood series, hope you can do South Central LA and the favelas of Rio one day.
I grew up in housing commission too bro in Australia and seriously I never seen worst conditions then I have in some places I have been too I mean it’s rough in oz too but not as rough as it there. However a majority of people that live in these places are good people working class people just trying to survive. Thanks for showing this
I grew up there, or more precisely, nearby. You are lucky not to encounter the locals in the middle of the day. It would have been a much different story wandering there by nighttime. Either you have balls or you are simply not aware of the danger. Anyhow, great video! it brought me back. So happy I live in Sydney now!
I am French, lived 3 years in the centre of Paris. I never ever saw those images of Paris, even on TV. TV just shows you the riots, the flames...But never the aftermath and the cold reality of it in daylight. I am speechless....
You know your going the right way when you see windows blocked off, by the way just watched all these hood vlogs love them keep it up bro liked and subbed
Thank you for covering this. As someone who grew up housing commission in South Maroubra/ Lapa in the 90s, I visited Paris back in 2019. Its somewhat come full circle seeing this side of Paris back in 2019 and cant imagine whats its like now with thier immigration problems since then. Paris is still a gem but like many global cities its not perfect
@@gabby2358 Trust me lol I spent most of my early childhood in my Grandmothers flat on Portland Crescent...... I got vivid memories of Junkies threatening each other with guns, trying to set the whole block on fire.
@vote_trump_number1 idk wtf youre saying, I’ll explain my side using english though. Yes, indeed Australias government is also shit and pushing censorship bills hard and discretely in large part. But yes, France’s government is also fucked. Which is why I hope the citizens can regain their liberty through peace, but I realise that is a very unrealistic expectation of how events in real world life would turn out. I still have no clue what the fuck you said though ‘lad’.
Hey man, as someone from Marseille, it'd be amazing to see you do the Quartiers Nord but I would really advise being cautious, contacting someone from the community and having a guide depending on which side you go to. The law of the street is king there.
To be honest, Clichy is in a state of ruin and you passed around some dealing points freely and without any problems. Trust me man in France you some places were you couldn’t even enter the neighbourhood. And if you really want to see what real ghetto in France looks like check for the Quartier Nord de Marseille, it’s truly sad to see :/
You're giving him real death speedrun advice brother
But he comes at 6am. Nobody in the street or RER. Thats why he can enter the building. The sheet is sleeping
The people act like uncivilized animals and run their own neighborhoods into the ground. Most are from 3rd world countries. Let in the 3rd world, get 3rd world problems.
@@vilya3577 not where I live they don't sleep I from marseille
Also the southern part of Grigny, called 'la grande borne', it is about 25 kilometres south of Paris, go there at late afternoon
As someone living in Paris I can say the part that amazed me the most was when you found your way in Chatelet station at the begining. Well done !
hahaha same
mais grave
He probably had some help, because he could never get to Aulnay-sous-bois with a ticket +.
Somebody bought the right ticket for him.
de fou, mm nous qui habitons là ne savent jamais se repérer mdr
chatelet les halles c est l afrique que de la racaille la bas
This is the stuff that will blow you up worldwide. Just keep on doing this series!
could you imagine big names like joe rogan talking about span, or even doing an interview with him...
He Will die if he keeps it up and then it Will be no more videos. This is kor europé anymore its a ockupation
@nelson850 Spanian will never be allowed entry into the US to be interviewed by Joe Rogan
its working for sure, I just discovered him last week from the Barcelona hood. I havn't stopped watching his videos what a legend
@@kgreen5730Do you like the podcasts more? I don't know why he stopped them
For those who wonder what the "93" you see everywhere means, it is the ID number of the département (state, roughly) of Seine-Saint-Denis, adjacent to Paris, where many of the worst neighborhoods in France are located. "93" became somewhat of a badge of honor for some of those who live there, meaning they come from a rough area.
yeah thats where I come from and I love it there !!
Don't say it to 94, 95, 78 and many otherb
@@FranckRogerDJ we have similar situation here in Moscow. all the hoods outside of historical city centre(which is located inside the garden ring, boulevard periferique equivalent) are basically all housing projects like what you see in banlieue parisienne. and city is divided into 12 "administrative okrug", the word okrug literally means arrondissement in french. these are CAO(centre), SAO(north side), VAO(east side), UAO(south side), UVAO(south-east side) etc. toughest hoods of the inner city are in the eastern and southern parts, so many people here represent it, like having VAO sticker on their car, writing VAO everywhere like 93 in seine-saint-denis or something like that
95 is for rich people like 78 my man what u talking about here ?? 94 is my b boys right there.. yeas its is tuff in 94 but not 95 and all those bourgeoisies ollool @@jimmyfevrier3821
You forgot to mention that it's used to be pronounced 9-3 (neuf-trois ; nine-three, not quatre-vingt treize ; not ninety-three).
They all think you look like Benzema, that's why you get a pass😂
😂😂 good one lad
He going when thugs sleeping
They think he’s Algerian lol
@@Itsmetheworldsgreatest 100% 💗
Ahahaha gave me a laugh
I'm an electrician and I worked in Clichy-Sous-Bois last year in the neighbourhood you showed around the 22:45 mark (called Bois du Temple), didn't go back there and was surprised to see that the vigiks and lights we put are still standing lol (yet atleast). That whole neighbourhood is getting worked on, it used to be even worse than that. Some floors are full of roaches, stairs covered in piss, and every floor has a different stench. Was funny seeing it from your POV, I like the concept. There's plenty of projects that are worse than this in France sadly. You should get a guy from one of those places to show you around to see how it's like and see the difference and similarities between countries
Stay safe
Eh bin c'est une belle profession que tu fait 👍
All Western countries are like this, more or less.
Stop lying you no life
This is a man who had his freedom taken away, now that he's got it back he's using it to the fullest. Traveling the world and exploring everything he can. Love your work.
His freedom was not taken away?!? HE, HIMSELF!!! gave it away! Now he seems like he's learnt his lesson! 🎉🎉🎉
@@nisoshahabibzadeh He would've kept doing what he was doing. He didn't turn himself in. They caught him and put him in jail. When you break the law, you lose your Freedom. None of us "Give it Away". Some run for their lives to avoid being caught. Some places are so poverty stricken due to corruption that they were forced into "Criminality", or Survival Mode.
They're not bad people. They're simply doing what they have to do to survive.
LMAO 🤣 a criminal 🤣 labeling things criminal 🤣 is not only a hypocrisy 😂 but hilariously pathetic to a point of straight deflection, what a hating bum 🤣 😂
Like the Billionaires who dont lives in the same Planet and already have a Ticket To Mars with Elon Musk and the Band (at least he's dreaming that he will be part of a Trip ???) He's able to go here and there but pointing finger to someone or somethings, still there's four others fingers pointing at U, No ?
@@nisoshahabibzadehbro the legal system is shyt you get 20 years for weed but 5 for murder or rape tell me how that’s fair? It’s all about who getting their pockets filled PERIOD.
For some context: A lot of those buildings are going to be destroyed so that explains why they didn't fix it up because it would be a waste of money (that's why it feels like they are not even trying, because they are not, they are waiting to destroy it). Also, some buildings you showed are not lived in because they are going to be destroyed/remade. Same for the mall, it's going to be destroyed (to be remade) so it's mostly empty but they still need necessities so that's why you have shops like the bakery and the butcher still there.
Sometimes some parts of buildings are not used anymore like the room for trashcans (the one he asked if it's someone's apartment) because now it's outside, in the old days we used to have rooms for those but nowadays we don't really use those rooms. It can also explain some abandoned cars, some people left and didn't take their cars and now they are used for spare parts and such.
In the streets you have lots of signs that say, the whole neighborhood is under construction.
If you want to see what the new buildings look like, you should look at the buildings that replaced Ronsard tower, its modern white smaller buildings. Very similar to the Gilbert Klein Municipal Conservatory which is in the same neighborhood as the video.
Now visually it is a reality but it takes time to renovate a whole neighborhood (you have to relocate everyone and make sure of the security to avoid accidents) and there has been some neglect (also they had the aftermath of the 2005 riots and people take care less of their environment if it's ugly than if it's nice so it's a vicious circle) but it improved greatly compared to before (they got a nice tramway now) and the people who live in this neighborhood are really hopefull about the new plans. It's a shame he didn't get to talk to people to see and understand more the situation.
Instead of using "destroy" use "demolish" when talking about construction or building
Yeah didn't fix it up since 2005, come on man...
You can put people in nice, fancy buildings, but it's just a matter of time before those buildings will be run down aswell. Most of this is social housing I am guessing, where people tend to think they don't have to care because they don't own it. Same thing happens pretty much anywhere in Western Europe.
Bien vue ces précisions.
@@lillexus5589 Effectivement !
Span…. Your attitude, mannerisms and knowledge from a year ago vids to now is an amazing transformation. You’re at peace with the best life you’ve created for yourself, your missus n sister.. how great is it to feel free to travel the world without worry.. proud of you mate..
This series is secretly becoming peak vlog content, what a legend!
bs
@@larrydowlingyour mothers bs your hole life is bs so shut your mouth maggot. 😅
@@larrydowling clown
@@larrydowling Why are you here then ? Oh Trolling how original NOT !
speaking the truth ,been around the world 1000 times ,aint no danger in daylight in any hood is there ,but yeah Anthony has freedom that most honest crooks never even dreamed of .ill try to calm down yeah ok.Remember he was only allowed out of Australiabecause he used of a media visa (temporary) let me set the record straight.@@fifilamoore1718
I used to live in one of these neighborhoods (not as violent as this one, though)... the sad thing is that 10% of the population of these neighborhoods are responsible for 99% of the damage and the deplorable state of the buildings. No matter how many millions of euros are invested, everything is damaged faster than it's repaired.
And most of them are muslims and black people
You know, most of thé time the repairs that you so much praise are only paint. Elevator were not repaired, isolation not done, lead in water pipe or paint not solved. Those building were filled with poor and uneducated people. Those who were able to escape povrety leave. Those who not stay and the circle continu until filling those building only with the poorer and helpless.
Amen. They need to leave ASAP
Worse thing is not living in a those apartments,
It is a dirtier place than a nice residence but when you close the door you don't mind (although screams and night "bike life" is terrible)
The worse is to go to school there where you can't learn a thing and get to be forced to be with psychos.
Millions are not only invested in paints but also in schools, youth Associations and sports fields but end up getting burnt all the same
There's nothing being invested, 93 is the least subsidied departement per capita. Stop believing far right media.
You should see quartier de la Castellane in Marseille (2nd largest french city, located in south of France) it's way worst than that (the worst in France, even maybe in Europe). You have drugs dealers each 10 meters and they wouldn't let you film. Compare to this it looks like you've been to a rich Swiss private neighborhood
he came at 6 a.m. that’s why there was no one there
😅😅😅😅😅"Compare to this it looks like you've been to a rich Swiss private neighborhood"
Worst in europe is la scampia, napoli
@@BlazzzShops are opdend at 6 am? Kids are playing outside at 6am? Sure buddy
@@rr21-oui à 6h
La journée il aurait pas fait 100 mètre
Into the hood and Its all eats are the best content going rn
Appreciate the efforts Span, stay safe brother
Si tu veut voire ce quartier au cinéma 🎦
Regarde ( les misérables) de LADJ JY
Et ( bâtiment 5 )
C’est ici que ça été tourné
Les misérables étaient au festival de Cannes
As a French , born and raised in Paris, i'm really surprised no one came to confront you about being there. You don't look like a cop but still usually in those kind of places you need a hall pass from the local kingpin to walk around with a camera.
Mais jpense il est allé le matin frr c pas possible
@@skanixm C'est sur tu regarde les Halles sont vides il est forcément allé le matin
Well I'm from Paris too and we can all do the same walk in CLichy... IN THE F****** MORNING !!! look at the screen when he buys metro ticket (around 8 AM) !! this guy is fake and nobody realises it haha
@@aviox3664 mdrr gros le physique change rien si t'es tout seul et pas chez toi
@@aviox3664 d'accord aviox3664, tu connais la rue de toute évidence. Merci de m'avoir partagé ton précieux savoir et ton expérience. Tu as clairement raison et ca se sent a ton vécu de campagnard fdp
You know why this series is soo unique... because no one else has the balls to do what he does.. period!
The closest is charliebo313, but even he doesn't walk into random buildings in foreign countries lol
Kurt kaz does stuff sorta similar
Bald and bankrupt definitely does these
There’s quite a few yourubers who do it, Arab is probably the craziest one
Kurt kaz
Bro, I like your videos. I am pretty sure you are showing us the near future of all us on this planet. For me no doubt that as sooner as we expect all people on the world left alive will live like one enormous ghetto even much worse than ghettos you show us. That is why I love your videos, taking them as a preparation and warning what we all will face in the coming days. ❤😊Thank you, bro!
Loving the videos Span. So good to see you enjoying yourself and experiencing new things mate. You deserve it.
Eshay bah shits fuck3n entichish lad full on. Enjoy your izzapuzz cuzz hope you got the epepereperonish and the thin crust but it's all goods if you didn't cuz you can have whatever izzapnish up to you n that. Take care bruz and enjoy anianspazeere
Vous pouvez boire ce quartier dans le film de ladj jy ( les misérables) 😜
the only thing i look forward to on youtube anymore is YOUR videos.thank you brother for the journeys,knowledge and risks appreciate your hard mahi 🙌🇳🇿🇳🇿🇳🇿
Loved the "I'm not going in that"...completely understandable and honest response from a man on a solo mission, sometimes you have to nope outta there
What kind of a mission is that.... the inhabitants felt insulted. He didn't talk to anybody or asked for context. He simply films places like it's a zoo, and gets views and likes.
I've spend 20 years of my life in Clichy sous bois. You are so lucky to havn't any trouble entering blocks like that. I can't counting how many times i was attacked. Twice i though my time ended. Just walking on the street was stressfull. My mother still live there. Every time i go to see her, it gives me pimples....
Oh man listen I’m French living in Sydney, you clearly went in the morning, too early! If you would have gone there in the afternoon that would have been a completely different video. You see all the blocks where you came in with the sofas are points of sale. Opening “midi-minuit” (midday-midnight). The content would have been maaad! You would have found 5 to 20 people per entry, the sellers completely hooded. These little rooms that you showed us would have been inaccessible (place of prep/count/cut). Imagine if they would have found you here😅. But good job anyway, otherwise we wouldn’t have had all these images. As you said, it’s impossible to film without knowing someone (afternoon). Next time you should try going to Marseille too, beautiful city by the sea with even more bigger/dangerous neighbourhood than that. Love the video!
Yes Marseille!
Lol bros not gonna make it out alive if he tries Marseille
@@readmycomment3157 😅 karim benzema cousin! I wanna see him with the people. Does he speak any French? 💗
marseille is not spécially more dangerous it's just built different..... There is more shootout in the surbubs of Paris than there is in Marseille... But he will have good content for sure
I was thinking the same thing!
I know you don't care and your just out living your best life bruv
But honestly. Your an inspiration to anyone who uses drugs and think there is no happy ending. Your living proof, you can get off the shit and go live the best life possible. Huge inspiration brother. Much love and respect. I hope to run into you one day just for a quick hand shake
There's videos where he talks aboutit.
@Matt_Hartnett420 search for Spanian heroin addiction. There are multiple videos of him talking about it in different depths.
It takes an ex-con Aussie to display what no French journalist has the balls to show us...
Good on you, mate
Allez va prendre ta dose sur CNews, va !
La France injecte de l'argent dans ces quartiers ,les gens de ces quartiers détruisent tout et ensuite s'étonne que plus rien ne soit fait dans leurs quartiers
Je ne sais pas par quel miracle le gars a eu cette liberté de circulation dans cette zone.. Tu as Livre Noir et le média pour tous qui font ce genre de reportage aussi.. pas en profondeur comme ici, mais qui peut éveiller tout de même les consciences..
il y est allé super tôt le matin tout simplement @@Vlad97111
Sauf qu'il faut arrêter avec ces copiés-collés qui stoppent immédiatement le débat. Vous savez pertinemment qu'il y a des endroits à éviter et qui sont habités en grande majorité par une certaine population. Tu ne peux pas simplement balancer ça en croyant que ça va résoudre le problème ou même faire changer d'avis le mec. Il y a une réalité, à toi de l'accepter ou de la renier.@@pw6002
Paris makes london look like a tropical Paradise
Clichy sous Bois is NOT Paris. There are rough places everywhere in the world - including the UK.
@@solangelauthier2381 yeah but Paris has alot of shit holes packed into a small area
Haven't commented on a video in YEARS, but commenting now just to boost Algo because this is really good content bro, love it 👌
This is insane lad. So many thanks aye.
Its raw...unscripted..... and that familiar rhythm we know and are engaged in anticipation ......its like we are there with you.
Youve nailed it bruh... what this inter- connectedness is all about...youve captured it.
We're proud of you.
Represent.
Yeah mate..you selling frosty boys?
You like it raw I bet mate aye
What are u talking about
As someone who at the age of 14 had to move back to France with my mum who grew up in towers just like these from Sydney it is not always an accurate representation of the people living in them. The media always tries to portray us people in these banlieues as having no life and just selling drugs but in reality you'll find some of the most down to earth and humble people who just want to get out and give everyone around them a better life. Whether you're white, Arab, Black we all understand each other's situations. Thanks so much for sharing this to Australia and showing just how lucky we are to be here.
French Banlieues and Sydney Housos have this connection that most us are unaware of
Most us are the same/similar nationalities and we dress very similar
Facts bro
How long did you live in a Banlieue for? 😢
The blacks are ruining the world
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣@@snekktikhays1780
i am 23 minutes in, and you haven't passed another human being! it's weird, like a ghost town, but you just said there are 28,000 people.
i like your narration and your upbeat style. great video
These videos are more interesting and enjoyable than TV travel programs, even documentaries can't quite add that personal touch. We can relate to down to earth Spanian who risks his own safety taking us to places no one else would, he has a way of making us feel we are there with him. Fantastic series👍
sounds like you really really want to sack him off bro..
@@journeyman6752 that's obviously in your head mate. are you out of still in the closet?
The locals are just as unsafe with Spanian walking around. He could kick a few asses.
J’ai grandi à Clichy sous Bois de 1978 à 1989 au Chêne Pointu et c’était vraiment magnifique et j’en ai de beaux souvenirs 😢
L’école Paul Langevin, le collège Louise Michel ……
La discothèque l’Echapatoire ….
Triste de voir ce que c’est devenu 😢
Comment ça se fait que tu es parti?
Dans le temps, tu habitais là avec tes parents?
@@TheWorld_2099 oui j’ai habité à Clichy sous bois avec mes parents, c’est mon père qui a voulu quitter cette ville qui commençait à se dégrader.
Je suis vraiment désolé pour toi, mais malheureusement c'est le destin de l'Europe. Même ici en Italie, la situation empire, et l'invasion continue sans relâche. 😢
@@k-bilzen ah d’accord, ça se voyait déjà.
C’est pas par accident que ça s’est développé ainsi. Il faudrait un peu étudier l’aménagement urbain pendant ce temps.
@@TheWorld_2099 la région Parisienne est trop peuplée on arrive à presque 15 millions d’habitants et le béton est trop envahissant, la misère est présente avec des personnes mal logées et les incivilités quotidiennes que beaucoup d’habitants ne supportent plus, moi personnellement j’envisage de quitter la région parisienne.
Watched this with my fiancée is French and lived for a while in Paris and she was like “ what are you doing!! Don’t go inside the that room in the flat! It’s for the dealers “ but she also said I hope it shows Australian kids why they should appreciate what they have. . . Great effort doing that bro, not sure everyone will appreciate how dangerous that can be to go there
Right, compared to the ghetto's worldwide, the Australian ''hoods'' don't look that bad by comparison ay.
Yeah the couches are most definitely dealing points. I’ve also noticed at 26:58 there are license plates (“Plaque”) written on the wall to spread the word around “EW968AX Passat” (VW) “EB753SK 308” (Peugeot) and “GD - - - GR Megane” (Renault).Those are probably from unmarked police cars that have been spotted wondering around the towers. They also wrote “BZ le AX” which means “f*ck up the AX” in reference to that VW Passat with the AX number plate and also “f*ck EB SK” for the 308. So yeah proper ghetto I’d say.
It's literally Sydney but on a larger scale? Make's sense considering Paris/France is much more densely populated? Yea, we get it your government treats you all like dogs more than ours do, but surely we shouldn't have had to grow up seeing Junkies threatening each other with guns as well, right?
@@Teriiarco not dangerous to go where? Paris? Whos talking about danger?
@@Teriiarco yes I do and you’re saying a whole lot of nothing lol go to sleep
Big Boy, I appreciate you valued and respected my city and its banlieues (hoods). Extremely creative content, I think you're propelled. I subscribed and be following you. Very f original. Lots of feeling and soul. Very much "spleen de Paris" )) Keep up
I cant believe a year ago I watched the "Bush Manoeuvre" video you made and thought I'd never take any of your content seriously. What a pleasant feeling it is to see such unique and obviously well thought out content.. what an inspiration
As someone that watches your videos for a while and from the banlieue/hood in Paris .Thank you so much for showcasing that part of Paris,seriously people just tryna make a living out there by any means necessary,we are not all bad people.also take the time to speak with kids and people there it’s refreshing to see someone from outside of France,it kinda give us hope and make us dream even more.specially if you tell them your story I’m pretty sure that you’d live a positive mark on their mindset and motivate them.but you got BALLZ for be there too respect for that my brudda 👏🏾🤙🏾🤙🏾
You should go to South of France Marseille “les quartier Nord” it’s more intense I reckon and your viewers would love it
Il aurait des couilles s'il etait blanc...un basané dans le tieq' whaou original!!!!
Dude, my sister-in-law nearly got kidnapped in France. She traumatised.
@@jennyj0007 can u say sth more bc i want to move to france :)
@@szpara3191 she lives in the south of france and had attempted kidnap by Africans
@@szpara3191why would you want to move to france... xD
Dude, these vlogs are killer. Intense man.
One problem with places like this is that a few ruin it for the many. Some years ago I read some articles about how ambulance personnel and firefighters were attacked by thrown rocks every time they tried to enter some suburbs here in Sweden. And shit like that just puts everyone in danger.
Anyways it's very interesting and also sad to see this.
"that a few ruin it for the many". The hell no it's a big majority in many many place.
Even the African mothers was stealing with their kids during the riot this years. Those people had a place most of them are living from social social security and so many other help from the state.
The majority is totally ok with the drug traffic cause they sent their kids work in the street.
Majority are the dregs of humanity
Keep it up Span! Content just gets better and better
Man. This is your best one.. I know they all say it .. this is the real hood and their are no other clips available apart from French language as far as I can see. Makes Australia look safe even though it’s not… well not the worst. Keep checking these ones pls that other UA-camrs don’t. Reminds me of La Haine the film. 🔥🤙🏽
This guy is amazing. He used to be violent but now he is so humble and cool.
Thank you for the video bro! Keep up the fantastic work, & stay safe out there!
man this is only like the 3rd or 4th video I have seen from this guy and I can already tell he's gonna be one of my favorite content creators on here 👍👍
Great vid. I was born in Paris and moved to Sydney when I was 3. Appreciate this. You nailed it. A banlieue in France usually describes poorer neighbourhoods which are usually outside or on the outskirts of the city. I remember when I lived in France in my early 20s when I was studying there and I lived next door to massive state housing high rises. My first day moving in, there was a huge skip bin on fire at the entrance of my place. Scared the shit out of me. Haha. After a while just got used to it and made friends with the locals. They were mostly awesome people just in difficult circumstances. Anyway, appreciate your videos. They’re really good. 👏🏼
not exactly. A Banlieue is just an outskirt. Plain and simple nothing more. Neuilly sur Seine is a "Banlieue" and is one of the most top class richest areas in france. But we use the term "banlieue" or "quartier" more as an expression to design these african neighboorhoods.
@@necroplastfulexactly, banlieue literally refers to the suburbs, no matter the condition.
I love this series. If Span and the team could get a local contact to give them a tour around a certain hood I think that would also be really good content
The fact that he's doing this with barely any local knowledge of the hoods is what makes it more authentic
He said he’s better without.
Totally agree - he needs a good fixer who can arrange convos with the locals. Observations only skim the surface.
@@agostinhomartins8373the content starts being “same-ish” without any interactions or insights from locals…to be fair it’s a single minded view.
@thomasnishantha4941 if you put it that way then the content wouldn't be much different from a lot of the other vloggers out there that use guides in there videos
The fact that you look like the average North African (I am from Algeria so no racism here), made it easier for you to blend in and get farther than any camera crew could. Plus your street smarts kicked in and you got a coffee to blend in which is what most of us get in the morning. Great vid mate!
This is a very racist comment wow stigmatizing someone and say he looks Arabic
This is a very racist comment wow stigmatizing someone and say he looks Arabic
@@Etienne782 It's a remark and an observation on what made him blend in, snowflake.
@@Etienne782if that’s what is considered racist to you should have seen the world 50 years ago. You’d shit your pants
@@Etienne782wow you’re soft 😅 he said nothing racist. He’s making a point about how in some situations you gotta look the part to succeed.
Excellent work! At 14:18 you can see the words "Hashish / Weed / The Street" written in French on the entrance hallway. Looks like you stumbled upon "un four" - an apartment complex that openly sells drugs throughout the day and night. Stay safe and thanks for the content!
Oui c'est exactement sa il a du aller tôt le matin mes encore ceux quartier n'est plus autant chaud que avant vers 2005 2010 avec les émeute des zyed et bouna
I'm from France, from one of this kind of place, though I have it way less worse. It's really nice seeing someone talk about all of these slums, but I suggest, you should definitely visit the Quartiers Nord in Marseille. You won't be dissapointed. +1 sub (btw, the riots from this year happened throughout all of the country)
nikolasha, No Not in the whole country, in the provinces in the countryside it is calm and clean. Immigrants who arrived in the 1970s made these areas this way. 40 years ago everything was correct!!!
@@pitrick7349 Lool, with or without "immigrants", if you dont put any money in the restoration of such area and buildings in more than 50 years, it will look the same. In fact, it could have been worst if people didn't lived there. In the provinces, the ghettos that doesn't look like that it's because they were created later, and because money was put in restoration projects by town halls. Get your facts straight before spreading you stupid racist BS.
@@pitrick7349 you got some purity complex
@@itsisaaax1932 No, I have 60 years of Parisian suburbs behind me, so I speak with knowledge of the facts because I knew these areas a long time ago which were clean and safe and when we see the reality in 2023, we say to ourselves that foreigners should never have arrived here to disfigure our beautiful France.
C'est pas possible de se rendre la bas ils laissent rentrer personne dans leurs quartiers
Kinda eerie that no people were out and about. Glad your safe.. watching from So California
he left early in the morning otherwise it's impossible to enter neighborhoods like this in France
I’m originally from Paris, but I’ve never seen these neighbourhoods , it was chilling to see how deserted they are, it’s almost eerie
Its the first video of you that im watching and i must tell you that you have some big balls going to these places alone, mad respect, im followimg👍👍
thank you for showing to the world the reality of some people's lives, well hidden by the mainstream media.
it's not hidden at all in french media, everybody knows how it is, they do more hide the real reasons for the spot to be like that
He just show ruins...those buildings will be demolish
it's the people who live there who turned this place into a shithole
Import the third world, become the third world.
😂😂😂😂😂 I guess it's worst in their countries. All the money we put there is destroyed, they just don't care about anything
Videos like this remind me of ‘Bald and bankrupt’ style vids. Keep it up bloke. Great content
Sick video bro I really enjoyed this!
Thank you for the video man, I can relate so much to your experience.
I'm french and I lived in Perth for some time. I moved in Yangebup firstly. People told me it was the ghetto. I was amazed how clean it looked for a ghetto. A neighbouring Aboriginal family couldn't stop yelling and fighting at each others, but they were all smiling and saying hello to us everydays. We just knew that we didn't want to fall out with them ;). I never ever got in any trouble in that hood, whatever the time of day or night. And I'm a short, skinny, blond haired, video game addict btw
Somehow I think I know the house ur taking about with yelling indigenous hahaha I grew up in yangi for over 20 yrs and my parents are still there. I would love to move back as I really enjoyed it and never any issues!!
@@vee8980 Ha nice. Small world... Hope you get to go back there ;)
Typical black areas
Je suis a Cockburn et ils disent que armadale c’est chaud ! Lol
@@bougossfrancoaustralotuns mdr ces australiens ;)
Damn, I just found you yesterday and was binging your videos wondering when the next hood walkthrough was gonna drop. Loved the other ones, makes me remember the hood I grew up in.
I love this series!
If you can travel to Budapest, Hungary you had to check the Hős utca (Hero steet) or the outer side of the 8th district. The building are built in the late 1800's and the conditions are the same or worse like this place, but the locals are friendlier.
Every city has something like this. Very interesting video, thank you. I love your channel!
every city in France yeah... not every city in Europe i can assure you... France is overall dirty and its not because of french
Thats crazy how they got a mall right in the middle of the projects. Coming from America and living in some of the most dangerous places this country has to offer I respect the struggle in France. They going thru real poverty and real struggles there too. Salute from Philadelphia PA!
i'm french , there'sno struggle here , the socialist government give a lot of money and government spend hundreds of billions to renovate theses shitholes every years , the people living there ARE RESPONSIBLE of the shitty situation , all these places were clean and safe before the massive african /muslim immigration from the 70's
Love these channels. The governement is not responsible. The people have to take it themselves. Unite and build up.
As a french i can tell u it's easy to walk in those streets when all rats and gremlins are sleeping dude, it's obvious there is no one here because it's the morning, maybe sunday morning..
Honestly i dont accept what happen in those streets, but if u wanna show the reality next time go in afternoon or end of afternoon and u will see what's going on, deal, drogues and shit that's the reality, and even if ur strong, walking alone in those streets can be dangerous for u.
vous avez juste la mort de pas voir vos préjugés validés. allez dans n’importe quelle cité, tant que vous foutez pas la merde et que vous avez pas l’air suspect personne ne vous fera rien. oui il y a des problèmes dans les cités mais pas que. faire comme si les gens qui y habitent sont une sorte d’espèce différente plus dangereuse ou je ne sais quoi, c’est juste pathétique. j’en connais des quartiers dangereux mais la plupart des cités n’en font pas partie.
les problèmes de drogue etc sont une conséquence directe du manque de prise en charge de ces cités, pareil pour leur état dégradé. les autorités ne prennent jamais en charge les logements sociaux ou leurs habitants tant qu’il n’y a pas de drame qui s’y passe.
10 or so
i bet he wont, because he is bussy and dont want to show reality.
@@franzhans8249 he would kick your head in pal
Je vie en France à Sevran je peux vous jurer que tu viens de 00h00 a 00h00 tu rentre pas sans autorisation surtout pour filmé trop dangereux si tu n’a pas de protection
Crazy Mad Fearless! Bravo!
You are the first person I have seen to do a review on clichy sois bois. In 1977 we lived in clichy in a new apprt, at that time there were no problems, some years later the three blocks of apprts were demolished. All very sad to see a commune in this state. From Paris the direct route is from the metro Bobigny Pantin, then bus direct.
Bruh people are saying great vid but it’s only been 4 mins
Welcome to UA-cam
Massive pole-smokers.
@@kanggvngYou missed the point
Not for us in the West
Hahaha liars. They haven’t even watched yet. Clout chasers laddd
Can you do more haunted shows 😳🙏👻 loving your channel man.
oath Colombia's reactions were the best
they quit them ages ago
Peekaboo!! Did I scare you?
@@user-xg9wb9zs7j Nah really
@@Daniel-ld7xsniger and yes i mean Niger figur that out :)
7:58 'banlieues'' just means suburbs.
14:18 ''shit, beuh'' written over the sofa shows a drug deal spot.
14:27 CSB on the wall stands for Clichy Sous Bois
I grew up in a rough area of Sydney as well but man this is insane makes me realise how lucky we are to live in Australia even our worst slums wont compare to this.
This is a ghetto in paris but dont look at Marseille's ghettos its more like bresil vibes
Try Chicago .
I grew up in those guetto in France and now I live in the Sydney suburb. Yep you guys are lucky.
In France yes, it has been getting taboo, like it doesn't exist ...good french familles don't want to see that
If you think this is bad you haven't seen anything
Awesome content. Thank you for showing us the true living conditions that's covered up from mainstream media. No one in this day of age shouldn't live in these conditions. Thankyou🙏🙏
Covered up, lol
C'est eux qui ont rendu ces quartiers sales.quand on sait pas on parle pas tu est pas de chez nous alors ferme ta bouche et mêle toi de ton pays espèce de larve
@@zomgbat it's called corruption
@@rickreed9525 Nah it's called war in the Gaza strip or Ukraine being more interesting than a shit in an abandoned building, hardly some big conspiracy
@@MyPronounIsGoddessman stfu you dont know shit about those places
We are truly spoiled by the fact you put your life on the line for this content. Outstanding stuff
Come on it's Paris
Life on the line, lol ok.
No one's life was in danger. If you grew up in hoods like that people don't get killed for no reason, not even money or clothes but people don't like their hood to be filmed like it's a Zoo or something.
@@benlejusticier HAHAHA "its Paris"? boy you retarded
@@benlejusticieryou ever watch what goes on in these estates or Paris when people are pissed??? Riots regular.
Don’t be fooled. Go to Marseilles on a night time in the less commercial areas!
Great video man, writing this from the Paris suburbs 👍
I like how Apple Maps made the place feel even more isolated lol, tbf the tram could have provided a more comfortable route (+without a long walk), even if it adds a few transfers.
As you said Clichy (and neighboring town Montfermeil) lacked a proper train station, so the extra branch to that tram line (T4) was added to finally connect those places to suburban train lines, and that project was in part decided following those riots, although poverty and isolation in that area were already big issues for some decades by then.
In the past few years, some buildings have been demolished to make room for newer ones (we can see some of those in this video). Some blocks are still set for demolition or at least renovation I guess, there's a big urban renewal project to make that part of town feel a bit nicer.
Finally, a new metro line (line 16, part of Grand Paris Express) with a station serving Clichy is set to open in a few years, bringing with it big changes in the area. Not every issue will be solved by infrastructure projects, but hopefully that's a step in the right direction.
Amazing video man really shows you reality of living in those rough areas not just the lovely crepe area of Paris great contrast ! 26:56 pause and look at the wall the local corner boys / dealers have written the undercover cop car registration numbers & the make of the car on the wall "passat" "megane" etc they defo have that block on lock lol keep up great work bro !!
Excellent diversity covered in this European tour. Top work.
I absolutely love watching your video's. You have a very kind, caring face ❤️
Great content man keep it up ! :D I'm french and i've seen Clichy sous bois, Scampia and Barcelona videos since yesterday, it's great videos congrats man ! :)
Great series! Clichy is bad, but there are far worse areas surrounding Paris, never mind other spots in France where you definitely couldn’t have just walked in as a stranger. Keep it up!
Can you let us know what suburbs are worse?
@@sheddon. la castellane and pretty much every other suburbs/estates in Marseille. dealers literally block the road for cars and inspect them before they enter the estates. its crazy
@@sheddon.aulnay sous bois, clos saint lazare, corbeille, Marseille quartier nord etc. people don’t like strangers or tv filming them cause they feel like being animals in a zoo.
Clichy c'est le quartier le plus délabré a Paris mais c'est pas la banlieue la plus chaude autant délabré ya le parc Coro a Marseille le 143 et le parc Kaliste
Saint Ouan is so worst..
You should def hit Glasgow next. One of the roughest cities in the UK. Check out Paisley and Cumbernauld while you're there.
Yes yoss -I lived in cumbernauld before the shopping centre was done up -seafar-abronhill-etc-, I know wat u mean - spans content is superb-reckon he'll do Glasgow 1 day soon.🤝
There’s much worse than paisley and Cumbernauld 😂😂
Glasgow is nothing compared to how it was in early 00’s
Drumchapel- the flats there was like this French but worse lads
But things change-that was while back an just for it - I loved cumbernauld. - Good Times all in all..respect
As a french, I can tell you there are places like this in the whole country, in every big and medium city. Streets with zero future, where the only hope you have is to leave the place forever as soon as possible.
Clichy is probably one of the worst, the damages done to the buildings are beyond repair. I grew up in a place like this, I just had the chance to leave and find a much better neighborhood.
But never forget, 90% of the people libing there are honest individuals just trying to live a normal live honestly. The fact is, who would like to live in a place like this ? The government let places like this literally rot, does nothing at all to better the situation. Most of the shops have burnt, most public services too like schools or else, and companies have left since a long time due to harassment and destructions. That's why all you'll find there now are damaged cars and big rusty buildings.
Apart from all that, I think the video was shot in the early sunday morning, as we clearly see two guys entering the church, probably for the sunday morning Mass. Which is why all seems rather empty ; on Sunday mornings in places like this, you just stay in your apartment, there's nowhere to go outside, and nothing to do without transportation.
If you return there at midnight... well, don't ever do that. Many places like this in France are no-rights zones and even the cops won't come to rescue you, and even less a medic.
What about the billions of euros for renovating these places ? As soon as it's renovated it becomes shitty again. Why ?
"The government let places like this literally rot, does nothing at all to better the situation." True in this case, now that all hope vanished and the place is depopulated, but the government spent at least 100 billion euros on building, rebuilding and improving the banlieues since 1977 and after last summer's riots it passed another bill to splurge more billions. It's easy to call it a money problem but the reality is that investments don't matter if the inhabitants can't behave, crime has taken over and the kids burn the new facilities to the ground every 3-5 years.
Yes, man, that's France ! But the question is : why do we let the 10% dishonest make the law in these places ?
Why not to open a local police station in order to assure security for the people who live there ?
No money for this ? But we have a lot of money for plenty of other things in this country.
And also the problem with french justice : even if police catch the delinquants, most of the time they are not condemned...
@@FranZzz-Z Ils les utilisent pour construire d'autres cités plus petites ailleurs et ils sont en train de reloger progressivement les habitants. C'est le cas dans plusieurs cités minées par la drogue, une drogue consommée aussi par les plus nantis au passage. A Paris, la bourgeoisie carbure à la coke de Saint-Ouen par exemple. Je parle de la ville où je vis. D'ailleurs, c'est en train de changer par ici. Thierry Marx va y ouvrir un bouillon dans quelques mois ! Il n y a pas que du négatif dans le 93 ! Bonne soirée !
Don't listen to him, I'm French, Our government has invested billions in this suburb, but the locals always end up destroying everything
Thank you for sharing, an Aussie had to come to my hometown and show me a corner I have never seen. Thank you for your work and efforts, all the best👏🏻
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Just found your account! You’re definitely someone I’m
Gonna
Support with a follow. Keep it up! Inspirational
Good video man! One of the most notorious estates in Paris, It will soon be demolished like most of the infamous ones. It's probably half empty by now. They already demolished and rebuilt an even worse looking one called Les Bosquets which was right next to this one.
From the 70´s until mid 2000´s this are (like most of the estates) was absolute hell on earth. No way you, or anyone, would have entered in them days.
Keep this series going!
they demolish those place but the people who cause the problems are just move somewhere else and every one cry when it's at their place....
In Marseille there is a neighborhood called Félix Pyat, there they had installed nets at the bottom of the buildings because people were just throwing their trash out the window, once I even saw a refrigerator there.
My mother family went living in on of these places after the war. They were very nice places, very modern at the time, were like small villages, everybody know each others. People were not rich but you had some social mixe, with some people renting while others were owners. My mother family saw all the migration waves, the italians, the polish, iberians etc. My grand father was one of them from yugoslavia. Of course there was sometimes problems with each waves coming in, but overall people all ended up accepted and it was a nice place to lives.
But at some point, it was africans that started coming. There was already some of them, mostly from before the decolonization. But after the decolonization things changed. First wave was from maghreb, it started during the 80/90s, then from subsaharan africa late 2000s. And it's from there things changed a lot. Crime, deal, depredation started to grow out of control, people started to flee en masse, even older generation of migrants from africa were fleeing and were upset like anybody else, by the newcomers. Some people will tell you they are left behind or other things, but the state is throwing billions after billions in these places, more money they ever seen in the past, but they will burn down new schools, public facilities etc.
When my grad mother die, it was the last time we went there, my sister and my mother went to see my grand mother appartement complexe for the last time and they were followed by some arab men that probably didn't wanted them there. All the friends of our family had also left. There was only african migrants dealing and watching any "newcomers" they didn't know about. What was once my family and friends well maintain and lively place that i loved to go over, is now what we would call a no go zone.
J’ai eu la même expérience que vous, enfant dans les années fin 60 et début 70, j’ai vécu dans une cité de la sorte en Essonne, ma scolarité était dans une de ces écoles de la République à la population d’origines différentes (Algeriens, Portugais...), tout se passait plutôt bien, centre aéré, colonie de vacance, classe de neige. Aujourd'hui c'est une zone de non droit, tous les commerces sont partis, une no go zone avec une faune qui ferait passer un loubard de l’époque (avec sa mob) pour un enfant de cœur. Et puis nous le savons tous, avec la disparition de l’autorité, du sens du devoir, l’armée, l’éducation nationale, le respect, l’ascenseur social, la valeur travail etc etc etc...tout a été laminé, aujourd'hui c'est liberté "je fais ce que veux", dont acte !
Pareil ici, j'ai grandi en banlieue dans une cité du 93 dans les années 70-80 et c'était la belle époque, ce n'était pas le grand luxe certes mais les gens étaient sympathiques, il n'y avait pas d'agressions gratuites et personne ne s'amusait à dégrader les infrastructures mises en place. Il y avait déjà des Maghrébins et des Africains mais c'était des gens qui avaient fuit leur pays lors de l'indépendance parce qu'ils avaient choisit la France, ils aimaient ce pays, sa culture et ses valeurs, et c'était de sacrés bosseurs, rien à voir avec ceux d'aujourd'hui qui viennent pour les aides sociales voir pire pour participer à des activités illégales. J'ai quitté la France en 2009 dégouté parce ce qu'est devenu le pays, la France est devenue un hotel, on y rentre comme dans un moulin, même la nationalité Française n'a plus aucune valeur ils la donnent à n'importe qui.
Tout ça finira razé au lance flammes.
Moi j'ai grandi à Roubaix, c'est pas mieux.
@abdel-qudus1143alors je ne sais pas si cela a changé avec le temps mais dans ma ville à Drancy il y a au moins 5 écoles primaires, une grande bibliothèque, deux commissariat, 3 collèges, deux lycées (un privé et un public), 1 piscine municipale, 1 centre culturel avec un cinéma, beaucoup de club de sports et culturels avec une aide de 50€ de l'état, 3 terrain de foot de 90 m et dans presque chaque cité il y a un city.... Mais tout cela n'a pas empêché d'y avoir les émeutes et la destruction de l'entrée de notre carrefour et de notre centre culturel.
@abdel-qudus1143y a toujours eu des quartiers pauvres mais jamais aussi sale. Pourtant y a eu du pognon de l etat. Rien justifie une telle crasse. C est de la faute unique des habitants notamment africains. Probleme est qu ils sont pas dans une demarche d appartenance a un territoire donc c est le chacun pour sa gueule. Dans un monde Normal y aurait eu une prise en main par des groupes d habitant pour nettoyer et repeindre. Ici on dirait que aucun veux faire un effort ou payer un minimum de restauration comme s ils etaient pas chez eux.
Bro you bought 8 tickets for 8 people didnt you? Anyways you are fast becoming my favourite channel bro. You and your content is just so addicting once you start watching. Keep up the great work brother.
This is the area that Francis Ngannou had migrated to when he finally made it across the borders.. and to where he is now is so crazy, much respect!
Francis was probably the safest man there
Hello from Serbia bro 🇷🇸 i love your video's 😎📸❤️
Love the content Spanian! Great tour of Clichy Sous Bois. I'm really enjoying your hood series, hope you can do South Central LA and the favelas of Rio one day.
I think going to speak to the priest would've been a good move for some info on local conditions for the residents and you'd be safe.
Most priest are pedophiles these days 😂😂
they bare all muslim here and don't respect Christians
This content is so good ! Showing the dirty side of what the media don't show you.
I grew up in housing commission too bro in Australia and seriously I never seen worst conditions then I have in some places I have been too I mean it’s rough in oz too but not as rough as it there. However a majority of people that live in these places are good people working class people just trying to survive. Thanks for showing this
Get this man to a million subs ASAP ❤️🔥
I grew up there, or more precisely, nearby. You are lucky not to encounter the locals in the middle of the day. It would have been a much different story wandering there by nighttime. Either you have balls or you are simply not aware of the danger. Anyhow, great video! it brought me back. So happy I live in Sydney now!
I am French, lived 3 years in the centre of Paris. I never ever saw those images of Paris, even on TV. TV just shows you the riots, the flames...But never the aftermath and the cold reality of it in daylight. I am speechless....
Les parisiens ne veulent pas réellement voire toute la banlieue populaire qui l'entoure, c'est triste
You know your going the right way when you see windows blocked off, by the way just watched all these hood vlogs love them keep it up bro liked and subbed
Thank you for covering this. As someone who grew up housing commission in South Maroubra/ Lapa in the 90s, I visited Paris back in 2019. Its somewhat come full circle seeing this side of Paris back in 2019 and cant imagine whats its like now with thier immigration problems since then. Paris is still a gem but like many global cities its not perfect
Hey, South Maroubra is the best part of Sydney. Best beach, nice people
@@pavlos..i think he’s talking about lexo. Not the best place to be 💀
@@gabby2358 Trust me lol I spent most of my early childhood in my Grandmothers flat on Portland Crescent...... I got vivid memories of Junkies threatening each other with guns, trying to set the whole block on fire.
Paris is like Africa , a proper cesspit
maybe the so called immigration problems are really socio economic problems purposefully placed in isolation.
Spanian out here on the La Haine block. 🐐
That’s the future for all Western countries
Big ups to all the French homies, hope you overcome your shambles government as peacefully as possible, as idealistic as that may be 🙏🏼
Yeah it's the governments fault these people decide to defecate in the open and set their buildings and cars on fire
@vote_trump_number1 idk wtf youre saying, I’ll explain my side using english though. Yes, indeed Australias government is also shit and pushing censorship bills hard and discretely in large part. But yes, France’s government is also fucked. Which is why I hope the citizens can regain their liberty through peace, but I realise that is a very unrealistic expectation of how events in real world life would turn out. I still have no clue what the fuck you said though ‘lad’.
@vote_trump_number1 what... maybe the immigrants shouldn't just destroy and throw away everything given to them
@vote_trump_number1 bro stfu get a grip
@vote_trump_number1waaaaaaa?
Just found your channel, love the hood videos. Keep up the good work 👍
You’re very likeable mate and love the content, you’re for sure going places
love the journey concept from the City to the Hood!
is morning concept
@@ProjectArtVisual journey signifie voyage, pas journée
@@ElColombo-CanadienseMuyGringo pardon ma French
Hey man, as someone from Marseille, it'd be amazing to see you do the Quartiers Nord but I would really advise being cautious, contacting someone from the community and having a guide depending on which side you go to. The law of the street is king there.
J'habite aussi Marseille, t'es un malade de lui dire ça avec tout ce qu'il se passe cette année.
Même avec un guide ce serait quand même une cible 🤦
Im commenting how good this is before watching it. Its obvious its gonna be hectic