11 Things I'll Really Miss About America

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  • Опубліковано 21 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 5 тис.

  • @EndingSimple
    @EndingSimple Рік тому +77

    American here. I was feeling pretty sad today. This made me feel better.

  • @GCAT01Living
    @GCAT01Living Рік тому +595

    I have a Russian friend who visited America and was tickled pink to eat in a diner. They even had the red, poofy booths and free refills on coffee and she was just so thrilled. It was so cute.

    • @FallacyBites
      @FallacyBites Рік тому +20

      Yeah, Spouse's coworker from Israel had the same reaction!

    • @ApeWithPants
      @ApeWithPants Рік тому +17

      I have a norwegian nephew that had the same reaction haha

    • @treetopjones737
      @treetopjones737 10 місяців тому +6

      As I recall it's IHOP where they leave a pitcher of coffee at your table.

    • @leavingitblank9363
      @leavingitblank9363 9 місяців тому +3

      @@treetopjones737 Yes, that is correct.

    • @iamfishmind
      @iamfishmind 7 місяців тому +7

      yup i still love greasy spoons after many years in america. i also once went under a bridge in a mostly abandoned former industrial district and i said "now THIS is americana"

  • @CannonRanger1
    @CannonRanger1 Рік тому +1454

    I was a ranger in the National Park Service for 28 years. I got teary watching you get teary talking about the parks and the rangers. We always love to hear where folks are coming from. Whether it's from across the globe or across the street, we're thrilled to see people come visit. You have well over 400 parks to check out before even considering to leave. I'll let the rangers know you're on the way.

    • @huntercrosby8882
      @huntercrosby8882 Рік тому +48

      Hello fellow green+gray! Best damn job in the world.

    • @twentyonegrams8617
      @twentyonegrams8617 Рік тому +63

      Thank you for taking such good care of our parks. ❤ Thank you for keeping them beautiful.

    • @jtbredow
      @jtbredow Рік тому +39

      My father was a career National Park Ranger (30yrs) and both my sister and brother-in-law are currently in NPS. Even though I didn't follow that path, I loved growing up in the park and love visiting them whenever I can.

    • @msmith11112
      @msmith11112 Рік тому +16

      i have to admit, i have run into a few rangers. but still. thank you for being there. most are great at getting information and help.

    • @Shnive
      @Shnive Рік тому +26

      America's greatest idea.

  • @callenclarke371
    @callenclarke371 10 місяців тому +146

    This channel is absolutely endearing.
    I've been a lifelong Anglophile, very much envious of the depth of English history, but also amused by British people who express an amusing dislike of Americans for one reason or another. But to find such an odd mix of wit, cynicism and affection so well-expressed. Just really fun to watch. Keep up the great work.

    • @ZaynneThaWook
      @ZaynneThaWook 10 місяців тому +9

      I agree. I like that he’s not afraid to be fully honest

    • @butcherjsy8
      @butcherjsy8 8 місяців тому +2

      I hear some of that from fellow Brits, I wouldn't take it to heart, it would never relate to how they actually treated you or thought of you once getting to know you. I speak well of you behind your back and in front of you though!

    • @OzzyCoop
      @OzzyCoop 13 днів тому

      @@ZaynneThaWook I know an English dude who rips on American food. Chocolate, wine, cheese. Apparently we can't make food as good as Europeans do lol

    • @worstgamer1162
      @worstgamer1162 3 дні тому

      Bro they make those better in Europe then in the US😂 ​@@OzzyCoop

  • @pixelzomblina
    @pixelzomblina Рік тому +451

    I live in Texas, and my Welsh husband won’t stop doing a Texan accent! It drives me up the wall but it makes my friends laugh because he’s actually good at it. 😭

    • @SilvaDreams
      @SilvaDreams Рік тому +21

      Reminds me of my sister when we moved from New England to North Carolina in '92(I was 10), only she sounded more Southern than the actual locals and did it poorly(think over done movie Southern Belle).... Took her maybe a week to start that.
      Worst part is we moved from Rhode Island so we didn't have a accent to speak of which confused many. It wasn't till in my early 20s when I moved back up north that I was informed I had a Southern twang/accent.

    • @coolandhip_7596
      @coolandhip_7596 Рік тому +10

      ​@SilvaDreams you were blessed with a case of the southern tongue

    • @rickedwards6150
      @rickedwards6150 Рік тому +16

      When I went to college in western Massachusetts, I lost my strong Rhode Island accent. I started pronouncing r’s in words and got ridiculed by the family for ‘tawkin’ weird.

    • @SilvaDreams
      @SilvaDreams Рік тому +2

      @rickedwards6150 The irony that in 1st and 2nd grade I had to go to speech lessons because I didn't say my Rs like a Bostoner.

    • @slinkysmom5674
      @slinkysmom5674 Рік тому +27

      My husband (Texas) is under strict orders not to try and use his British accent when we visit 🙄

  • @juliee.7072
    @juliee.7072 Рік тому +186

    Brit here, the furthest West I've ever been is Florida. Once for a week at DisneyWorld and the second time for a stopover, just one night at Miami airport. And yet it felt so different there! Huge skies, spectacular thunderstorms, vast distances, the sunlight is different, you feel more expansive because theres so much room to move around in. The food portions were wild. We got to use a diner for breakfast the morning of our flight, these highway patrol officers were sitting nearby and the friendly waitress kept filling up our coffee. It was 1992, and the cars were still enormous gas guzzlers and my dad drove us from Miami to Orlando and back in a Pontiac Firebird and i even saw an alligator. ❤🐊

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG Рік тому +10

      Being that much closer to the equator does make difference to the skies but the Northern States look a lot like our skies.

    • @xXx_Regulus_xXx
      @xXx_Regulus_xXx Рік тому +8

      DisneyWorld, as I'm sure you know is a larger than life version of what the States are really like, but there's no faking that Florida weather!

    • @TheOnlyOneStanding8079
      @TheOnlyOneStanding8079 Рік тому +6

      I'm from San Francisco California and I wish to visit Disneyworld and see an alligator in Florida

    • @jovetj
      @jovetj Рік тому +7

      That "different sunlight" is called a _clear sky._

    • @llc1976
      @llc1976 Рік тому +7

      The quality of light is so different in the different areas. In New Mexico for instance at dusk the sky is magical. Yes the gigantic “big red sun” as Lucinda Williams sings it in Florida at sunrise or sunset is jaw dropping.

  • @slc1161
    @slc1161 Рік тому +3067

    We don’t need clickbait. We love you any way, any how.

    • @WyattRyeSway
      @WyattRyeSway Рік тому +225

      It was funny. He owned the clickbait right away. It was really more a prank he played on us and a funny one.

    • @KairuHakubi
      @KairuHakubi Рік тому +79

      @@WyattRyeSway it got me! He'd just better not make a habit of it :p
      This would have worked in a couple months as a Thanksgiving video, the list of things you're thankful for is roughly the things you'd miss if they were gone.

    • @maryvalentine9090
      @maryvalentine9090 Рік тому +49

      It’s called a joke. Lighten up.

    • @DasLooney
      @DasLooney Рік тому +62

      Loved his clickbait not clickbait, it's hilarious for anyone that skipped the beginning lol. Good job, Lawrence!

    • @llamasarus1
      @llamasarus1 Рік тому +23

      @@WyattRyeSway Self-awareness doesn't absolve oneself.

  • @suzannesellers7383
    @suzannesellers7383 9 місяців тому +18

    Laurence, several times a week, I check your number of subscribers and look forward to the near future when you hit 1 million subs. No matter how depressed I get about how we Americans are so divided politically, I see my country from your eyes and it brightens my day.

  • @jackieyoung3359
    @jackieyoung3359 Рік тому +479

    When I had Austrian friends come to visit I took them to many nice, higher end restaurants. They never seemed too impressed. The morning of their flight home I took them to my local dive diner for breakfast. Omg, they LOVED it! Definitely their favorite spot to eat. And they also said, “It’s just like in the movies.” 😂 So funny what we take for granted.

    • @klimtkahlo
      @klimtkahlo Рік тому +16

      How nice you have Austrian friends! Having lived in Austria and also in the states, I would pick Austria and Austrian all day every day! Sorry Americans! Also Austria is probably the most beautiful country I have ever seen and I have seen a few!

    • @leafbelly
      @leafbelly Рік тому +3

      @@klimtkahlo Yes Austrians are better people than Americans. /s

    • @Paul_Wetor
      @Paul_Wetor Рік тому +24

      Good point. There are fancy restaurants everywhere, but American diners have "local color". I once visited Falmouth on a UK cruise and the fish and chips shop poured my Coca Cola down the side of the glass, same as if I'd ordered one of their beers. I was impressed because nobody in America ever does that with a soda. It was a small thing, but I treasure it for being "local color".

    • @shells500tutubo
      @shells500tutubo Рік тому +2

      @@Paul_WetorI'm going to have to start doing that, lol.

    • @alexcarter8807
      @alexcarter8807 Рік тому +14

      There are places here in the US that really are just like in the movies. I've stayed in a place around Hollywood, Los Angeles, that was right out of a 1940s film noir. I was traveling cross-country on my motorcycle, with just about all I owned in a duffle bag strapped to the back of the bike, and stopped at a diner/coffee shop sort of place on I-10 between Arizona and California. I was wearing, well, motorcycle stuff, jeans, leather jacket, that sort of thing. I was just in for coffee and something to eat. Some Japanese tourists came in and they loved it - myself, my bike, the place (which had seen its best days when James Dean was still alive) to them I guess it was just like something out of a movie. And yes, we in the US do in fact use those red cups for parties and things.

  • @Ximm84
    @Ximm84 Рік тому +98

    As an American who is frequently in the UK it always puts a smile on my face when a cashier or petrol station attendant greets me and then hears me say "Hello, how are you doin'?" in my mildly southern accent and a smile, and they look up in surprise. They have always been intrigued, like it's the highlight of their day.

    • @mintz9782
      @mintz9782 Рік тому +3

      Gas station.

    • @leavingitblank9363
      @leavingitblank9363 9 місяців тому +3

      There must be more Brits in the US than US in the UK. Hearing a British accent in a shop wouldn't seem odd at all, but when I imagine hearing a US accent in the UK, it really stands out.

  • @burf90
    @burf90 Рік тому +395

    I think the attraction of American diners is the feel that you're eating in someone's kitchen. They feel homey, friendly, and comfy and I think that's largely because we're pretty casual here and not insistent on a lot of formalities. I've traveled a lot and I've never found a restaurant in any other country where you get that same feeling.

    • @randeebecker2455
      @randeebecker2455 Рік тому +7

      So true!

    • @LugborG
      @LugborG Рік тому +24

      For me, it’s that every diner I’ve been to has had great food. Regular restaurants are fine, but a small diner is almost always a step above. There’s a place near me that has some of the best fries I’ve ever had, and a couple towns over is a diner with excellent pancakes.

    • @jadebel7006
      @jadebel7006 Рік тому +9

      We have them in the u.k there called cafes

    • @cattysplat
      @cattysplat Рік тому +10

      @@LugborG It's comfort food. Where you can eat pretty much everything on the menu and leave feeling full of delicious fried goodness.

    • @MemphisCorollaS
      @MemphisCorollaS Рік тому +12

      Agreed. I’m so sad that my two favorite diners where I live have closed down. Waffle House is a guilty pleasure too, but it isn’t the same as an old school independent, hole in the wall diner.

  • @xVentax
    @xVentax 8 місяців тому +118

    I live in the UK, but have done the entire Route 66 in a Cadillac. It was an amazing experience, and every American we encountered was warm, friendly, generous and really interested in our trip. We didn’t pre-book accommodation, just turned up and got lucky every time. I spent one evening in a tiny motel drinking wine with the owner and helping her fold her laundry! I’d love to go to Yellowstone though . . .

    • @edman79
      @edman79 5 місяців тому +11

      That sounds so cool

    • @HardNigga-tr4uy
      @HardNigga-tr4uy 5 місяців тому +1

      Dope

    • @scottb6560
      @scottb6560 4 місяці тому +3

      Yellowstone is magnificent, but as an American who has been to most of our National Parks, I would suggest that if you can only chose one, go to Yosemite. It is beautiful beyond words!

    • @206beastman
      @206beastman 4 місяці тому

      What kinda caddy

    • @winstonelston5743
      @winstonelston5743 3 місяці тому

      @@206beastman Watch _The Muppet Movie_ (original version) for the song "Moving Right Along".
      You haven't done Route 66 until you've done it in a fifties classic car. "A bear in his natural habitat. A Studebaker,"
      The open road, the open windows, the swamp cooler....

  • @moxiebombshell
    @moxiebombshell Рік тому +523

    I feel like there's nothing more American than being utterly attached to the idea of taking an RV on a road trip across the country... despite never having set foot in an RV in one's life 😂

    • @xXx_Regulus_xXx
      @xXx_Regulus_xXx Рік тому +11

      so true, I've seen glimpses of the iconic RV cross country trip (driving a short distance with a pop-up camper trailer, commuting longer distances in a regular car) but haven't had the time or money since entering adulthood.

    • @tgill2943
      @tgill2943 Рік тому +3

      And they are sooo easy to drive😲

    • @davestvwatching2408
      @davestvwatching2408 Рік тому +6

      The British "caravan" everywhere though, camping might be more popular there.

    • @mjinba07
      @mjinba07 Рік тому +14

      My wife and I traveled like this two winters as "snow birds." It was, indeed, wonderful. We met a lot of nice folks, saw spectacular things, and I'll never forget the comfort of having home with us wherever we went.

    • @tinkerstrade3553
      @tinkerstrade3553 Рік тому +2

      Buy an old "beater" RV, fix it up yourself, the way you want, then have the joy of riding off into the sunset. A turtle bound for adventure, with your bike on the hitch, to go for help with when the RV high centers on a rock.
      You'll just love the whole "Americanism" of it all. Drive as much or as little as you want. Camp at any wide place off the road, as long as it's not Philadelphia. The City of Brotherly Love is badly in need of a family intervention.
      Oh, and buy tick spray. Just trust me on this. Donating hemoglobin to the insect of the wilds is a little regarded, but time honored practice since at least the days when Teddy was known for chasing up hills after windmills. But not for ticks.
      Ticks are the uncivilized 3rd cousins of the more urbane bed bug. Unfortunately, their outdoor lifestyle has led them to carry a burdensome forest tax of around 4 million deadly parasites. Most of whom are debilitating, if not lethal, to humans.
      Happy RVing!!!🤣

  • @marciawilwerding4984
    @marciawilwerding4984 Рік тому +689

    Thank you for loving America. We often get the idea the rest of the world hates us (usually via our own media). I thoroughly enjoyed hearing the things you love about America which are also many of the same things we home-born Americans love. Hope you never have to leave. I love actually everything British, so it goes both ways across the Pond.

    • @nikkireigns
      @nikkireigns Рік тому +29

      Perfectly said 😊

    • @ryanmoore4920
      @ryanmoore4920 Рік тому +4

      I will only encourage reality if it makes the world easy to understand.

    • @theeyesehaveit
      @theeyesehaveit Рік тому +11

      Well said and I also agree.

    • @MonkeyJedi99
      @MonkeyJedi99 Рік тому +15

      Regarding National Parks and historical places, I've long noticed that the interesting things near where you live never get visited until someone from farther away comes for a visit.
      That's what it took for us to go to the Mayflower and Old Sturbridge Village.
      -
      Long ago (1970-79), we lived in Phoenix, AZ for about three years. We never even got close to the Grand Canyon.
      About twelve years after moving back to Massachusetts, my grandmother took the family to the Grand Canyon, including a chartered plane ride into the canyon. This trip was during the two weeks I was in Fort Drum for National Guard annual training, and they didn't tell me about the trip until about a week after I got home, when the pictures were developed at the local drugstore.
      -
      This is the same family who had a grand all-of-the-family Christmas the one year I was not invited.
      But I'm not bitter.

    • @lordleonusa
      @lordleonusa Рік тому +36

      No, you're quite right. The rest of the world does hate America - OK, calm down! I'm just kidding, I'm British, and I therefore apologize for my sense of humour! We really can't help ourselves. LOL fwiw, I Love America and whatever you do, don't believe the media!

  • @Wooden_indian
    @Wooden_indian Рік тому +412

    It's refreshing to watch and listen to a foreigner remind you of treasures, that have been taken for granted, Thanks Laurence. We don't want you to leave, ever.

    • @CynHicks
      @CynHicks Рік тому +8

      There's a lot of beauty in the world but when you live within a union like this it's hard to find something better unless you're rich and then you can pretty much find a sweet spot anywhere. 😂

    • @sunniertimer598
      @sunniertimer598 Рік тому +23

      He's an American now.

    • @Rizky06
      @Rizky06 Рік тому +14

      America is like "Hotel California" you can check out any time you like but you will never leave. 😁🎶🎸

    • @elmo2800
      @elmo2800 Рік тому +4

      Yeah, it's so strange to hear positive things about America.
      Most Americans dislike the country today. There's plenty of things to hate for sure.
      But there's a fascination to hear the nice things.

  • @aseerose5684
    @aseerose5684 Рік тому +9

    I'm awfully glad you aren't leaving, Lawrence. (hugs)

  • @phoxhole
    @phoxhole Рік тому +363

    What an unbelievably wholesome reminder that there's still plenty to love about my home country. Thank you Lost in the Pond

    • @mr.admr1016
      @mr.admr1016 Рік тому +13

      I am not a fan of a lot of things about the US, its global interference and meddling with things unjustly, gun laws, safety etc... that being said, it is by far the most unique nation I have ever seen and I am currently working extrememely hard to apply to some uni's there. The nature, for example, is one of the most stunning anywhere in the world. I mean you guys have a place from every climate, the amazing natural parks and the beutifull landscapes and cities are..well, amazing. And the academic environment as well as the opportunites taht entails are also fantastic. So yeah. the US is cool (mostly)

    • @TheBullyMomma
      @TheBullyMomma Рік тому +1

      ⁠@@mr.admr1016, Our extreme version of capitalism is responsible for most if not all the bullshit we spread. The wealthy have convinced the moronic that anything that’s good for business is what needs to be regardless of how detrimental it is to the majority.

    • @lovelylavenderr
      @lovelylavenderr Рік тому +5

      @@mr.admr1016I hope you get into one! We'd love to have you. The media might say otherwise, but in reality most of us absolutely love foreigners and learning about foreign cultures.

    • @jenn976
      @jenn976 Рік тому

      As you’ve seen, there are so many great things about our country. Good enough to save from those who would destroy our institutions. So get out there and vote.

  • @mikeshahan1960
    @mikeshahan1960 Рік тому +112

    Lawrence, you are a treasure. What I like about your observations about America is how it gives me, a 63 year old native, a fresh look at this country I call home. Thanks for sharing it all. Stick around, please. The US wouldn't be quite the same without you.

  • @sherryheim5504
    @sherryheim5504 Рік тому +284

    The American Diner is a unique part of our culture, more important than our Michelin starred restaurants. Diner food is like a warm and loving hug from your favorite grandparent, there is just nothing like it.

    • @Lucius1958
      @Lucius1958 Рік тому +4

      I remember a song parody we made up in our childhood: *"Nothin' could be finer than be eatin' in a diner in the mornin'..."*

    • @filanfyretracker
      @filanfyretracker Рік тому +4

      and a good diner probably tastes better.

    • @Levacque
      @Levacque Рік тому +4

      It's one of your most important cultural exports to Canada. Your contribution is much appreciated.

    • @ellenmeilee
      @ellenmeilee Рік тому +12

      I’d take an AmericanDiner over a Michelin star restaurant any day.

    • @BTinSF
      @BTinSF Рік тому

      Ever eaten in a "real" one--that is, one made from converting an old rail dining car (which is where the name came from)? I did once or twice in my youth and also in several ersatz ones that looked like old dining cars but actually weren't.

  • @rebelboi88
    @rebelboi88 Рік тому +119

    I'll never forget taking the train from Chicago to D.C. and my dad shaking me awake at the crack of dawn to look out the windows. The sun wasn't even peeking up yet but the sky was glowing and the blue light let you see just enough of the Pennsylvania mountains. The fog rolling over and down into the valleys will live with me for the rest of my life.

    • @Snakeplisskin440
      @Snakeplisskin440 10 місяців тому +6

      I had this similar experience seeing the mountains of West Virginia for the first time. They cut this major highway through the mountains. I remember coming down from Ohio and the sun was setting, fog was rolling in, only one set of headlights coming the other way, it felt like a scene from a movie.

    • @rebelboi88
      @rebelboi88 10 місяців тому +4

      @@Snakeplisskin440 It's the little things that last a lifetime. Ain't that amazing?

    • @garycamara9955
      @garycamara9955 3 місяці тому +2

      The only time I took a train was from LA to Sacramento in the 50s. We were on the skylines. Passenger cars with a glass roof, and a bar. I was in the 2nd grade at the time. But I still remember it.

    • @rebelboi88
      @rebelboi88 3 місяці тому

      @@garycamara9955 it really is the best way to travel if you have don't have to rush.

  • @willyjimmy8881
    @willyjimmy8881 Рік тому +183

    When you said, "WE have every terrain under the sun", that hit me in the feels.

    • @nthgth
      @nthgth Рік тому +12

      It definitely means a lot from a Briton who is proud to also call himself an American. This guy's awesome.

    • @marioc1247
      @marioc1247 Рік тому +6

      SAME!! I was so happy to hear him say “We” ❤🇺🇸

    • @azurephoenix9546
      @azurephoenix9546 Рік тому +8

      I've been to so many countries, and it still amazes me to see things like a Sahara in the middle of the Midwest, a giant butte jutting up from the flat desert, mountains covered in trees and mountains of bare rock, enormous miles long lakes in the western rockies, just there, up in the top of the mountains. In 2 days, you can drive to pretty much every possible geographic locale. The beauty of this country always amazes me.

    • @SJD326
      @SJD326 Рік тому +4

      It fills me with a sense of pride for being an American

    • @empirion502
      @empirion502 Рік тому +1

      @@azurephoenix9546 Yeah, it's actually kind of a trip to be quite far away, and realize that (from a landscape perspective) it looks a lot like home, or places you might have visited state-side

  • @jmolsen8328
    @jmolsen8328 Рік тому +402

    As an American living in Europe, I can say diners are absolutely what we miss most.

    • @mintz9782
      @mintz9782 Рік тому +13

      Whatcha doin over there, come back over 🦅

    • @jmolsen8328
      @jmolsen8328 Рік тому +29

      @@mintz9782 Nah, loving the rest of my life here 🙂 but if anyone wanted to open a chain of real american diners across Europe I am sure they would be a hit!

    • @jonbondMPG
      @jonbondMPG Рік тому +24

      I miss diners, despite being British in Britain and never having been to a diner in my life.... But I've watched enough TV and 24/7 decent food or coffee or a slice of apple pie is where it is at!

    • @BigWillieFreestyle
      @BigWillieFreestyle Рік тому +21

      I'm moving to Germany within the next year or two and this video has suddenly made me realise how much I'm going to miss diners. And Waffle House. 😢

    • @smurfy181
      @smurfy181 Рік тому +7

      I lived in SE Asia for 3 years, and I also found myself missing diners the most. It's real.

  • @jasoncox5263
    @jasoncox5263 Рік тому +423

    I love your love of America. It is really easy to get discouraged by all the nay-sayers constantly putting this country down, but you help remind us of how special this place really is. Thank you.

    • @penskepc2374
      @penskepc2374 Рік тому

      Once you realize the America hate is just jealousy masquerading as a superiority complex you care less. It's lonely at the top as they say.

    • @naomihatfield3015
      @naomihatfield3015 Рік тому +11

      And the little shout-out to the Baconator was appreciated, too. ❤

    • @AdrianPerez-hk4ym
      @AdrianPerez-hk4ym Рік тому +8

      The nay-sayers or republicans 😂

    • @jasoncox5263
      @jasoncox5263 Рік тому

      @@AdrianPerez-hk4ym no, if you want to get political it's the democratics that tend to put this country down.

    • @glennthompson8378
      @glennthompson8378 Рік тому +7

      The neigh-sayers and re-pug-icans?

  • @cece8650
    @cece8650 8 місяців тому +5

    Oh, thank goodness, you are staying with us!. We love you.

  • @carolyncomings521
    @carolyncomings521 Рік тому +203

    About American accents... when I was visiting London many years ago, my traveling companion and I (both native Californians) encountered some college students from Georgia (the American Georgia) while riding the tube. We chatted for a bit with those students, and then a nearby English woman remarked, "I just love listening to your accent." Singular. We asked, "Which accent?" And found out that to her ear, we all sounded exactly alike! (We didn't.)

    • @aletmartins6940
      @aletmartins6940 Рік тому +36

      Strange, isn’t it? Same way Americans and British people seem to find it difficult to distinguish between Australian, New Zealand and South African accents… one’s ear has to become attuned to the sounds.

    • @jadebel7006
      @jadebel7006 Рік тому

      YOUR accent..I'd!0t ..u personally have more than 1? Hahahaha brits don't think that..unlike d*mb Americans who think we only have 1

    • @gretchenkiley6615
      @gretchenkiley6615 Рік тому +22

      Yes! As an American, SA, NZ, & Australian accents are similar but quite distinct when you actually listen.

    • @cynthiakeller5954
      @cynthiakeller5954 Рік тому +10

      All the English accents sound the same to me. But I can tell the difference between a UK, AU, SA accent.

    • @silkiilocks
      @silkiilocks Рік тому +27

      That's so weird LOL...The California and Georgia accents couldn't be more different LOL

  • @kymhaubrich9389
    @kymhaubrich9389 Рік тому +138

    This was really special. We really need to count our blessings and appreciate what we've got here in the USA. Thank you for the mintyfresh viewpoint. You made me feel good about being an American which doesn't happen much anymore!

    • @jadebel7006
      @jadebel7006 Рік тому

      It's a sh!th0le.. only the d*mbest ppl like this guy want to be there

  • @joshp8535
    @joshp8535 Рік тому +347

    I want you to know that I started watching you 2 days ago, and still nearly had my heart fall out of my ass when I read that title.

  • @SheRa6100
    @SheRa6100 Рік тому +33

    A friend from Nottingham joined me here in Pittsburgh, Pa and commented on our habit of giving driving directions in time; for example, the restaurant is 10 minutes from here. Love your channel 🙂

  • @MaternalUnit
    @MaternalUnit Рік тому +173

    It's so refreshing to hear positive things about my country! Much criticism of the U.S. is well deserved, but we have wonderful things as well. ❤

    • @8_six7_five3_09
      @8_six7_five3_09 Рік тому +19

      We are far from perfect, but there's no place else I'd rather be. The US is an Amazing country, and I'm proud to be an American!

    • @jwv6985
      @jwv6985 Рік тому +12

      I agree but most criticism of the US is greatly exaggerated or untrue.

    • @klimtkahlo
      @klimtkahlo Рік тому

      You do! The nature, Amazon next day delivery or affordable Amazon; stores, customer service, diners and American breakfast. Friendly people and store employees ( although mostly just fake and looking for a tip, it is nice as the recipient) For truthful friendships look for Europeans, only my personal experience. Oh forgot affordable drivers license and gas prices (relative to Europe anyway), also “home stores”.

    • @klimtkahlo
      @klimtkahlo Рік тому

      @@8_six7_five3_09I suppose you have never travelled to Sweden, Switzerland, Austria, Germany… I recommend, you may change your mind…

    • @8_six7_five3_09
      @8_six7_five3_09 Рік тому +3

      @@klimtkahlo Yes, I have, and no, I didn't. My love for my own country does not equate to an inability to appreciate others. As I said before, I love it here; there's no place else I'd rather be (otherwise I'd go there), and I AM EXTREMELY PROUD TO BE AN AMERICAN. 😊 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @ParkDari
    @ParkDari Рік тому +73

    My family has spent decades visiting the National Parks on vacations. You can get the Park Passport and get it stamped at every National park. Kids can collect commemorative badges when they check in with their passport. My brother collected hat pins and I have a big collection of patches. I plan to frame them soon.

    • @ralphstrickland7110
      @ralphstrickland7110 Рік тому +5

      Having a park passport is great. We love to go get our stamp whenever we visit. Free advice (take it for what it is worth) to anyone considering getting one as a hobby: get the big one. We got the pocket size and we’ve almost filled it up. We’ve been to lots of parks, but there are still plenty we still want to visit.

  • @CasualKillZz
    @CasualKillZz Рік тому +92

    Laurence, I think I speak for a lot of us when I say that you don’t need clickbait, your personality alone is enough for us! Also, you had me in the first half 😂

  • @raeannaroylance5401
    @raeannaroylance5401 Рік тому +156

    I lived in Mexico for 4 years.
    When it was time to go back to the States, it was so bittersweet.
    In Mexico, I felt like an American.
    In the States, I felt like a Mexican.
    🇺🇸 ❤️🤍💙💚 🇲🇽

    • @ellenbryn
      @ellenbryn Рік тому +22

      people are so ridiculous. I wish everybody would live in different places so they'd learn that having neighbors with interesting backgrounds/family history is not a bug but a feature. (Besides, the US is land taken from natives - if we're not going to give it back to them then we really should be welcoming to wverybody, not just those who arrived before a certain date or from certain places)

    • @Ned-Ryerson
      @Ned-Ryerson 11 місяців тому +13

      14 years in Britain, 2 in Austria, 5 in Namibia, 3 in the Netherlands, and a very formative school exchange as a teenager in Australia (just over 3 months, but very important). I have loyalties everywhere, I sometimes forget I am German.

    • @rob585
      @rob585 6 місяців тому +1

      ⁠@@ellenbrynPretty privileged thought to think everybody can move to a foreign country for a bit just because.

    • @thedailywin537
      @thedailywin537 6 місяців тому +3

      @@ellenbryn The past is another country. Dwelling on it distracts one from the relevance of the present. America, as an idea, as a set of values, is worth preserving. That simply won't happen if we foolishly and unthinkingly fail to defend it from those who wish it harm. Don't let this country be destroyed by those who could not have created it!

    • @ghostlyimageoffear6210
      @ghostlyimageoffear6210 4 місяці тому +1

      ​@@thedailywin537 Exactly, could not and would not have created it, yet want to leach its benefits without sacrifice and reciprocation.

  • @gl15col
    @gl15col Рік тому +100

    Rent an RV and go for it. The puppy will love it. I've driven through the Rockies more than once and it's both stunning and terrifying but I managed to survive. There are so many beautiful parks in Michigan, right next door. Thousands of miles of sandy beach, the Porcupine Mountains, 5 dark sky parks. Responsibilities and crappy health kept me from seeing my own country, don't let procrastination do the same to you.

    • @rtyria
      @rtyria Рік тому +4

      It's really rough when health prevents the sorts of adventures I'd like to take. UA-cam videos can help, but it isn't the same.

    • @MonkeyJedi99
      @MonkeyJedi99 Рік тому +3

      Regarding RVs, definitely rent, don't buy.

    • @erinmac4750
      @erinmac4750 Рік тому +4

      Michigan has 5 dark sky parks! That's amazing! I've been missing the Milky Way I saw as a kid, so on my list is to go to dark sky parks.
      Although I am fortunate to live in California, and I think the Sierra is pretty much one long dark sky park. Though I haven't been up there on occasions where I could check that out. Soon, though....
      💜🌎🌌🍀

  • @spanishdncr71
    @spanishdncr71 Рік тому +325

    I imagine moving back home to England when I retire and people thinking I’m a fascinating old lady because I lived most of my adult life in the states. I recently went on a two week road trip and drove 3080 miles through 13 states 1/4 of the country and all of the different scenery we saw along the way was just breathtaking, especially when we saw the smoky mountains. ❤❤❤

    • @LC-fx2lo
      @LC-fx2lo Рік тому +23

      The smoky mountains are magical ❤

    • @JesAusCam18
      @JesAusCam18 Рік тому +10

      Yes! There’s a reason why The Great Smoky Mountains National Park is the most visited park in the US. Well the beauty AND the convenient location.

    • @consciousmoviereviews9730
      @consciousmoviereviews9730 Рік тому +2

      What states did you visit?

    • @spanishdncr71
      @spanishdncr71 Рік тому +6

      @@consciousmoviereviews9730 I visited Savannah Georgia, New Orleans Louisiana and Nashville Tennessee. Drove from New Jersey, through to Delaware, Maryland, Virginia (stayed overnight in VA in both directions) North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee and Pennsylvania, back to NJ.

    • @consciousmoviereviews9730
      @consciousmoviereviews9730 Рік тому +7

      @@spanishdncr71 That's great. You missed going into the Western States towards the Pacific Ocean. There's a different kind of beauty in this region.

  • @nyneeveanya8861
    @nyneeveanya8861 Рік тому +107

    I live in the mountains of North Carolina. This is where my daughter was born and raised. In her junior year of high school she went on a marching band trip to Canada. I tried to prepare her for the flat lands to which she said… mom I’ve been to Georgia and Florida. When she got back she was still in awe of how flat the flat lands were. Without a single rolling hill in sight like Georgia and Florida have. Quite impressive when you’ve lived where the scenery changes every time you go around a curve and the next curve isn’t 50 miles away but only 2..

    • @catg5105
      @catg5105 Рік тому +5

      I am lost. Was she attending an event in the Prairies or in Toronto? British Columbia and Alberta have mountains. There are even steep hills in Quebec City and Montreal or Halifax or St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, to name a few Canadian cities.

    • @llc1976
      @llc1976 Рік тому +7

      I grew up in Urbana Illinois flat 365 degrees the moon at harvest time over the black earth because the harvest is done. Wow. As soon as I see the flat and view my blood pressure lowers

    • @tinydancer_
      @tinydancer_ Рік тому +2

      My daughter lives in Ashville. Never have I seen a more Beautiful Place. I loved touring the Biltmore on my last trip. 🇺🇲💕

    • @markplain2555
      @markplain2555 Рік тому +8

      So there is a story about a guy in Saskatchewan who treated his dog really badly. The dog decided to run away from home. And for 2 weeks this guy watched his dog run away.

    • @alibobo2009
      @alibobo2009 Рік тому

      ​@@markplain2555yeah

  • @SaltyPuglord
    @SaltyPuglord Рік тому +22

    It didn't escape my notice that @6:26 Laurence said: "because **we** have every terrain under the sun". And then I said to myself: "Myself, Laurence is a US Citizen! Has been for a while. He's 100% right to say "we" in this case." I think what I'm trying to say here is: Thanks Laurence, for being awesome! I'm glad you're a citizen of the USA!

  • @kathleenhensley5951
    @kathleenhensley5951 Рік тому +103

    I live in a very rural area of Washington state... I watch the sunsets nearly every clear day. I love the idea that America took a 2 poor Italian families in the early 20th century and gave us a chance to make something of our lives. I will always be grateful to America for that.
    Glad you aren't really leaving. We need people like you.

    • @veramae4098
      @veramae4098 Рік тому +2

      I have never understood anti-immigrant people. We're they're descendents. Yes, it sometimes feel as if we're drowning in Irish or Mexicans or Chinese or Italians, but man oh man oh, they WANT to be here and are going to work hard!
      *U.S. Treasury Dept stats show that every big wave of immigrants (legal or not), after 2 years produce a 2% growth in our economy which is permanent.*
      Yes, I'm glad my Irish great-grandmother brought her little girl here during our Civil War. (She was a teacher and the Brits were busy hanging any teachers they caught. True.) And my peasant Danish ancestors, and maybe a couple more I don't know about.

    • @ghostlyimageoffear6210
      @ghostlyimageoffear6210 4 місяці тому

      ​@@veramae4098Because our new immigrants are too different, want to be here because we already did all the hard work and sacrifice and they get to recreate their cultures while "riding gently down the river of my family's blood", without reciprocation and really without appreciation, while their numbers and non acculturation subsume the people who created the country, the only people in fact who can sustain it in the form it was intended to be.

  • @kathimorrical9912
    @kathimorrical9912 Рік тому +107

    I've been on the planet 74+years, and have seen the wonders of the Rockies, both east and west coast, the view from a mountain top with snow in June, babies born and folks died, but all this was in the US. I was awestruck when visiting England in a 1,000 yr old church ( Chichester cathedral). I love my country, however, the UK has such long lasting history ( and buildings)
    That I can't help but be impressed. I DO appreciate our wide, large plains and mountains, but you're right, driving them can be daunting. Thanks for the vids your channel is one of my favorites!

    • @moxiebombshell
      @moxiebombshell Рік тому +7

      haha, I had similar thoughts, myself! I appreciate many things about the US, but I think of things like how in the UK and I think parts of Europe as well there exists the"right to roam" -- how you can walk across the country, including across land that we in the US would consider private property. Or that one can so easily travel throughout so many countries from the UK -- and how people there can have a regular working class job and still afford to fly to Spain or Italy on holiday (not to mention actually getting the vacation days to do so... and don't get me started on my envy of their access to healthcare !)

    • @abrahamroloff8671
      @abrahamroloff8671 Рік тому +3

      North America has a vast history with ancient cities, and civilizations... we just killed and enslaved those people. Buried and forgot most of their existence.
      I've helped unearth a 300 year old Spanish colonial chappel and I've stood in a thousand+ year old temple here, dedicated to gods long forgotten.

    • @srellison561
      @srellison561 Рік тому +3

      @@abrahamroloff8671 To be fair, some of those civilizations were dead long before Europeans came to North America, so don't overplay the hand that Europeans had. The indigenous peoples were also pretty good at killing each other before Europeans arrived.

    • @lisakurak3733
      @lisakurak3733 Рік тому +1

      I agree about all that English history. I was flabbergasted to learn London's age. In 44 years (2047), London will be 2,000 years old! Hard to believe London was formed about a dozen years after the death of Jesus.

  • @jillkoop5682
    @jillkoop5682 Рік тому +199

    After listening to your video, it is easy to understand why so many Americans never travel outside the country. There is so much to see and so many things to do here. It is hard to get bored! We are very blessed. We are blessed to have you, too, Laurence!❤

    • @Kim-427
      @Kim-427 Рік тому +14

      But,Can I just say that many of us do travel out of America. And don’t forget we can go to Mexico and the Bahamas. Its not Europe but it is a different place of different people and cultures. It’s said that we don’t travel out of the US but it’s in comparison to people that live next door to other countries that costs a very small amount to get to. Lol That’s not fair. For the average person to travel to Europe from the states it would be extremely expensive and not to mention if you have a family.

    • @super1million11
      @super1million11 Рік тому +11

      it's because the country is so big we only have a few different countries near us that are affordable to go to. And they are similar enough that people don't see a reason to travel there unless they live near the border or just really wanna travel there. Some parts of America would actually be insanely expensive for Americans to travel to. International travel can cost thousands just to get there and that doesn't even include cost of a place to stay or any unforseen costs. In places like Europe going to another country can be as easy as traveling to another state for an American. This is coming from an American who really wants to travel to a few other countries I see cost as the main thing stopping me from doing it.

    • @diamondlou1
      @diamondlou1 Рік тому +5

      @@super1million11 Exactly. For Americans to travel to another country (excluding Mexico & Canada), we have to board a plane and fly over thousands of miles of ocean. Heck, it takes 8 hours to get to Hawaii. It's no wonder so many Americans don't bother.

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 Рік тому +1

      First time I left the United States was to go to The Happiest Place on Earth = Tijuana!

    • @FearsomeWarrior
      @FearsomeWarrior Рік тому +6

      Work culture doesn’t help either. So tired. I think about things I want to get done while driving home. When I get home I hit the couch and don’t get up for an hour or two.

  • @kika-ge5qr
    @kika-ge5qr Рік тому +7

    Move to New Jersey. It is the 'diner state'. Thank you for your humor and love.❣️🇺🇸👍

  • @kathleenmorabito4477
    @kathleenmorabito4477 Рік тому +13

    My favorite diner experience is the sounds. I live in a state with few diners after living in NJ, the diner capitol of the world. When I go back to NJ, I always hit a diner. I realize that it’s the sounds that make a diner, a diner. The clattering plates, boisterous conversations, the sound of things sizzling on the griddle. I love them all.

  • @deborahdanhauer8525
    @deborahdanhauer8525 Рік тому +286

    We are glad you’re staying Laurence. We would miss
    1 your funny little face
    2 your funny videos
    3 Tara
    4 your accent
    5 the cat
    6 the dog
    7 Uncle Toby
    8 your glasses
    ❤️🤗🐝

    • @rtyria
      @rtyria Рік тому +20

      9 your humor (or humour).
      10 your interesting trivia

    • @leifewald5117
      @leifewald5117 Рік тому +12

      11 the British flag helmet

    • @suecastillo4056
      @suecastillo4056 Рік тому +12

      All of the above!

    • @JRR0013
      @JRR0013 Рік тому +2

      We would be keeping Tara....and Arthur....and the cat.

    • @AlexKS1992
      @AlexKS1992 Рік тому +6

      I’m still waiting for the day when Uncle Toby makes his first cameo.

  • @peterlively8269
    @peterlively8269 Рік тому +133

    I think it is appropriate that the most emotional Laurence got during the list was for diners.

    • @TheGravityShifter
      @TheGravityShifter Рік тому +9

      The best part is when he nearly broke down seeing the Yellow Bus that happened by

    • @rockybernard2997
      @rockybernard2997 Рік тому +2

      the American Diner isn't what it used to be. I mean, Bob's Big Boy is no more. Everything is specialized anymore. And the prices they get for coffee these days is simply 'no longer diner-ish.'

    • @rainbowvoid2900
      @rainbowvoid2900 10 місяців тому +1

      as an American living in England for the better part of 10 years now I miss diners/American restaurants/food. Everyday 😢

    • @erakfishfishfish
      @erakfishfishfish 10 місяців тому

      I grew up in New Jersey, aka the diner capital of the world. My friends and I would always end the night at one all through high school and college. It’s the only thing I miss since moving out to the west coast. We don’t have real diners out here, just Denny’s.

    • @treetopjones737
      @treetopjones737 10 місяців тому

      @@erakfishfishfish Not true, depending what you mean by "real." They exist, you'll have to search for them, they aren't clustered together, and not many are open 24 hrs.

  • @charitybedo2085
    @charitybedo2085 Рік тому +35

    New subbie here! I love how much you love America! I love it so much that I got goosebumps when you said
    "WE have every terrain under the sun". That "we" really got me and brought tears to my eyes. You're American
    now and always as far as I'm concerned. Thank you so very much for coming here and being a part of our lives.💖🤗

  • @FarmgirlFriday
    @FarmgirlFriday Рік тому +134

    Laurence, I think even many of us Americans that have lived here our whole lives still have a lot of our own country to explore! Hope you get to do more of that soon. I live in the Pacific Northwest and am fortunate enough to have toured a few of the National Parks within driving distance. I can highly recommend Mount Rainier, Yellowstone and the Grand Tetons, Glacier, Arches, Bryce, Zion, and the Grand Canyon. I hope to make it to your half of the country to see some of the parks in the east!

    • @ruthparker9756
      @ruthparker9756 Рік тому +5

      Far too many have never even gotten out of their home state

    • @petergreening4810
      @petergreening4810 Рік тому +4

      Don't forget the Columbia River Gorge & the Mouth of the Columbia, the Olympic Peninsula (with the only temperate rain forest in the world), the San Juan Islands, the Grand Coulee, where to stop. If you didn't guess I am also a Washingtonian.

    • @LindaC616
      @LindaC616 Рік тому

      ​@@petergreening4810you made me feel better that I've gone through CRGorge! I've left places in the States for when I'm too old to go abroad

    • @glenncombs3471
      @glenncombs3471 Рік тому +1

      Well, then, Hello from Puyallup!

    • @allenhill1223
      @allenhill1223 Рік тому +3

      This is true. Just traveling the whole Midwest from Canada to Mexico. Is so massive. And my personal favorite.

  • @donaldc3950
    @donaldc3950 Рік тому +164

    Having traveled in Europe I can say as an American that the best thing about my country is the air conditioning and public restrooms.

    • @rhino5100
      @rhino5100 Рік тому +22

      That reminds me of my first trip to Europe as a teenager (from the US) with a group educational tour. We landed at the airport in Germany and I started looking for a public water fountain. Not finding one, I asked one of the employees at the airport and her deadpan response was "There are no drinking fountains in Europe."

    • @alisaaustin8431
      @alisaaustin8431 Рік тому +11

      Yeah, I had a hard time finding a restroom in southern Ireland. I sang, It's a Long way to Tipperary. It's a long way to Goooooooo" on my way to a Tipperary restroom.

    • @malapoyo
      @malapoyo Рік тому +18

      RESTROOMS!
      Yes! NO-PAY restrooms.
      I had to pay to wee in The Netherlands! 😡
      AND I had to pay for WATER! 🤷

    • @cynthiakeller5954
      @cynthiakeller5954 Рік тому +3

      @@malapoyo We would pay one time for the stall and let as many people go through. Also I hate making reservations for an evening meal, probably bc I hate being on time.

    • @amyschmelzer6445
      @amyschmelzer6445 Рік тому +2

      @@FavoriteThings606Ice is overrated. We visited Scotland and France last summer. I think they only put ice in our drinks because they heard our American accents. I don’t put ice in my drinks any more. I pretty much only use my ice maker for quickly cooling down things like boiled eggs or when blanching tomatoes to remove the skins.

  • @brmnyc
    @brmnyc Рік тому +22

    I think this is just about the best video you ever posted, and as an American, I can only say "Thank You".

    • @BTinSF
      @BTinSF Рік тому

      Except the part about his cat not being his greatest love. I can hardly face my own cat after hearing that.

  • @davidanthony4845
    @davidanthony4845 5 місяців тому +9

    One of my favorite moments, when my wife and I were going to Vermont, was, after flying into NYC, stopping at a classic aluminum diner in Connecticut and watching her leaf through the 16-page menu.

  • @PatFarrellKTM
    @PatFarrellKTM Рік тому +117

    I lived in the Washington area, and my wife worked for the Smithsonian Institute. Relatives from far away would come visit and say "Tomorrow we are going to do the Smithsonian" and we would shake our heads. I've spent at least a month in one of the Smithsonian's museums. The Smithsonian has 21 separate museums. Doing a decent job at visiting any one will take at least a few days. Doing all of them would take a couple of months.

    • @paulyguitary7651
      @paulyguitary7651 Рік тому +11

      I tend to think when people say they “going to the Smithsonian” they are most of the time talking about either the History Museum, American History Museum, or Air and Space Museum. They either want to see Dinos, Archie Bunkers chair or the space capsule. Last one I went to was The Native American museum. Parked across the Potomac from Reagan National and walked, as always.

    • @erinmac4750
      @erinmac4750 Рік тому +5

      I haven't been to the Smithsonian in forever! As someone who made regular trips with my parents from ever since I can remember, I've been to all of them, though now it's been a couple decades...and I'm on the opposite coast.
      Thank you for reminding me of a trip I definitely want to take with my kids. We wouldn't be able to cover everything, but they'd get an idea. What an incredible legacy.
      💜🌎🍀

    • @PatFarrellKTM
      @PatFarrellKTM Рік тому +5

      @@erinmac4750 If you can, do the Udvar-Hazy extended Air-and-Space out at Dulles Airport. They have more. More planes, more engines, more technology.

    • @PatFarrellKTM
      @PatFarrellKTM Рік тому +9

      @@paulyguitary7651 Yes, but that makes the point, folks from outside the DC area just can't comprehend how big the Smithsonian is. Some folks can spend days on just the gems portion of the Natural History museum. When I was a teenager, I went many times to what was then called "science and technology" and is now called American History.

    • @Oldleftiehere
      @Oldleftiehere Рік тому +2

      Love the Smithsonians especially the Native American Museum.

  • @Dingomush
    @Dingomush Рік тому +66

    That was a great piece, my man! What a wonderful way to lay out all of your favorite things about your new country. You make the rest of us proud!

  • @topaz3468
    @topaz3468 Рік тому +52

    I grew up in the era of Mom and Pop diners. My family and grandparents would meet up at different diners after church on Sundays. Grandpa would always give me a quarter, which was a lot for a kid back then. Such fond memories... and you're right Lawrence -- most of them are all gone now 🥺

    • @xXx_Regulus_xXx
      @xXx_Regulus_xXx Рік тому +5

      there are still some good ones left, and chains like waffle house and denny's come pretty close as long as the staff are decent

    • @jadebel7006
      @jadebel7006 Рік тому

      We have them in every town of the uk..there's called cafes..this guys r3tarded

  • @lovelylavenderr
    @lovelylavenderr Рік тому +32

    There's so many things that us Americans take for granted that we have in our everyday life and don't think about not having. Seeing foreigners or foreigners who live/study in America appreciate the US helps me appreciate it more even if there are many things that disgust and anger me about it. Each country has its good and bad and we all need to remember that more.

  • @laurac1902
    @laurac1902 Рік тому +27

    Even though you did not accurately guess the Texan accent, when you were trying to recreate what you initially thought was the Alabama accent, it sounded exactly like a Texan. So your accent replication is accurate and that’s a win!

  • @janiceforaker8473
    @janiceforaker8473 Рік тому +37

    I love that you post positive things about America. We NEED this now. I'm SURE there's great things about Britain, but "America bashing" seems to be the thing to do now, and your videos are quite refreshing! Thanks! ❤️❤️

  • @elizabethtorrales7170
    @elizabethtorrales7170 Рік тому +17

    Laurence, every time I listen to your stories it reminds me when my son was five years old. That boy had an imagination and lots of questions. I had a great time being his mother. He is now grown up and reserved, but I still remember when he used to make me laugh and I had to turn my head so that he didn't he me laughing. He could go on and on for hours until he felt he needed a nap. I could also listen to you weaving stories one after the other for hours.

  • @angrytedtalks
    @angrytedtalks 10 місяців тому +6

    As a fellow Brit who has actually been to Grimsby...
    I have been to Yellowstone twice, Yosemite (Yoss-a-might), many Redwood forests, Zion, Bryce, Arches, the Grand Canyon (North, South and West), Crater Lake, Lake Tahoe, Florida Keys, Everglades, Miami, Tampa, Orlando (all parks), New York, Chicago, LA, San Diego, Seattle, Omaha (yes), Boston, RI, Portland (Maine and Washington), Pitsburg, Buffalo, Phoenix and Denver.
    I also enjoy diners.
    But the fish in Grimsby...
    Your Texas and Alabama accents were pretty good BTW!

  • @kevinwallis2194
    @kevinwallis2194 Рік тому +372

    Something about this country that has at least something for everybody. So many things unique to each state too.

    • @ericjohnson7234
      @ericjohnson7234 Рік тому +3

      yeah, like pverty homelessness and crime.

    • @BigMoore1232
      @BigMoore1232 Рік тому

      ​@ericjohnson7234 If you're from another country stay there and if you're from the U.S leave. We don't want you lol

    • @lancekirkwood7922
      @lancekirkwood7922 Рік тому +5

      @@ericjohnson7234 and towers where people live at the cost of 15 million dollars +

    • @viewman86
      @viewman86 Рік тому +37

      Everywhere has its problems. I could dive into them, but this is a positive focused video. Nothing wrong with appreciating the good and honestly beautiful things. On a different note. I'd take a perfect San Francisco sunset. Or a day out snowboarding. Or a hike through the Appalachians (a short one). And some southern bbq or jumbalaya or Friday night fish fry at my local spot in WI. This country and all have plenty to hate on but also lots to love

    • @Earthly_Being
      @Earthly_Being Рік тому +7

      @@ericjohnson7234Lmao Debbie downer. You forgot smoke shops.

  • @Sean__F
    @Sean__F Рік тому +110

    Laurence's impersonation of a Southern accent was spot on, he said he thought it was Alabama but I instinctively heard it as a Texan accent and was proven right... at least inside my own head.

    • @zaram131
      @zaram131 Рік тому +9

      Same here! As soon as I heard it, I said that is Texas!

    • @morganseppy5180
      @morganseppy5180 Рік тому +2

      It was definitely "suthern".

    • @maidenminnesota1
      @maidenminnesota1 Рік тому

      I heard Forest Gump, but...

    • @nthgth
      @nthgth Рік тому +1

      I'm a lifelong American (northeast) and I wouldn't know a Floridian accent from Texas or Alabama.
      I'm hoping my approaching trip to TX will teach me lol

    • @morganseppy5180
      @morganseppy5180 Рік тому +2

      @@nthgth Texas, Alabama, Louisiana!, Kentucky, Tennessee, both Carolinas, and Georgia accrnts are all different. Same with the north east.
      There's a Vice(?) video with an accent/language coach who goes through all the accents down the northeastern states that is amazing.

  • @chrisoberg6888
    @chrisoberg6888 Рік тому +46

    Been following you for years, Lawrence. So happy for you that you are now a fellow American :) we have our problems but it's nice to see some positivity!

  • @galerae947
    @galerae947 Рік тому +22

    I live in America, but I miss lazy hours passed in Barnes & Noble bookstores, with a hot coffee drink and a special nibble. Used to love sitting by the window on rainy or snowy days.

    • @leavingitblank9363
      @leavingitblank9363 9 місяців тому

      Why can't you still do that???

    • @galerae947
      @galerae947 9 місяців тому

      @@leavingitblank9363 my little town doesn't have a bookstore.

    • @leavingitblank9363
      @leavingitblank9363 9 місяців тому

      @@galerae947 We're down to one B&N and one used book store. We used to have a book store with a fireplace. It was the best.

    • @ComiCBoY000
      @ComiCBoY000 9 місяців тому

      @@galerae947 Business opportunity perhaps?

  • @susanunger2278
    @susanunger2278 Рік тому +177

    After all that work which you've put into your new house, I knew you weren't leaving the USA :)

    • @tbonejenkins8807
      @tbonejenkins8807 Рік тому +15

      Not to mention becoming a citizen.

    • @susanunger2278
      @susanunger2278 Рік тому

      @@tbonejenkins8807 Absolutely

    • @charlieann456
      @charlieann456 Рік тому +13

      He couldn't live without a basement.

    • @noma5050
      @noma5050 Рік тому +1

      I didn't know, for long enough, and I had just been doing my civic duty by watching news (no, not MSM).

    • @BigMoore1232
      @BigMoore1232 Рік тому +3

      ​@cfryling7781 not in the midwest...a tornado could hit at any moment lol

  • @mbryson2899
    @mbryson2899 Рік тому +51

    My better half and I recently moved from California to Oregon. Our new place has an 800-900 year old redwood in the front yard, plus a cedar, a black oak, and a pear tree.
    Lots of visiting wildlife, too: a raccoon, screaming jays, squirrels, spiders, peculiarly cooperative wasps, a beautiful garter snake who tuckered himself out on our chilly lino floor, a frantic pencil-wide 2" long caterpillar, and a skunk.
    I'm a lucky person!

    • @mamanoneyall51
      @mamanoneyall51 Рік тому +5

      You have a new version of the twelfth day of Christmas 🎄

    • @Cam-vz2zk
      @Cam-vz2zk Рік тому +1

      I left too and I'm just glad to be out of Cali....

  • @monikaweld5567
    @monikaweld5567 Рік тому +31

    You know, as an immigrant from Germany, I must agree with your list. I, too, absolutely love diners...and trees! ❤

    • @sunnyhill8179
      @sunnyhill8179 Рік тому +1

      And I, an American, was privileged to live in Germany for nearly 3 years (over 50 years ago). I LOVED the parts of GY that I got to see and I enjoyed meeting very special German people!

    • @WesB1972
      @WesB1972 4 місяці тому

      As a native born U S citizen I have always wanted to visit Bavaria and stay at the Zum Turkem hotel, so much history there.

  • @annecosgrove2133
    @annecosgrove2133 Рік тому +55

    Thanks for the shout out about Pennsylvania. We have been all over the US and Canada in a car, and we know we’re home when we get to PA because of the landscape change, trees and gentle green mountains. My adult children think PA is the dark side of the moon, but I am always refreshed by the beautiful, peaceful hills and farmland (we live a half hour from Gettysburg) and how they look in each season. Thanks.

    • @SpunkMcKullins
      @SpunkMcKullins Рік тому +4

      I just got back froma trip up to Scranton last week for a wedding and was blown away by how beautiful it was. I'm from the midwest plains, so it's all flat, grassy, sea-level fields. Still beautiful in its own right, but the Pocono's can only be described as stunning.

    • @danielflanagan3325
      @danielflanagan3325 Рік тому +2

      717 Represent!

    • @Alboalt
      @Alboalt Рік тому

      @@danielflanagan3325 Whoop, whoop!

    • @Priscilla-Prancercise
      @Priscilla-Prancercise Рік тому +1

      I was very impressed by the beauty of PA when I visited in Fall. It’s getting way too hot in Tennessee, thanks to Climate Change, so I may have to move there.

  • @mikki3961
    @mikki3961 Рік тому +282

    America is like 50 individual countries! From the East Coast to the West there are so many regional differences. Food, culture, language, climate. Travel enriches and teaches. Love Ya Laurence!

    • @veziculorile
      @veziculorile Рік тому +8

      it's not actually. Keep telling yourself that to feel more special

    • @CR1T1KaL714
      @CR1T1KaL714 Рік тому +45

      Umm actually it is....stay mad you little dolt
      @@veziculorile

    • @veziculorile
      @veziculorile Рік тому

      @@CR1T1KaL714 burgerland is one big cesspool of fatties. There isn't any culture just cheap imitation. The EU is an actual diverse place far superior to burgerland USA. Stay mad with expensive healthcare and 2 week long annual vacation.

    • @Rebecca-pr6wk
      @Rebecca-pr6wk Рік тому +5

      Amen to THAT mikki3964 🎉😊

    • @dg-hughes
      @dg-hughes Рік тому +23

      That's why the USA has states and not provinces. Each state has far more power over its own affairs than a province would.

  • @Nrscathy60
    @Nrscathy60 Рік тому +23

    Lawrence, I loved this video! It was so heartwarming. You are right about it all. I'm 63 and Just recently saw Yellowstone. It was the most... what, poignant moment of my life? It was so surreal. I was fascinated and scared at the same time. Everyone must see Yellowstone once in their life. I've never imagined a place like this. It's like being on another planet. It is truly a must see!

  • @hydro_storm4527
    @hydro_storm4527 Рік тому +51

    I always find it fun to see what people not originally from the US say they liked the most about it, and it's always stuff that I take for granted. The mom and pop restaurant down the street, the mountains I live in, etc etc. All things I don't really think about too much until I watch videos or listen to someone's reaction.

    • @tago69mago671
      @tago69mago671 11 місяців тому +8

      I've watched youtube vids of Americans living here in the UK make the same lists about what they like here and I agree with you. Its all stuff we take for granted but at the same time mostly unique to the UK.

    • @TheGiantKillers
      @TheGiantKillers 6 місяців тому

      Road trip thing is interesting as my American brother in law's number one love about living in the UK is having 60 countries within a 4 hour flight.

  • @topaz3468
    @topaz3468 Рік тому +32

    Great video as always Lawrence! BTW, it's not just the accent that is sometimes a hint as to where each American is from, but more so the pronunciation of different words. At university 40 + years ago, my linguistics professor made the students memorize linguistics maps he developed for the US. The geographic boundaries each contained their own pronunciations and distinctive words that were seldom used in other parts of the country. We also traced the origin of each dialect to the European country the immigrants were from who settled there. Most of the South was settled by British immigrants from specific regions of the UK.

    • @MrQuetzalLover
      @MrQuetzalLover Рік тому +1

      What were some Washington/PNW specific pronunciations?!

  • @pamelasimone5084
    @pamelasimone5084 Рік тому +27

    That was a very emotional video. Please never leave because we would really miss you and your wonderful monologues about the lost memos. As someone pointed out you are one of us now so we welcome you with open arms. Besides you still have so many places to see.
    I really hope you and Mrs Brown get an RV and go on a great road trip with Arthur and the cat. You can see Yosemite, Yellowstone, Grand Teton, and Mount Rushmore. You can go wine tasting in Napa Valley, take a cruise to Alaska, or go east and take in the Smithsonian, the Capital Building, Mount Vernon, and Monticello.
    I’ve lived in America all of my life but I’ve lived in several states. My home state is Ohio and I returned here recently. I’ve lived in California, Virginia, Florida, Indiana, Chicago, Maryland, West Virginia, and Pennsylvania. I spent some time in Utah, Missouri, Connecticut, and North Carolina. I’ve visited New York, Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Tennessee, Kentucky, Georgia, Colorado, and Kansas.
    I’ve taken trips to Canada and Mexico. I even had a chance to visit Liverpool in the UK. I got to see the Mersey and even went pub crawling.
    Everyone I met was really nice and friendly. I found some differences that took me by surprise. They thought it was funny that I found names of restaurants were funny.
    Stay safe and I’m looking forward to your next video.

  • @kimg4652
    @kimg4652 Рік тому +19

    When you decide to visit Yellowstone keep in mind that Glacier National Park is a half a day drive away. You can do both! I look forward to that video.

  • @languageworm9879
    @languageworm9879 8 місяців тому +2

    This video warmed my heart, as an American living in the UK for about 5 years so far! Thank you for pointing out the beauty of America that you've grown to appreciate! I feel the same about England. It makes me sad to think about the day when we will move away from here ❤

  • @thom8728
    @thom8728 Рік тому +33

    Lawrence, as a fellow American, you make me appreciate this country more and more!

    • @johnjones3813
      @johnjones3813 Рік тому

      Turn on the news, you'll be snapped back to reality.

    • @MrJest2
      @MrJest2 Рік тому

      @@johnjones3813 That's presuming the "news" is even remotely real...

  • @Psianth
    @Psianth Рік тому +47

    If you're interested in wildlife put up a hummingbird feeder! I've lived here in chicagoland my whole life and never knew we had them here until I met someone with a feeder, you almost never see them otherwise, and they're fascinating to watch. And this is the time of year they really go nuts for them.

    • @margietucker1719
      @margietucker1719 Рік тому +2

      Yes! It's migration time. They need to quadruple their body weight for the long journey to Mexico and Central America. In my part of Texas, our main hummer is the Black-Chinned variety. Guess who's also showing up at my feeders now? Ruby Throats! Ruby Throats from up North, and East...are starting their long migration. Let's help them fuel up for their journey❤

    • @sunnyhill8179
      @sunnyhill8179 Рік тому +1

      My HS classmates & I would gather each summer in eastern Tenn. We had all grown graduated from a school in Louisiana. They lived in a beautiful farmhouse whose back deck extended end to end. They had at times over 200 hummingbirds visit their many feeders. They also had a beautiful waterfall in the backyard as the house was on the edge of a cliff. So lovely!

    • @zaram131
      @zaram131 Рік тому +1

      Because they’re going to be migrating south in a few weeks. If you put up a hummingbird feeder now, you will not have long to watch them. 😅

    • @Psianth
      @Psianth Рік тому +1

      @@zaram131 Very true, they're after those calories for the long trip and there aren't many flowers with nectar still around so they're all over the feeders constantly right now. I mention it because I was in my 30's living in this area before I even realized they lived here. They're so fast you might not even know they exist here unless you give them a reason to stop by (favorite flowers or a feeder). And they don't exist in the UK at all. They wont be around for much longer this year but they'll be searching hard for them.

    • @Psianth
      @Psianth Рік тому +1

      @@margietucker1719 Very cool! It's almost exclusively ruby throats around here, funny how they seem to leave in batches. And the males seem to go first, It's almost all females hanging around here now.

  • @rick262
    @rick262 Рік тому +50

    In addition to your sense of humor, one thing I really like about your channel is that you live here and you're able to offer impressions that have more depth than when people just travel here and stay for a couple of weeks. Great work!

    • @sunnyhill8179
      @sunnyhill8179 Рік тому +2

      And, he has been able to enjoy parts of the US that most visitors never get to experience. Plus, he was a lover of America from childhood.

  • @juliannehunter495
    @juliannehunter495 10 місяців тому +9

    Nice seeing your mention of Lake Michigan. I live not far from the shoreline in Wisconsin and I never, ever take it for granted. They're called the Great Lakes for a reason.

    • @BlargBlarg-z7k
      @BlargBlarg-z7k 9 місяців тому

      i keep putting up for a new name for Lake Michigan. the last time the petition got to Congress. the Golf Of Canada.

  • @NextExiter
    @NextExiter Рік тому +27

    You nailed it with diners, and glad the experience can be felt even for a late-comer. Some of the best experiences as a kid and young adult. You'd go to one on the weekend, on trips, after a show, after a dance, before a hike. So they're closely associated with and also packaged with many of life's best memories.

  • @ShadowOfADoubt9
    @ShadowOfADoubt9 Рік тому +35

    I love how highly you speak about the US. 🇺🇸

  • @rollandredland
    @rollandredland Рік тому +28

    This was an absolutely lovely video. Happy you're loving the States and happy to have you.

  • @kilo21swp
    @kilo21swp 10 місяців тому +8

    Sunsets off the Pacific Ocean, or the eastern shore of Lake Michigan in Grand Haven, are truly breathtaking sometimes.

    • @ColorJoyLynnH
      @ColorJoyLynnH 4 місяці тому

      Michigan resident here. People who have not seen Lake Michigan do not understand how much of an ocean it really is. And yes, grand Haven is beautiful but go north of there up to sleeping bear dunes. It’s a federal park for a reason.

  • @shilohmjh7628
    @shilohmjh7628 Рік тому +8

    Oooh Laurence, we would miss you so very much! I do so enjoy your videos very much. As a bit of an Anglophile myself, it’s neat to experience my home country through a Brit’s eyes.

  • @abipoole2859
    @abipoole2859 Рік тому +25

    I have lived in Lancaster, Pennsylvania for most of my life (minus college, which was in Winona Lake, Indiana), and I still have never been to the Tetons or the Grand Canyon (well, I flew over it once) or Yosemite. It was nice to be reminded that there are lots of treasures right here at home that would take a lifetime for me to experience. Glad you’re staying.

    • @lijohnyoutube101
      @lijohnyoutube101 Рік тому

      Go, get out, enjoy the world! Granted Lancaster is beautiful its like a painting of green rolling hills.
      Go see Zion!

  • @glenncombs3471
    @glenncombs3471 Рік тому +15

    I love your sense of humor, dude! People complaining about clickbait just don't get it... Keep these vids coming. You're much appreciated.

  • @elvyfoster7455
    @elvyfoster7455 Рік тому +10

    I grew up in the Chicagoland area, and the sunsets truly are amazing.
    My dad fostered my love of diners. He was one of those guys who sat at the counter nursing that bottomless cup of coffee, chatting with the servers behind the counter and other patrons. My favorite diner was run by a Greek couple with no employees would come in, the wife would ask if they wanted the usual, and the customer would go behind the counter and get drinks for themselves. When strangers came in and just sat down, a regular would ask what they wanted to drink and get it for them. It was just the best.

  • @milkshake123abc
    @milkshake123abc Рік тому +16

    When my husband and I visited London in '99 I was hungry to hear English accents. Just absolutely love it. Can't get enough of it. So many good things about life in America. We need to appreciate it more. Philly lady here. Glad you enjoyed Pennsylvania.

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG Рік тому

      I'm surprised you heard many real 'English' accents in London, no joke, it's so full of foreigners these days, you must have gotten off the tourist areas.

  • @engletinaknickerbocker5380
    @engletinaknickerbocker5380 Рік тому +10

    When my son was discharged from the psychiatric hospital, in an effort to get out and about, we decided to visit each of 92 counties of Indiana, and stop in a diner and order a piece of pie and a cup of coffee. Some places just warm up a frozen pie, but others are freshly baked.

  • @lisad8388
    @lisad8388 Рік тому +15

    Thank you for reminding me what is the best of America. I have to say, lately I 've forgotten.

  • @ixchelssong
    @ixchelssong Рік тому +4

    Just want to say that in NJ where I live, there are 3 diners within a 15 minute drive from my house. YUM!

  • @tubamansmom7012
    @tubamansmom7012 Рік тому +6

    I love diners too. One of the things I love about them., at least at the ones Ive been too, are the old men that gather every morning for their cup of coffee and conversation and who know their servers by name and servers know theirs. Its also just the food. Comfort food. The staff are really what sets the diners apart from most places. There is a relationship that builds with customers and staff-and I love that. The diners are very much part of the community.

  • @five-toedslothbear4051
    @five-toedslothbear4051 Рік тому +21

    0:37 Oh, thank goodness, Laurence. You really had me there for a minute. And I don’t need Clickbait to watch your videos… I am right now exercising and watching anime and got a UA-cam notification and now I’m watching your video, so there.

  • @MissKellyBean
    @MissKellyBean Рік тому +10

    Omg you did a Texan accent so well, Laurence! As soon as you said “Alabama?”, I thought, “no, that is clearly a Texas accent!” (I’m from Austin, btw). Great re-enactment!

  • @vociferonheraldofthewinter2284
    @vociferonheraldofthewinter2284 Рік тому +33

    I don't understand why in the world this couple hasn't bought a nice RV (or a van - vanlife is quite the rage right now) and gone on an extended tour through the Rocky Mountains. I grew up there. What a privilege. Once you experience the Rockies, nothing can compare. From the forests of the Tetons to the stunning geography of Utah to the Grand Canyon, it's a new experience every hundred miles or so.

    • @squiddwizzard8850
      @squiddwizzard8850 11 місяців тому +10

      They're expensive

    • @treetopjones737
      @treetopjones737 10 місяців тому +2

      You might expect Alaska ( that very cold state has the highest ) to have the most mountains of all the states, but California actually outperforms the last Frontier by nearly 100 mountains. Overall, California has more than 400 mountains and major peaks, with incredible views all throughout the state of all terrain types.

    • @amberlindsey7112
      @amberlindsey7112 9 місяців тому

      I currently live in So Utah. I live the red rock in the mornings with the sunrise. Then when I go to No Utah I miss having lived there and the mountains. They are definitely not the same as the ones at this end of the state. It could be two different states with just with the scenery differences.

    • @leavingitblank9363
      @leavingitblank9363 9 місяців тому +1

      @@squiddwizzard8850 You can rent them!

    • @evelynreynolds1447
      @evelynreynolds1447 5 місяців тому

      Brits make fun of “caravans”, travel trailers. These are popular but also not loved by Brits, so these apparently are looked down upon and maybe that’s why this man and his wife don’t have an RV or a travel trailers.

  • @joannabeu951
    @joannabeu951 Рік тому +20

    I love the drive from Chicago through Pennsylvania. It’s fascinating to watch the land change as you travel through Ohio.

  • @nspires1
    @nspires1 Рік тому +24

    As an American (Californian) who's spent a lot of time in England, and has done the reverse to you (ie: I now live in Portugal), I just wanna say one thing: GET YOUR ARSE TO YOSEMITE! (Or any of them). Do it NOW!!!! 😀 Loving your channel! Love your personality. (You remind me of a cross between Robin Leach and Ricky Gervais). 😀 Love your linguistic "analysis" of our "common" languages. Love your shares on what it's like to be a "transplant" in a different culture. And I love seeing my "homeland" through your eyes. I (almost) feel what the Portuguese call "saudade" for it all. Almost. 😜 (The sunsets here in Portugal are 'as', if not 'more', drop-dead gorgeous. But the trees of California! OMG, how I miss them).

  • @DarkLadyPhoenix
    @DarkLadyPhoenix Рік тому +94

    The most difficult thing I found about living in Japan for a time was the loss of the 24 hour diners. The 24 hour supermarkets! I worked night shift in Japan so the loss of the ability to go out and get food and supplies when I needed was well, needed.
    I sorely miss my call center job because I do love the "guess the accent" game. I got really good at telling the difference between Texan, Alabama, Tennessee and Kentucky accents.

    • @DW-lb6hw
      @DW-lb6hw Рік тому +11

      ​@@xionmemoriaI mean, to most of us, they sound exactly the same lol. Some a little twangy-er than others, but they mostly all sound the same to me.
      -signed the East Coast

    • @bruceleealmighty
      @bruceleealmighty Рік тому +3

      It really depends where you live. That goes for just about anyplace in the world. In many metropolitan areas of Japan you can find 24 hour places to get things. The biggest difference is you don't find vending machines in America half as much as Japan.

    • @gj8683
      @gj8683 Рік тому +2

      I don't know how it is now in Japan, but when I lived there 32 years ago, you had to memorize which stores would be open on which days as well as the opening hours.

    • @bruceleealmighty
      @bruceleealmighty Рік тому +1

      @@gj8683 Yeah, that's still the case, but it's more of a rural thing or relative ruralality if you will. The further you go from city center or from metro areas the more often you will come across various days and times of operation. I use to think it was strange that certain stores were open only during certain months and seasons, but it's not unlike Halloween, Independence (4th of July), even Christmas places that pop up in the US. I find the Manga thing the most difficult to follow. It's practically everywhere, but there is nothing to find in consistent form.

    • @TheGreatAtario
      @TheGreatAtario Рік тому

      Aren't konbinis open 24/7?

  • @carlhudson83
    @carlhudson83 11 місяців тому +6

    Hey Laurence! I'm a fellow Brit from Boston, Lincolnshire.. Home of Bell's Pumpkin Patch!
    I've been touring the States a fair bit with a band for the past decade, and one of the best drives we ever took on a tourbus was from Salt Lake City to Minneapolis..
    If you ever get the chance to cross South Dakota, you'll see not only how beautifully desolate it is, but also how it feels more than a little bit like driving across the Fens in the UK..
    But for hours and hours and hours!
    Very much enjoying your videos sir, bravo! X

  • @spiercephotography
    @spiercephotography Рік тому +47

    Don't worry Laurence; I'm an American and I still cry when I get to my favorite National parks for vacation (any time I can) even when I've visited them more than 10 times so far. it's a "normal" thing, some of them (well, most of them) are quite stunning and gorgeous! Hell, i cry when I'm missing them because i wasn't able to go a particular year and such too. Such a sweet video, so glad you're here and enjoying all the US has to offer!
    If you need help getting an interinary going for Yellowstone/Grand Teton/Glacier etc, let me know and I'll be happy to pass on some recommendations!

    • @cindyleehaddock3551
      @cindyleehaddock3551 Рік тому

      If you can, plan ahead and drive to Grand Tetons / Yellowstone. I did that a few years back in the off season. Just wait until late May--I did it when the park first opened in early May and got chased all the way to Denver by a bad blizzard that had them closing the highways behind me as I fled. The parks were great, and very few people, plenty of wildlife!

  • @suzannesellers7383
    @suzannesellers7383 Рік тому +15

    Laurence I live in the metropolitan Atlanta area which is called City in the Forest. We have coyotes, foxes, deer, armadillos and even black bears besides the myriad of squirrels. A friend from Switzerland was shocked by the animals here and how we just ignore them.

    • @sitara68
      @sitara68 Рік тому +1

      I wouldn't say we ignore them. We cohabitate with them. I'm currently struggling with some field mice who have eaten all my baby cucumbers. 😅

  • @TeamSakuraKC
    @TeamSakuraKC Рік тому +117

    I lived in Tokyo for 3 years, and I could absolutely identify with your trees and wildlife mentions. Tokyo is such a massive sprawling behemoth compared to even America's biggest cities, and there's so much concrete and buildings everywhere with very little green. Because of little habitats for animals, there's not many animals either, with the primary ones you'll see being crows. But because Tokyo is kept so clean, even crows are not as common as pigeons in most American cities. I did take trips outside of Tokyo, but it's surprising how far you have to go to find somewhere that isn't also concrete jungle or is rural farmland (many rice paddies!). You don't have to go as far to find that in America, no matter which state you live in.
    I very much loved Japan and I do want to visit it again someday. When I do hopefully I'll have more opportunities to see natural areas full of trees and wildlife.

    • @pucky900
      @pucky900 Рік тому +4

      I so is. I was lucky enough to be down in Iwakuni and Niigata Pref. We had trees and green. Remember one time in Tokyo. We sought the highest observatory we could find just so that we could find some green. All we saw was grey concrete as far as we could see.

    • @bethsojourner6798
      @bethsojourner6798 Рік тому +4

      When you go back go to Towada National Park. It's up north and absolutely gorgeous. It's very green and lush. Driving thru it you come upon streams cutting down a steep hillside thru ferns and sometimes shrouded in mist. I loved my time in Japan and I'm glad I was in northern Honshu.

    • @poonyaTara
      @poonyaTara Рік тому +2

      I lived in Ikebukuro and was told how beautiful this park in Tokyo was, so I went there. It had a tree. One tree. I'm from the Midwest--I have hundreds of trees in my backyard.

  • @BookishDark
    @BookishDark 10 місяців тому +7

    This was so lovely. We live in a time of exaggerated cynicism AND exaggerated enthusiasm - earnestness is damn lovely. And as an American, it’s especially lovely to hear a Brit (now American, too, of course) talk about the things they actually LIKE about us! 😂❤

  • @WardyLion
    @WardyLion Рік тому +10

    I love American Diners too! We have imitations of them here in the UK but whenever I visit the US (wife and in laws are American) I have at least a couple of diner breakfasts.
    American breakfasts are my fave and I just love going into a diner, eating enough breakfast to cave the table in and then being handed a bill for $12 for the two of us.
    That’s not an exaggeration, that actually happened on our honeymoon. Shout out to Mom’s Country Kitchen in Front Royal, VA!

    • @katw3070
      @katw3070 Рік тому +1

      Did you go on the beautiful Skyline Drive? The entrance is in Front Royal.

    • @WardyLion
      @WardyLion Рік тому +1

      @@katw3070 We did head that way, yes. We also went into the Skyline Caverns.
      Last time we were up that way, in 2021, I got an international drivers permit so I could drive my sister in law’s car (once insured, obviously) and not drop hundreds on a hire car. The twisting, turning forest / mountain roads were a delight for someone like me and I’m glad she had a car suited for roads like that!