The clip where he pukes in his mouth is an interview from the European parliament election, they all had a set amount of time to answer all their questions, hence the timer. Kudos to the guy, from what I remember reading he happened to be sick that day but managed to do the interview anyway. Stress from the interview probably didn't help the upset stomach either.
'E' is short for 'En', meaning '! don't', 'I won't' or 'I haven't' depending on the question, to which one doesn't want to take part enough to give that 'n' in the answer. In the following part of that meme series there's a kid, who seriously trolls a nosy journalist.
Ye its the opposite. Halloween has a festival atmosphere while virpominen is.. well its for the kids whatever it is. Not wedding. Utterly useless thing when you´re supposed to be on your best behaviour since some random kids might come ringing your doorbell to get candy. Kids under the age of consent that is.
Pekka Pouta is THE most legendary meteorologist in Finland, and is one of the most known Finns within Finland. His passion for weather is inspiring, real professional taking the whole weather thing serious, but with that sort of authentic and laid back attitude that people love.
Rally english is a byproduct of the Finnish language. Finnish is a phonetic language, which means that every single letter is always pronounced the same way. There is no "ough" problem where you can think of at least 4 ways to pronounce "ough" in English (or you know, how English regularly uses the phonetic alphabet to help with pronunciation. That's what the (ðə) that bracket thing is). So, rally English takes a bit of how english is spoken and mixes it with how a Finnish speaking person would say the word. Edit: also to kinda explain the Pekka Pouta thing. Pouta means something along the lines of 'fair weather' or 'no rain'. The guy became a legend, because he's funny but also his last name is what he'd have to report as weather. It's like some british fellow was named Richard Stormy and became a meteorologist. And if you find that funny, we almost had a gay president who is also a dj. Unfortunately, we aren't that based yet.
Virpominen In finland has largely become a mix of orthodox virpomis-tradition from the east, where kids decorate willow branches and the Easter witch/troll tradition from the west / Sweden. Most kids nowadays dress up as witches and decorate the willow branches instead of only doing one of them.
Pekka Pouta is also a widely known metalhead. I was at Nosturi(rip) watching Kotiteollisuus back in the day when all of the sudden the front man Hynynen goes "Vittu. Täällä on Pekka Pouta" (I wont bother to translate coz of things) and the crowd started cheering like crazy. Good times.
Anything between -25 degrees and +25 degrees Celsius is normal in May. Add five degrees in either direction for the extremes. We can go from having one meter of snow on the ground into an actual heatwave in a span of two to three weeks these days.
If you want to check out another popular Finnish channel, famous for its "Rally English" (spoken by the hosts) is the "Hydraulic Press Channel" and its spin-off "Beyond the Press". The first one focuses on crushing things with... you guessed it, a hydraulic press. The second one is a bit more broad in its content and they do other crazy and fun stuff such as co-ops with another channel which specializes in explosions.
I swear I met an elderly man with the same spirit as Anni. He was having some trouble with a registration machine at the Dr and after trying to scan his card for the 10th time he voiced that he needed help. His name popped up on the screen and I asked if it was correct. He replied with a simple "O." and it took my immigrant, still learning Finnish brain 2 whole seconds to realize that, that was short for "On."
Turku is on the south-west coast of Finland. The weather in May can vary a lot. The average temperature in May on the south coast is 10-15 degrees C, but sometimes it can snow like in the clip and sometimes we have summer temperatures, like this year with 20+ degrees since mid-May.
He has a voice easy for an ear and - generally - holds his composure and acts professional. That's what we like as Finnish - right? Also has been on weather news for decades by now. Even his social media bloopers have not taken away the fame.
Finally a Finnish meme clip collection with actually legendary meme moments... except why on earth was Kummeli there, but maybe that sketch in particular is used in meme's so much it sort of qualifies the spot, even though it is an actual comedy show
About the weather in Finland. I was in Spain with my family in April to July 2015. When we arrived back home we found out that midsummer was snowing. Weather can be peculiar here.
What makes the "virpominen" meme even funnier is that nowadays it's kinda ambiguous word. It's often used as a metaphor for m*sturbation. So when that kid talks like "I tried virpominen once but it wasn't really my thing" it's hilarious in this context. Ps. I'm 38 years old and still laughing at these kinda things, I guess I'll never grow old and mature. 😄
@@Noradory I think it was around 2006 when I heard it used this way for the first time. It was on Big Brother tv-show. 😅 I don't believe it's age related, maybe it's just people with a little bit twisted mind who's using it in this context. 😄
Something you may be interested in is a Fin guy with two You tube channels. One is called the Hydraulic Press channel. In the other, which is called Beyond the Press, he uses explosives to destroy things.By explosives I mean big fuck off anti tank mines, hand grenades, C4, dynamite, anti personnel mines. Even claymores. This is military grade weaponry. Where the fuck can you get that stuff from to blow up shit on a you tube channel? Even a thermobaric bomb.
Yes, Finns have the ability to say words by inhaling and continue the sentence by exhaling seamlessly. Our American friend says that when we speak Finnish it sounds strange. For example, the highly multidimensional Noniin expresses very different things when inhaled than when exhaled. And let's not even go into the emphasis of the letters.
Similar to just saying or writing k when you mean ok. Means you are on letter savings mode since you don´t think the discussion really warrants your full commitment and you´d rather not have to revisit the subject matter again.
I know the guy who "vomited", he is actually slightly handicapped, and he has those mild spasms, not really a vomit. It might be a good thing to tell the viewers though.
Back in the day in the 1990's when people in Finland actually used cash, I went to a bar and ordered a large beer. A bit less than 20 mk (about 5€ in today's money). Paid with a 50 mk bill, got back a couple of coins. Took issue with the bartender, his view was I paid with a 20 mk bill. Finally got the full change, with a send off of "And don't come back here trying that sacam again".
I´ve been given back less than I should so many times it makes no sense Finns are considered honest people somehow. Nowadays when I pay with cash I allways get correct sum back since its very seldom people pay with cash anymore so there´s no routine for scamming anymore.
@@teppo9585 Good procedure back then would have been laying the bill the customer paid with across the cash register box until the correct change has been given, and only then depositing it in its correct place. Poor workplace familiarization, complacency over procedure? Who knows.
As someone who lived during the "markka-aika" (age of Finnish marks), the coins the cashier gave back seemed to be the 50 pennies coins, so two would make 1 mark in what he gave back.
Not really "ei". It’s mostly only short for "en". So it's no, but in the first person. So depending on what it's a response to, it could be something like "I won't", "I didn't", "I haven't", "I'm not" etc.
"Tonnin seteli- face" is today widely used expression.
The clip where he pukes in his mouth is an interview from the European parliament election, they all had a set amount of time to answer all their questions, hence the timer. Kudos to the guy, from what I remember reading he happened to be sick that day but managed to do the interview anyway. Stress from the interview probably didn't help the upset stomach either.
'E' is short for 'En', meaning '! don't', 'I won't' or 'I haven't' depending on the question, to which one doesn't want to take part enough to give that 'n' in the answer. In the following part of that meme series there's a kid, who seriously trolls a nosy journalist.
Yep. It's like having so little interest in that matter, that you don't even want go thru the trouble of completing that short word!
Zero interest! 🙂
Pekka Pouta is a legend.
too bad they banned his doggo from being on background/at the studio
and best of all metalhead.
Nomen est omen.
1:03 Virpominen is almost same, but Halloween has the atmosphere of a funeral, while a virpominen has the atmosphere of a wedding.
Opposite
Yeah in finland we dont trick or treat at Halloween but we do go virpoa at easter
Ye its the opposite. Halloween has a festival atmosphere while virpominen is.. well its for the kids whatever it is. Not wedding. Utterly useless thing when you´re supposed to be on your best behaviour since some random kids might come ringing your doorbell to get candy. Kids under the age of consent that is.
@@teppo9585 I mean "wedding" words more like happy and joy...
and it is not simply exchanging a branch for candy, but they do a spell too with the branch, for life and health.
Difference between Halloween and easter virpominen is that Halloween is threatning with tricks while virpominen is casting health spell.
Pekka Pouta is THE most legendary meteorologist in Finland, and is one of the most known Finns within Finland. His passion for weather is inspiring, real professional taking the whole weather thing serious, but with that sort of authentic and laid back attitude that people love.
There's another meme of Pekka Pouta: "Pekka Pouta in the moshpit". He's a metal head and was seen frequently at festivals.
Rally english is a byproduct of the Finnish language. Finnish is a phonetic language, which means that every single letter is always pronounced the same way. There is no "ough" problem where you can think of at least 4 ways to pronounce "ough" in English (or you know, how English regularly uses the phonetic alphabet to help with pronunciation. That's what the (ðə) that bracket thing is). So, rally English takes a bit of how english is spoken and mixes it with how a Finnish speaking person would say the word.
Edit: also to kinda explain the Pekka Pouta thing. Pouta means something along the lines of 'fair weather' or 'no rain'. The guy became a legend, because he's funny but also his last name is what he'd have to report as weather. It's like some british fellow was named Richard Stormy and became a meteorologist. And if you find that funny, we almost had a gay president who is also a dj. Unfortunately, we aren't that based yet.
Virpominen In finland has largely become a mix of orthodox virpomis-tradition from the east, where kids decorate willow branches and the Easter witch/troll tradition from the west / Sweden. Most kids nowadays dress up as witches and decorate the willow branches instead of only doing one of them.
Pekka Pouta is also a widely known metalhead. I was at Nosturi(rip) watching Kotiteollisuus back in the day when all of the sudden the front man Hynynen goes "Vittu. Täällä on Pekka Pouta" (I wont bother to translate coz of things) and the crowd started cheering like crazy.
Good times.
Anything between -25 degrees and +25 degrees Celsius is normal in May. Add five degrees in either direction for the extremes.
We can go from having one meter of snow on the ground into an actual heatwave in a span of two to three weeks these days.
If you want to check out another popular Finnish channel, famous for its "Rally English" (spoken by the hosts) is the "Hydraulic Press Channel" and its spin-off "Beyond the Press". The first one focuses on crushing things with... you guessed it, a hydraulic press. The second one is a bit more broad in its content and they do other crazy and fun stuff such as co-ops with another channel which specializes in explosions.
I swear I met an elderly man with the same spirit as Anni. He was having some trouble with a registration machine at the Dr and after trying to scan his card for the 10th time he voiced that he needed help. His name popped up on the screen and I asked if it was correct. He replied with a simple "O." and it took my immigrant, still learning Finnish brain 2 whole seconds to realize that, that was short for "On."
Economical!
Turku is on the south-west coast of Finland. The weather in May can vary a lot. The average temperature in May on the south coast is 10-15 degrees C, but sometimes it can snow like in the clip and sometimes we have summer temperatures, like this year with 20+ degrees since mid-May.
Turku on myös Suomen perse reikä.
Pekka pouta is the beloved TV meteorologist, nit sure how he got famous but he's beloved by all
Pretty sure being on the TV news every day is how that happened.
He has a voice easy for an ear and - generally - holds his composure and acts professional. That's what we like as Finnish - right? Also has been on weather news for decades by now. Even his social media bloopers have not taken away the fame.
@@RemosPendragon Social media bloopers actually probably make him more iconic and remembered
@@F1nn12h That's fair to say.
Finally a Finnish meme clip collection with actually legendary meme moments... except why on earth was Kummeli there, but maybe that sketch in particular is used in meme's so much it sort of qualifies the spot, even though it is an actual comedy show
Funny that people still watch the Hieno koru hermanni. I know both guys in the video :D
I have seriously gone through entire days with that meme replaying in my head, it's a true classic
The stone up in the ass of Timo was a metal bar that went through the bottom of the car but was stopped by his Kevlar seat.
"Mitäköhän ne meistä aattelee"😂
rally english is just a bad pronunciation, called rally english because rally drivers was the first on the tv speaking bad english
These are fun to watch😁
4:47 That 1000 marks to euros conversion has been adjusted for inflation since 2000. Without adjustment it would be 168 euros.
Kelkeshoos😂 I took years of french but I wouldn't tell anyone "I speak french"because I still don't, especially if it was work related.
@@Noradory For some reason it's a really tough language to learn. For example italian is much easier, easy to pronounce at least.
7:09 what was that random off framing of the clip bro XD, anyways great vid, even i live in finland i havent seen any of these memes!
"winter is coming" is always my favourite😂
I would say "Pouta" means no-rain. It can be cloudy or cool weather, but no rain = "pouta".
About the weather in Finland. I was in Spain with my family in April to July 2015. When we arrived back home we found out that midsummer was snowing. Weather can be peculiar here.
What makes the "virpominen" meme even funnier is that nowadays it's kinda ambiguous word. It's often used as a metaphor for m*sturbation. So when that kid talks like "I tried virpominen once but it wasn't really my thing" it's hilarious in this context.
Ps. I'm 38 years old and still laughing at these kinda things, I guess I'll never grow old and mature. 😄
@@Noradory I think it was around 2006 when I heard it used this way for the first time. It was on Big Brother tv-show. 😅 I don't believe it's age related, maybe it's just people with a little bit twisted mind who's using it in this context. 😄
2:41 the "e" is like a shortened version of "en" that means no but in finnish no kan be many words its "ei" too
"En" = "I'm not" or "I don't". Difference between "ei (=no)" and "En" is that latter one specifies that "I won't be doing that"
Something you may be interested in is a Fin guy with two You tube channels. One is called the Hydraulic Press channel. In the other, which is called Beyond the Press, he uses explosives to destroy things.By explosives I mean big fuck off anti tank mines, hand grenades, C4, dynamite, anti personnel mines. Even claymores.
This is military grade weaponry. Where the fuck can you get that stuff from to blow up shit on a you tube channel? Even a thermobaric bomb.
as a Finn, I came along to laugh too 😂
"se oli tonnin seteli" is from tv serie
Rally english is well known thing. All ages know what that means. A heavy finnish accent👍🏻
Also phrase ”tonnin seteli” is a well known finnish way to say ”poker face”
4:48 the face when you die inside 😂 I just can't stop laughing and thinking about how I have not seen almost any of these when I am from Finland🤔
The inhaled "eh" or ei ( = no) is sooo good
Yes, Finns have the ability to say words by inhaling and continue the sentence by exhaling seamlessly. Our American friend says that when we speak Finnish it sounds strange. For example, the highly multidimensional Noniin expresses very different things when inhaled than when exhaled. And let's not even go into the emphasis of the letters.
great acent you have :)
we very often say "e" as short for "ei" or so... :D
Pekka Pouta name is awsome, specially surname Pouta. It means fair/dry weather.
So it is Pekka Pouta = Pekka Dry Weather.
Pekka Pouta is famous whether man in news. he have done that work meny decade.
The guy on the 1000 marks bill at 4:34 seems legit.
Most of my friends here in Finnish speak only Rally english 😅
this Kirsi person who drop off from chair is new's anchor.
"e" is a short version for "en" which is "no"
Similar to just saying or writing k when you mean ok. Means you are on letter savings mode since you don´t think the discussion really warrants your full commitment and you´d rather not have to revisit the subject matter again.
I know the guy who "vomited", he is actually slightly handicapped, and he has those mild spasms, not really a vomit. It might be a good thing to tell the viewers though.
Back in the day in the 1990's when people in Finland actually used cash, I went to a bar and ordered a large beer. A bit less than 20 mk (about 5€ in today's money). Paid with a 50 mk bill, got back a couple of coins. Took issue with the bartender, his view was I paid with a 20 mk bill. Finally got the full change, with a send off of "And don't come back here trying that sacam again".
I´ve been given back less than I should so many times it makes no sense Finns are considered honest people somehow. Nowadays when I pay with cash I allways get correct sum back since its very seldom people pay with cash anymore so there´s no routine for scamming anymore.
@@teppo9585 Good procedure back then would have been laying the bill the customer paid with across the cash register box until the correct change has been given, and only then depositing it in its correct place. Poor workplace familiarization, complacency over procedure? Who knows.
Mandelin has made a video about rally english
First guy was slay
Eh, or actually en. It means no, but in this case it's "no I won't" (go to see bunny).
Hieno koru Hermanni = Real life jonnes in action. Early 00s. Lots of ES euro shopper energy drinks.
Thank's. 😂
hello from Finland
(Ui juma) in time atleast once
React to the series called Pasila. It is the most popular animated series in Finland.
There is actually an english version of some episodes but they suck. And the translations are worse.
It just doesn't translate.
@@moonliteX There used to be fan translations on UA-cam some years back that were actually pretty good. But they might have been nuked.
As a finn, i can say that guys are the most normal here
I’m French living in Finland every time a fins tell me I speak French most of them have same reaction 🙈
Rally English is really rough english speaken by old Finnish rally driver
pouta is no rain. Literally...it doesn't means good weather it just means no rain.
that empty the picket
You really need to check what "nominative determinism" means because at least in Finland it is a real thing!
Vittu aina Suomalaisia saa hävetä :DDD
Im laughing so hard because im finnish😂
Hahahahahha mitä helvettiä
Se oli tonnin seteli😢
I am Finnish
ei literally means no
im from finland
Toi tonnin seteli on kyl mun lemppari suomalainen meemi😂
As someone who lived during the "markka-aika" (age of Finnish marks), the coins the cashier gave back seemed to be the 50 pennies coins, so two would make 1 mark in what he gave back.
No, those are 1 markka coins. The last 50 pennies coins were smaller and different color.
İm from finland (mert is a turkish name)
We all speak rally English.
kummeli kultakuume!
"E" is a short for "Ei" which means no in finnish and people sometimes shorten it in speech
Not really "ei". It’s mostly only short for "en". So it's no, but in the first person. So depending on what it's a response to, it could be something like "I won't", "I didn't", "I haven't", "I'm not" etc.
i speak only rally english
I speak ralli englanti (rally english)
Please fix your headphones
.
i can do that😂
I. From finnish
finnish mims
Dude PKEASE PLEASE PLEASE Fix your video dimensions!!!!! 💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀
The picture in picture was again fucked up for q bit