American Highschoolers try British Snacks for the first time!
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- Опубліковано 29 тра 2024
- Today we’re back at the American high school to give the students their first taste of some classic British Snacks
Huge thanks to the staff and students at Downey High School for letting us film with them!
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Ollie is straight up salty in this video. “We (the British) created the language.” 🤣🤣🤣
In reality, the British didn’t come up with anything this day in age.. if anything, it’s Americans that come up with things now 😊
He was TRIGGERED 😂😂
except the word in question "biscuits" is French
@@-EchoesIntoEternity- Lol, right? When the English say they "invented the language" what they REALLY mean is that they stole it from the French.
didnt the Anglo-saxson created english
“Maybe because we invented the language?”
Ollie wanted all the smoke.😂
He wants all smoke no flavor!
He’s just telling it like it is! 😂
True though
Is a language even "invented" don't they rather develop?
@@annasaddiction5129 develop is the process of something being created
Fun Fact: The Walkers family sold the business in 1970 to American food producer, Standard Brands. In 1989, Walkers was acquired by Lay's owner, Frito-Lay, a division of PepsiCo. The Walkers factory in Leicester produces over 11 million bags of crisps per day, using about 800 tons of potatoes.
IN SHORT, Walkers was sold to Lay’s owner in 1989, so they’re both the same just a couple different flavours.
Lays chips are also an older company
@@dylankobielusz7087 yeah well Walker was founded before lays so...
Walkers OG though
@@crystalkamhuka39yeah well lays has better products
Are there 'Fritos' in the UK?
I'm an American and I had no idea that Chocolate Oranges were a UK thing. I see them in my local grocery store all the time and I love them.
I've had them too! I don't really think they're a UK thing, maybe they're just a bit more common over there or something?
@@josiea.3855created in York, England in 1932. More recently produced in Poland and then France. They’re just imported to the US
@@josiea.3855it’s definitely a uk thing
@@sinista.productions ok? Many things are imported to the US. They're acting like we don't have them at all when we, in fact, do have them
@@josiea.3855 I mean same goes for when other youtubers show UK ppl "American" snacks and then give them Cheetos, takis or hersheys, you can commonly find them in normal UK shops and all around the world but because they originate from US they would be included, same goes for terry's chocolate oranges. Them originating from UK makes them a UK snack..
Ollie being so savage about his British snacks had me dying 😂
The British have terrible food, and always have
ok weirdo
@@axelpepen2642what 😐
he can be a great comedian / he cracks me up all the time
My dude on the right looking like John redcorn's son definitely has my taste buds 😅
The first time i have actually seen ollie being triggered and just straight up insulting 😂😂😂😂
Which is crazy, because Lay's has owned Walkers since before he was born
@@LindaC616I'm fairly certain he was born in 87 and they acquired Walkers in 89.
@@LindaC616 Facts.. Lays purchased them in 1989.
But the UK “invented English! “🥰😂
@@LindaC616 which is also crazy because they are grownups making money off of children by putting them on the Internet, so that other adults across the world can insult the kids and be offended by what kids say.
Knowing what’s inside a flying saucer and waiting for the reaction is a priceless experience
We have flying saucer candies in the USA, but they are filled with nonpareils.
The chocolate oranges are actually sold in the USA around the holidays. I've always liked them for some strange reason, and get one whenever I see them. I also have to agree that American chocolate, especially Hersheys, is bottom of the barrel. I always look where chocolate is made beforw buying it. It's not hard to find cheap European chocolate in the usa that is 10x better than hersheys milk chocolate.
I was just coming here to say the same thing. I like the mint ones the most. Haven't found them in a few years though.
@@pinkmango1I've tried the mint Terry's chocolate and it is amazingggggg
I’m like, chocolate oranges have been here in the US forever. The fact that Brits are infatuated with vinegar can be jarring to someone unfamiliar to that taste. Jarring. And the fact that the Brits are feeling butthurt by their initial reaction is absurd. Vinegar is a strong taste. I can’t stand it if it’s overwhelming in a food personally, but that’s a personal preference. 🤷♀️
They used to sell everywhere, and were expensive, about $7 each. But now it’s hard to find, and you can actually find that at the 99 cent store
Try Aldi if you can find one near you. I used to always buy the chocolate hazelnut bars they'd sell in the checkout lane, and they were REALLY cheap. In fact, ALL the stuff in there was cheap, and the regular groceries were REALLY good.
As a British person I really can't watch American reaction videos without getting triggered😂
Sorry we’re a bit too blunt but some of y’all desserts are 😻😻😻
Same as a brit who moved to America it makes me miss HOME. they should do drinks…I wanna see their reaction to lucazaid…😂😂
@@themooncallerisn't Lucazaid essentially similar to like, Pedialyte? I.e. an electrolyte supplement drink. I drink stuff like that every day (American) but the stuff here is concentrated so i mix it 50/50 with water. I've been curious what it tastes like
"Drink this"
"What is it?"
"Mozart's tears"
"Thanks Naboo you're the greatest" *leaves*
"Do you think they'll get record deal?"
"Nah that was just Lucazaid"
Your desserts are really good. Especially your chocolate, I don’t know why that guy said he likes Hershey’s. I don’t know anyone that prefers Hershey’s lol.
@@the_viper_mc4404 i think its more of a "what other chocolate is in america" kind of thing. The only others i can think of are lindt and nestle
Actually, the Americans call them cookies because it's derived from the Dutch word "koekje" (little cake) and the British call theirs biscuits (frankly a much denser sort of baked good) from the Latin bis + coctus (twice cooked)
But it's also hilarious that Pennsylvania Dutch weren't Dutch
@@JB-vd8biDeutsch got confusing. 🤣
which means what Americans call a biscuit is more accurate
@@kingonthemoon7044 lol
@@kingonthemoon7044 Not really! I think originally the word was for something that was more like Italian biscotti (which ARE actually baked twice)
The "sick" you taste in Hershey's is from butyric acid, that was originally found in the milk they used, but since now just add it in seperately. It improves the shelf life of the chocolate and adds flavour, note you may not enjoy that flavour.
America is wild what the hell
The rest of the world unsurprisingly doesnt enjoy the taste of sick
THE UK IS BORING AND BLAND, WE NORTH AMERICANS ARE SUPERIOR 💙💜💙💜🩷🍼🐷🇯🇵🇨🇦🍓
@summer-oa9521, It’s because the original Hershey’s recipe was made with curdled (soured) milk. It’s an attempt to keep the original flavor profile.
It literally is the taste of sick. Vomit contains butyric acid
Chocolate oranges are pretty common in America as well. We always got them in our stocking at Christmas as kids.
I just tried them for the first time last Christmas, in Maryland. They were delicious!
maybe depends where you live
UKist here. It may blow your mind that we have Chocolate LIMES and Chocolate LEMONS... But they are pretty rare, and usually only found at Christmas.
@@robertwilloughby8050 now THOSE I haven’t heard of lol. How are they?
The high schoolers constantly roasting the British food finally got to Ollie. He had to throw some sass back!
As he should for that 👏
For some reason, I thought you said sass without the first S. I was so confused. I was like wait what?😳🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@ritaa1359 I mean it would help if they didn't give the American kids the most vile things to eat, The UK kids got Popeye's Chicken and they gave the US kids marmite, twiglets, and Prawn flavored crisp. Pretty unfair trade.
Just for a opinion?
Fun fact, Flying Saucers were created when a company who made communion wafers was going through financial difficulties and needed to find a way to boost their sales - so they were spot-on with their assessment that they taste like the wafers you get in church!
This needs so many more likes thats a sick story
I know that because I went to church and tried those wafers and I thought they tasted like flying salters
That's completely bollox pure bullshit
I JUST TOLD MY HUSBAND IT'S LIKE COMMUNION WAFERS
And waffles were originally made with communion wafer presses.
The chocolate orange is sold in the USA (by a different name) and I purchase them around Christmas time. They also come in choc/raspberry flavor.
They’re mainly a Christmas thing here in the uk too
im sorry RASBERRY WTF
Note to self: look for the raspberry ones. 😀
@@BennyLlama39 Note to self: how do they get an orange to look like raspberrry. 😀
As a Brit, I think you guys did a great job on finding the true classics of British snacks🤭💅
Personally I've never had twiglets and i have lived in Britain my entire life
6:37 “it tastes like if someone were to lick a grill, like the little rack.” I’m surprised Ollie wasn’t impressed with that comparison, that sounds like something he would say lol
He can dish it out but can’t take it
that was me!😭
Lmao. I busted out laughing at her description
I got the sense he was annoyed he was one-upped in the moment. 😎
That "WHAT THE HEULLL?!" by that one girl at 5:51 was absolutely hilarious with how authentic it was oml 😂😂
Frfr no cap ong
Even she didn't expect to say it 😂😂😂
Caught everyone off guard
Loving these awesome American high schoolers! They are so precious! Sweet and honest! The two hosts are also terrific! 👍👍
LOL! These Downey High School kids are such good sports! Love these hometown kids.
Love this! This was my hometown and my high school. So cool to see this!
Not so much hometown, looks more like the hood somewhere.
“Maybe because we invented the language.” - Ollie, 2023
This is probably in my top 10 quotes from Ollie 🤣🤣🤣🤣
well it's actually true, soooo xD
Well actually they took a lot from German, and French.
Absolutely 👍🏽😊
@@dalemoore8582and the French took a lot from Latin. A lot of English also comes from Common Brythonic. We invented English, but it was influenced by French and German.
@@dalemoore8582 its mostly greek but tbh they mixed different languages and made it into their own so it is still technically a creation even if they did magpie other languages like its not like someone who's only fluent in french can understand it or someone only fluent in greek.
"Tastes like vinegar"
"Yeah that's one of the main food groups in the UK. Meat, vegetables, salt, and vinegar"
PLEASE THE ACCURACY
And Ollie is bringing the salt
In Japan, I made the mistake of giving British and Aussie colleague some salt & vinegar chips I got from New York. Man oh man, they were depressed for days when we ran out. Should’ve brought more. Impossible to find them here.
In parts of the South green tabasco peppers just put into a jar with salt and vinegar is a common table sauce.We don't eat the peppers, we just pour on the vinegar.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
I’m just confused as to why she was shocked that something pickled onion flavour tasted like vinegar 😂
The Flying Saucers are American pixie sticks, but instead of the powder being in a paper straw, they put it in a wafer. We have chocolate oranges in America...at least we did when I was a kid.
4:31 I loved seeing all there faces go from 😐 to 😖 😂
"this is a ripoff of lays"
"sorry, im triggered rn"
These reactions are a gift that keeps on giving
I see u here everytime mind if I join?
Lmao we also have Smiths here in Aus which is literally the same 😅
Lmfaoo I’m screaming because they’re not wrong 😂
@@thatgirl9532also owned by Pepsi lol that’s why they all look the same.
@@orlandocast7941basically a lot of things that look a like are owned by a single company 😂
I would love love love to see a video that's "British Highschoolers reacting to American Highschoolers trying British Snacks" 😂😆😄
Yesss 😆😆
Yes, but not sure it would be legal, under Geneva Convention, to give them Hersheys
push
I would so watch that 😂
@@stephenlee5929 wait what 🤣🤣
at 2:09 An American saying something is too sweet is kind of ironic
Not really, a lot l of Americans are salty snack enjoyers rather than sweet ones
as a british person 🇬🇧, this well and truly breaks my heart 💔
Your everything sucks, your country sucks? Your weather sucks, your food sucks
Now you how it feels when we watch British people trying American snacks 🥺
By the look of these comments, Ollie wasn't the only one who was salty 🥴😂😂😂😂
Global war will be started over this video lol
Brits are always so pissy with us and we just laugh at them because they take everything too serious 💀
@@nutforana imagine you had a loud, annoying neighbour who spent all of his time shouting criticism at you and telling you how you should be living. that's why we get pissed off. we have never once wanted an american's opinion on anything yet you never seem to be able to help yourselves
@@haldern501 the video is BASED on what AMERICANS think of your snacks… which is their OPINION bozo 💀 maybe comprehend context clues next time, yeah? but stay mad & get wrinkles i guess 😂
@@haldern501 these dudes make two kinda videos, british people trying america stuff, with the comments full of americans interested in people expereincig their culture, and then american people trying british stuff, with the comments full of angry british people who have no joy in life.
I'm American and chocolate oranges are a holiday tradition in my family, maybe it's just where I live but you find them everywhere around Christmas. I'm surprised none of these kids have ever seen one.
Same here
Yes tried them when I was a kid. It’s been around me pretty much my whole life.
Same here too. Terrys are fairly common here.
I love having them at Christmas time! Especially the popping candy version!
That's mostly a Midwestern/Northern thing from what I've seen around the country. People who moved to other places from the North also sometimes keep it around
As a Brit, I can confirm that monster munch is an acquired taste,but I love them
Monster munch slap and are top tier crisps. I'll die on that hill!! 🤣
I'm in the US we had the flying saucers here in the 90s, however, it was little sprinkles inside. We also have the orange chocolate balls
Walkers is owned by lays lol to those who are confused they kept the original branding in the uk because walkers was already established.
Lays 1940
Walkers 1948
Lays is older
I meant at the time of the purchase
Lays actually started the logos general look in the 1930s.
@@bmorg5190 The comment literally says that walkers is OWNED by lays. Obviously it is older if lays owns walkers lmao
i think also the company Sabritas is owned by lays too, that’s why all the package logo looks similar
the “tastes like a goldfish if you lit it on fire and ate the ashes” is CRAZY 😂
I think he means the goldfish crackers, not a literal goldfish lol
@@83gemm i know i jus thought it was really funny 😄
Watched all three videos with the American high schoolers and absolutely loved it definitely a fan please do a follow-up series 😂
The expression on there faces is priceless..😂😂❤❤ I love it
Fun Fact: Why are Walkers Crisps called Lays? Pepsi acquired Walkers and re-branded it with the Lay's logo and products in 1989. The snack food is exactly the same, but PepsiCo decided to keep the Walkers name to ensure customer brand loyalty in the United Kingdom.
Walkers is older than Lays too. These bloody kids in this video grrr
Wikipedia: 1934, salesman Herman Lay opened a snack food operation in Nashville, Tennessee. In 1938, he purchased the Atlanta, Georgia-based potato chip manufacturer "Barrett Food Company", renaming it "H.W. Lay Lingo & Company". Lay crisscrossed the southern United States, selling the product from the trunk of his car.
@@anophelesnow3957keyword is kids genius
@@anophelesnow3957I'm afraid not, Walkers was founded in 1948.
the Twiglets made me laugh. thinking about Mr Bean's New years party ,when he didn't have hardly any snacks to go around, and pulled a branch into the kitchen window and sawed little twigs off it, and dipped them in Marmite and served them to his guests😆
That's called thinking on your feet - genius!
Wow, I had the exact same thought!! Glad that I am not the only one who remembered that scene when seeing these Twiglets XDD
That’s what it reminded me of too! 😂 I’ve always wanted to try
One of the best episodes!
OMG I love that episode definitely the best one!!
As a Brit I'm loving watching these guys... The girl with the disgusted Twiglets face made me laugh for ages. So funny!
4:00 love the sainsburys flying saucers. Gone up in price a lot.
"Probably because we invented the language!" Oh, that's way too much of a satisfying come back. I have to appreciate the look of 'touché' that he got back. 😂
It's mostly latin and German
@@CatnamedMittensYeah, but it's english. All languages have earlier influences.
the dialect that British people use now is heavily distorted and different than how other countries learn it. modern British English is pretty wack imo
Yet they didn't invent it though- Eastern Germany, UK just adopted it and heavily changed it but didn't invent it
I love the debate on the importance of the history of the origins of the English language. Points for point scoring on the relevant point. Because the question came from a child from the US. The subsequent development or redefinition of words came after the said origins. But the framing of the question she posed is perhaps indicative of mindset that caused the irritation and promoted the slightly inaccurate response.
We don't call cookies biscuits.... You call biscuits cookies, which could have been a better way of expressing that viewpoint. She got the point, however.
The reason the Walkers packaging at the beginning of the video looks so much like Lays is because in 1989, Walkers was acquired by Lay's owner, Frito-Lay, a division of PepsiCo. The Walkers factory in Leicester produces over 11 million bags of crisps per day, using about 800 tons of potatoes.
U can say that about smiths most countries just don’t want to sell lays because of the ingredients or chemicals and most countries just want food brands that represent there country not some American brand
@@ritaa1359that’s just not true lmao
Does that means Walker is the original Lay's?
@@Twofix no, it was bought by lays they’re totally different things
@@BreathOfDust Ah, ok.
The U.S. had a version of flying saucers when I was a kid, it was a wafer shell with small candied pellets inside - very popular
I never thought I'd hear an American say "there's so much sugar" and "too sweet" 😂
I’m American, and chocolate oranges are popular here too, but mostly at Christmas only. You can SOMETIMES find them at other times, but the only time they’re readily available and displayed front and center is during Christmas time.
And easter...
Not in Oregon. I always see them at winco and Costco, year round
In Canada its very much the same. My dad loves to get one every year
Christmas time is when I stock up on them!!
I love the fact that i can get them year round
i’m surprised they were so shocked with the chocolate oranges, those are in every store during the holiday season lol
Yeah I was about to say the same thing. I was shocked that they have never heard-of/tasted them before.
@@Angiebaby40 fr my mom always gets me them during christmas there the best
@@Rose-yz3sx They really are!! 🤤
Yes we have them in US
They are always available where I live in Florida. They are yummy!
9:00
I'm dying at this point.🤣😂
Love the reactions, so funny and cute.
It’s probably hard to do, but I’d love to see British high schoolers and American high schoolers interacting together in a video. Maybe they’re trying more snacks or exchanging common phrases from their respective country.
I was thinking that would be fun too
I think that would cause ww3 Brit’s don’t like Americans
Yesss that would be amazing!
It'd be nice if they didn't pick well-mannered private school kids to represent the UK but pick inner-city public school kids to represent America. The private school UK students would go home crying about the mean Americans.
@casual_user4388 lol that would be hilarious
As a brit I must admit that twiglets are certainly an acquired taste
Definitely lol
I don't really like them myself, and I'm a brit 😂
They’re basically flavoured with the same stuff Marmite is made of. I’m a fan but like Marmite definitely an acquired taste. Worcestershire Sauce Twiglets are much, much nicer.
I'm a Brit & I don't like them either
I couldn't go without it
I mean it’s literally marmite as a crisp (and the only decent marmite crisp option sit the f*ck down Walkers you don’t count)
I love them but then I love marmite on toast and this is that but a crisp
Flying saucers were an American snack as well. Just not sold many places here anymore. And usually filled with sprinkles
Mr. Kipling is exactly what I imagined a British snack would be named.
Yeah, it tracks. If memory serves, they had a dog food called Mr. Dog before changing it to Cesar.
Licking a dirty grill may be the most accurate description of twiglets I've ever heard
Yeah... I've NEVER liked Twiglets, or Marmite tasting anything either. 😂
Barely anyone in England actually eats twiglets
@@glencoco3142 This only supports my theory that Josh and Ollie tailored their snacks around their desired reaction instead of choosing the most popular.
@@BeeWhistler And this is why their sub pas millions.
They know wat they doing
Well, I guess it’s even now. The British kids were pretty savage about a lot of the American things. Now Ollie knows how I felt watching the other series.
except the british weren't so rude n mannerless.
@@MG-hs1ybwho was rude?
@@MG-hs1yb I didn't see any rude kids. Sweethearts, honestly.
@@MG-hs1yb That’s a matter of personal opinion, perspective, and bias. Many of the British boys were lovely or just brutally honest, which is fine. Some came off as very rude and cringingly imperialistic to me. It really put me off. These particular American kids you can tell have not had much interaction with or knowledge of British culture and probably not traveled abroad. But they didn’t seem rude at all to me. (I haven’t watched all the other videos though.) Basically a lot of it has to do with our own internal cultural/nationalistic bias, nuances of language and culture, and of course remembering that for both series they just picked a random handful of kids. It’s obviously not a blanket representation of either country. But, it’s good to put yourself in someone else’s shoes rather than only thinking from your perspective.
@@kdesaaf4190 I personally didn't find it insulting, but they were certainly very critical
These are so enjoyable!
Terry's Orange chocolates are sold at just about every drugstore in the US fyi and you can get prawn chips in the asian foods isle of most grocery stores 😂 2 things my family been getting for YEARS
This video is a really good example of how Americans act when uncomfortable. We laugh at everything, joke relentlessly, and are brutally honest. I don’t think the kids were trying to be insulting but I can totally see how others might be offended.
I agree with you. They were just being kids. We're use to eating all junk food and sugar. If it's not fried or sweet as hell we won't eat it. We just aren't use to the same things. Doesn't mean we're insulting anyone. We just don't like the same things. It just makes us different.
that isn't honest that is rude and having no manners, it is insulting and shows very poor upbringing
@@sierra7202 no excuses for being rude and having bad manners, these are not kids these are young adults.
@@lhl9010 they are still in highschool. Some of them might be anywhere from 14 to 17. I didn't find them rude at all. They were just being honest about how they felt about certain things. If I taste something awful. I'm not going to sugarcoat it and say it's fantastic. I wouldn't say anything in front of the person to upset but my face and reactions may give it away.
I think it is so funny when they don’t know what things r and because I’m from England I’m like r u dumb or those are amazing
I'd love to see a video of British Teens reacting to American teens trying British snack!
scroll on their channel
They did one where British kids tried biscuits and gravy that was fun to watch and I've believe they done one on snacks also.
That’s a great idea. The other responders didn’t understand.
Takes me back to the React channel ... lol
Same!
Terry's chocolate orange is AMAZING!❤❤
As a British person, I took their reaction to twiglets, VERY personal
The corporation that bought both Lays and Walkers kept the names, because of the brands' strong market recognition in their respective countries
The brand was originally invented in the UK, an American company bought them and kept the name Walkers for the UK customer and the rest of the world got the name Lays. Technically speaking they’re British
@rsanch7232 you basically repeated what I said. Thanks Captain Obvious 😆
Lays were established 1930s. Walkers 1940s
The brand was called walkers and they were bought out by PepsiCo who also purchased lays. Pepsi kept the brand names and matched the logos
@@rb19518 Not sure you are wording that very well. Technically Lay's predates them (by like 8 years). The rest of the world already had Lay's (aka Frito-Lay aka Pepsico). So the rest of the world didn't get the Lay's branding since it already had it. Pepsico just kept the Walker branding for the UK market.
The logo is based of the Walkers one though, Lays adding it to their name in 1996.
Josh's reaction to "it looks like an apple" 😂
They do make apples, too, I believe
@@LindaC616 those haven't been made since 1950s
@@ayb1470 They're new, on this side of the pond
@@ayb1470 maybe it's a knockoff brand. I know I've seen them and toyed with the idea of buying one
@LindaC616 oh ok, that's cool. We only have the oranges in the UK
I try to imagine the audition for this and I imagine it's very informal and probably not even chosen by the participants themselves. I imagine a paper being handed out to each student, saying, "nominate someone you know who's funny and good at improv, but who you'd also like to see trying some potentially disgusting food".
my dad is from england and he has gotten some english food stuff from time to time ive had some of these and there pretty good :)
“The bread from church”….”The Body of Christ”…😂😂😂
SAME EXACT THING I THOUGHT WHEN I SAW THEM!😂😂😂
I had the same thoughts lol
Im 58 yo Native American, Navajo man, and I stumbled on a recipe with chocolate and orange flavors. I find that a go-to chocolate fix anytime. I'd like to try British food and snacks. But my area of the USA rarely gets to experience other cultural foods. Aside from some yearly cultural festivals.
I love twiglets 😂😂😂 the curry ones they used to do was bangin, brannigans roast beef and mustard are the best try those 😅
The girl at 5:56 saying 'what the heeelll' in her native accent out of shock got me good 😂
And what "native accent" is that exactly? 😅Ghetto?
That’s how Latinas from Cali talk. Don’t hate EK. Not everybody grows up with silver spoon up their rear ends.
Literally the meme "they conquered all these lands rich in spices and decided not to use any" came to mind for some of these snacks lol
They picked the most reaction provoking snacks to get better engagement
You'll famously find lots of spices in chocolate.
@@jamesgunn7 chocolate yessssssss!!!!!!!!! Tho I still havent tried that orange one even tho I keep hearing from people that it's good. My mom even likes that chocolate but since I was a kid I was afraid of what it would taste like lol.
@@ohhoneyhani9963you definitely need to try the chocolate orange. It won’t disappoint.
Reminds me of @mrnigelng new Haiyaa Comedy Special...."You can find sushi at the pharmacy in UK" lol
As soon as the twiglets appeared I started salivating hard. So good.
I'm so in love with the fact you have a bucees hat on. I have worked for the company at store 2 and 22.
You should do a high school from each region of the US. Mid West, East Coast, South. I wonder how different the high schoolers would be.
I can guarantee you, it would be a LOT different! I could be wrong, but I'm guessing this is some larger sort of inner city school.
That would be so cool!!
VERY, the south is very different from this
Repent and trust in Jesus. We all deserve Hell for our sins, such as lying lusting coveting and more. We can't save ourselves, but Jesus can save us. He died on the cross to save us for our sins and rose from the grave defeating death and Hell. You must put your faith in him only. He is the only way to Heaven. Repent and trust in Jesus.
Romans 6:23
John 3:16❤😊
i can answer that ☝️very. 😐 different. 😐😪
The thing about jolly is that you always know what Josh is going to say whereas you never know what Ollie is going to say 😂
I swear the UK kids trying American food were so humble and polite even when they didn't like the food, these Americans are so rude
Its called honesty and being straightforward. We’re just like that.
I watched the one with the British kids and I didn't think they were polite about it at all. They were just like these kids but with a different accent.
Boohoo
They're brutal but SO entertaining 😂
“Jesus with Jazz hands” 😂😂😂 I’m done with Ollie lmfao
The Terry's Chocolate Orange is my addiction around Christmas time, since they seem to be a seasonal thing near me. I especially like the popping candy one. I get like 2 or 3 a week during November and December.
Canada has chocolate oranges. Some people hate them. I love them.
Having grown up as Asian in California, I'm fairly used to all kinds of flavor profiles and snacks. I didn't know Terry's orange chocolates originated in England though, you can find them in certain stores around the US as well. I remember eating them often as a kid.
I got tricked into trying Shrimp Chips by an asian friend of mine when I was a kid.
@@Tailstraw_xD Shrimp chips are amazing.
@@Tailstraw_xD u make it sound like ur a survivor r u scared the shrimp chips r gonna hurt u 🥺🥺
HI FRIENDSHIPS HI FROM CANADA 👋👋👋👋👋🐷🇯🇵🇨🇦🍓 YEHEY! 💙💜💙💜🩷🍼🐷🇯🇵🇨🇦🍓
There are lots of other British snacks that wasn't given to these kids...like shortcake, Jaffa cakes,e.t.c
They would have love those 😃
There was a previous video where they tried tea and biscuits, and they did try Jaffa cakes 😊
@@janeelizabeth7281 oh yeah
Shortcake is still missing tho😂😂
I had this plain lolly that would be dipped into flavored sugar when I went to the UK and I haven’t been able to find it anywhere in the US. I’m very sad 😭
I love Savoury snacks, Quavers and Wotsits are my guilty go- to snacks
Jaffa cakes are so good. They're popular around all of Europe
The Chocolate Orange ismthemonly one ive ever had, butmi love them. Get one for christmas every year in my stocking.
"Oh, pretzels. That's pretzels". That's when I knew that was going to be a funny one
8:59 Ollie had enough of UK food disrespect LOL, but he's wrong on that one since France brought the term
That part was funny af lol
At the end of the day, Americans shouldn't be telling anyone which words to use. It's not disrespect, it's just perspective.
That's like a fat baby telling a grown adult how to diet.
@@johnjungkook2721aahh we have comedian in our midst 🤣🤣
@@johnjungkook2721 Nonsense comment, of course.
@@johnjungkook2721 In general, American English preserves more words and vowel sounds from 1700's English than any dialect in England does.
As a Brit, I fully support their reaction to the taste of Twiglets
True, giving someone Twiglets for the first time without some kind of disclaimer is just cruel.
I have never in my 42 years on this planet met anyone who likes twiglets, it’s a bloody mystery as to who is buying them!
wdym twiglets are class
They picked the worst British snacks instead of the best ones
@@GreatestCornholioI love them sm
I don't really think chocolate oranges can really be considered a specifically British snack these days when they are so readily available everywhere. You can buy these at literally any American grocery store, and I'm sure they are equally available in other countries as well. Sure, they are made in the UK, but when they are available everywhere it kinda stops being a British snack and just becomes a "well known snack".
For something to be a nation-specific snack it really needs to be something you have to specially order, or fly out there yourself to get....not drive to the nearest grocery store...
How can you be so stupid? If the snack was originally created and manufactured in Britain it’s British. Amazon is over here in Britain its still an American company
With that logic, McDonald’s isn’t American
We do have Terry's Chocolate Oranges in the US. At least in the Midwest anyway. For some reason they only pop up in the stores at Christmas time.
Fun fact: in the UK Hershey's cannot be legally advertised as being chocolate, due to the low cacao content (it's not chocolate)
Ignore them. As an American, Hersheys is trash.
🤣😂
Hersheys is awful but they own almost everything here.
European chocolate is vastly superior to Hershey’s. Sure, as an American I grew up eating Hershey’s and I still might eat it as a low-rung cheap snack… but Brits have us beat in the chocolate category, no doubt about it.
Fun fact: in the U.S. Hersey's can be legally advertised as chocolate due to having enough cocao content according to American law (it is chocolate).
Who cares about arbitrary laws.
We have shrimp chips in our Costco and at our local Thai food place. I'm sure it's a little different but they are so good. I love that you're exposing another set of children to different foods. Americans by nature I think are more direct. It's not considered rude at all, especially when the point of the whole video is for them to try the new food and see their reaction-if they like it or not.
When it comes to directness we are not as polite as the British, dodging any negativity, but we are also not on the same end of the scale as Germany and Eastern Europeans, who are right in your face😅
@@LindaC616I’m American and I think the level of directness is regional here. Yankees tend to be the most direct. South/Southeast tends be the least. The very commonly used Southern phrase “Bless Your Heart” can have more than one meaning but is used instead of saying something negative. Josh and Ollie say things are disgusting when they don’t like them and they are British. I think they likely told the kids to be honest because a lot of kids would not to an adult without permission.
@@anndeecosita3586 I don't know, having talked for 30 years, I feel that the generation coming up is a lot different from previous generations with regard to Courtesy, manners, and respect for others
Those costco shrimp chips are 🔥🔥🔥
Yeah, I thought the shrimp flavor snacks would be common in Southern California. Here in Texas there are a couple of Asian snack mixes that have wasabi peas and something like a shrimp Cheeto.
Fun fact: although lays purchased walkers crisps, lays adopted walkers methods in their own crisp (chip) production. So whilst the kids are right about the logo being a rehash of the lays logo, in every other respect, they're eating a rehashed walkers crisp made for the american market as the current lays has far more in common with original walkers than original lays.
Bro I have been waiting for this “FOREVER”
I'm not from the UK but chocolate in the UK and Europe is hands down THE best. Also, my childhood memories include Walkers crisps (waaay better than Lays lol), Blackcurrent Ribena, Maltesers and strawberry Cornetto cone. I miss London
I’m Ghanaian and we grew up eating UK chocolate,hands down the best!European chocolate is also really good!
My mom used to send chocolate from the U.S, because she lived there and it was terrible 😂
It was really sugary and not that good, especially hersheys😂
☝️🤓 well walkers are the same as lays, but with a different name
@@chunkysquirle7633 different name and different taste.
@@nunutiiiiii there own by the same company
@@thglitherhacker1017 i know, regardless they taste different to me :)
I hear the hearts of the British breaking louder with each food try. I'm American, but I'm sure my British husband would have lost it at Hershey's being a superior chocolate!
A lot of Americans would have lost it too. I would have given the kid a side eye.
@@skyydancer67 you are right!
If someone told me Hersheys was their favourite chocolate, I would probably raise my eyebrows and question it 😂
@@corriehingston6744 😂
A weird set of taste buds if they think Hershey’s is superior
I know it wasn't featured, but as an American, Jaffa cakes are absolutely wonderful.
Jaffa cakes were featured in the UK Biscuits and Tea reaction.
That was so fun to watch, I watched the English eating American food and was hoping you had this. Thanks =)
Don't stress people!! You know their taste bugs are screwed when they said Hershey is top tier!! LOL
Lol, I actually said "blasphemy" out loud when they said this. I'm American, but I won't even look at Hershey's chocolate bc it just tastes like sugar. I prefer a good Cadbury, Ritter Sport, Tony's Chocolonely, or Lindt bar.
@@lateinbloomeven milka is better than whatever the hell hersheys supposed to be and milka is bog standard
I think it's USA taste buds that are screwed what with all the chemicals and additives that go into everything, even your meats. Well at least everything is huge in the USA. We get small fruit and veg in britain unless you grow your own of course.
He was asking them if terrys was ‘good chocolate’, like they’d have a clue what constitutes as good chocolate 😂😂😂
@@clivechandler8817it’s very true, I was just in Europe and all the snacks tasted so plain like they were missing something. Red 40 has a hold on us lol
They definitely sell the chocolate oranges here in the US, but it's usually sold during the holidays. I get mine at Target, and I love them! ❤️
I need to try it out.
They definitely have been available at Christmas time here in the US for years. I typically find them on the seasonal candy aisle at Walmart. I was at Walgreen's the other day getting some candy snacks and noticed some there too.
Trader Joe's has them at Christmas time too.
In California I grew up with the Canadian brand Ovation orange break aparts.
Hershey's is top tier only an American would say lol
bro america gets terry's chocolate during the holiday season and i be taking like at least 5 every time i see them. i had no idea they originated in the UK. soooo bomb
As a British person: this was the highlight of the video 8:55
when walkers existed before lays… 0:36
that’s what I thought
They’re the same company, it’s just they called it walkers in the Uk but changed it to lays for everyone else
Never try to remotely roast an American highschool kid lmaooo they will hit you where it hurts lol
🫤
🤓🤓🤓
American humour is just so different to UK. Americans laugh and anything.
What!…..those kids were soft and polite….pop over to an average British school….
Not something to be proud of… that’s like a bully bragging that they bully the hardest