This guy is a genuine guy that wants to learn, notice if he doesn't get a reference he googles it.. that is where all the other UA-camrs go wrong, they just here some shit and ask you to tell them in comments.. he's actually learning things but also shows the willingness to learn right in front of you other than behind a keyboard.. Loving the work JJ
And he has an awesome voice. Very calm and soothing. After the strike is over with (hopefully) the people on strike getting what they deserve, I want to hear his calm smooth tones in more media. Movies, TV, Video Games, etc.
Tyler Rumple (British reactions) / Tyler Bucket (Canadian reactions) also looks stuff up if he hears things that he doesn't understand though he poauses far too frequently, and seldom seems to really listen. He hears how things are pronounced and repeats them correctly but then goes ahead and mispronounces them anyway, which is annoying. He also asks for comments but does not seem to read any and has only ever once responded to any. Unlike Tyler, JJ is one of the, (if not _The_) best reactors, imo. 🖖
Steve (Reacting To My Roots) from Indiana, also requests help, links, advice etc, in the comments - and, like JJ here, he actually reads and responds to them. (Steve also "hearts" in response to his "favourite' comments Steve learns from them and the videos he watches). It's as pleasing to watch and follow Steve, as it is to JJ. ☺️☺️ ... It is a tad 'less' enjoyable responding to Tyler Rumple - UK (aka Tyler Bucket - Canada) and to Ryan Wuzer - Australia (also both from Indiana) as they both request our comments, yet both seem not to read the comments, to interact with, or learn from the comments...though Tyler does often Google stuff he doesn't understand and both seem to learn from the videos they watch, at least. (...though it surprises me at times, how little they all seem to know about, or have heard of, regarding the countries they're reacting to, but then,that's the whole point of these videos of course. 🤔☺️ Sometimes, we learn too, so that's always a bonus, imo. ☺️❤️☺️❤️☺️❤️🖖
This is easily becoming my favourite American reactor channel. I love how keen he is to learn stuff, not to mention his quite naughty sense of humour that sneaks out occasionally. Oh, and that voice!
There are so many inaccuracies in this video: -Northern Ireland DOES have a flag -England and Scotland Joined in 1605 -Gaelic (pronounced Gay-lick) is Irish while Gaelic (pronounced Gah-lick) is Scottish -Scots isn’t a language it’s a dialect -England hasn’t officially had a monarch have all the power since the Magna Carta was signed in 1215 -Queen Elizabeth isn’t just the head of state for the UK but for the majority of the Commonwealth -French was actually only the official language for Nobles and wasn’t spoken by most common men -it’s also illegal to eat a Swan in the UK -Oliver Cromwell also tried to ban celebrating Christmas except for attending Church -We do know how Stonehenge was built( or we have a pretty good idea at least) -This British Library is NOT the largest library in the world -Shakespeare created 3,000 words AND PHRASES This is what I can correct without researching
Northern Ireland doesn't have an official flag. The Act of Union was in 1707. Just because the Monarch was the same doesn't mean that England and Scotland weren't two separate countries. Scots is an officially recognised language. The Monarch has a lot more powers than you imagine. The Monarch can veto laws, dismiss the government on a whim and also choose who the Prime Minister is. The Monarch can pick anyone to be PM. Doesn't have to be an MP. The last Queen of England died in 1603 btw.
England and Scotland were separate countries until the Act of Union in 1707. They shared the same monarch but otherwise were independent. The Magna Carta was torn up and ignored by King John soon after he signed it and put very few limits on his powers anyway. It was centuries later that parliament took any real power to govern away from the king. Only certain swans (mute swans in open water have legal protection) this thing about all Swans being the property of the monarch is an urban myth.
I think it's hilarious when someone calls out someone else for inaccuracies, only for themselves to be inaccurate. Several things you said wasn't true, was true.
Something I forgot to add in my previous reply the lions of England are not actually lions, they're leopards. Historical they were adopted at a time in history when Northern European people didn't know the difference between lion's and leopards.
Usual England based nonsense, which cannot differentiate between England and Britain. Probably because the guy making the video knows almost nothing about Scotland, Wales and N Ireland. The product of an English education.
The UK Flag is NOT called the UNION JACK - It is the UNION FLAG. Jack refers to the pole it is attached to on ships.. Wales was already part of Britain before the final union and therefore does not have an inclusion of its own.
You are a bit out of touch there - The Admiralty used both names (Flag and Jack) interchangeably from the seventeenth century onwards, irrespective of use. An Admiralty Circular of 1902 pronounced that either name was officially valid. And in 1908 Parliament approved this verdict, confirming that 'The Union Jack should be regarded as the National flag'. Also Wales was not included as it was a Principality of England at the time and Wales only got officially recognised as a country again in 2011.
Only about 120 + years out of date... But hey! whose counting. The Union Jack, or Union Flag, is the de facto national flag of the United Kingdom. According to the Flag Institute (the vexillological charity), "the national flag of the United Kingdom, the Crown Dependencies and Overseas Territories is the Union Flag, which may also be called the Union Jack."
@@stewedfishproductions7959 never heard the word "vexillological" before but I know what it means now.. Thanks for getting my daily "learning moment" out of the way before lunch 👍..... Just can't wait to use the phrase "Big Vexillology" next time I'm winding up the symbology crowd 😉..
This video is a few years old, so some things might have been updated. Like we now have a king. Also, not all swans belong to the king. This was debunked a while ago. The crown count swans on a certain part of the river Thames pronounced ri·vuh temz
Only some of the people in the London area say 'ri-vuh', most of the rest of us Brits actually say River correctly. I'll let you off with 'temz' though.
The first swans shown had black bills and so were trumpeter swans, an American species definitely not occurring in the UK. The second was a single orange-billed mute swan which is the British species.
@Thurgosh_OG, it's just easy to show how to pronounce it. Yes river is pronounced correctly. But if your trying to teach someone how to say something by text how can you.
7:52 - The minimum age for alcohol consumption is 5 when you are at home or 16 with a meal. - "In England, Scotland and Wales, it’s not illegal for someone between the ages of five and 17 to drink alcohol at home or on other private premises". "Someone aged 16 or 17 and accompanied by an adult, can drink (but not buy) beer, wine or cider with a meal at a licensed premises (except in Northern Ireland). But it’s illegal for people this age to drink spirits in a pub anywhere in the UK, even with a meal".
I put your channel on when i go to sleep. Your voice and temperament are so calming. You are a good soul. I need this easy listening stuff. The world is pretty dark rn. Thanks for being you.
I live in Northern Ireland have done for 58 years, we actually do have a flag and it's called "The Ulster Flag" or "Red Hand of Ulster Flag" white background with red cross and red hand of Ulster on it. We also fly the union jack.
Scotland's flag is called the Saltire and commemorates the shape of the cross that St Andrew was crucified upon. Nothing to do with clouds in the sky etc. Quite a few of these facts should be taken with a pinch of salt
He says the London Underground is one of the oldest in the world, it’s the oldest opened 10 January 1863 , but some stations are a lot older the oldest is Harrow& Wealdstone 1837 . JH
The St George cross was the flag of the Plantagenet family once kings of England from about 1154 (henry 2nd) so its been around a bit longer than you think.
The UK originally applied to join what is now the European Union in 1963 but it was vetoed, by Charles De Gaulle of France, because of our 'too' close relationship with the USA. We applied again, successfully, and joined on Jan. 1st 1973, not 1979 as stated in the video!
After de Gaulle died. Just think how much better things would be if we'd stayed out back then and not got conned by yet another Government with an agenda.
Remember to say we were taken in to the 'common market' as it was called at the time by Ted Heaths government without a vote. The referendum (to remain in) came along in 1975.
and that was of course before it morphed into the over reaching and unrepresentative political force that it is now that dictates laws to it's members from an unelected elitist council. @@petergordon4525
The red Lion is a popular symbol for England - usually the football team is the most well known symbol for the red lions being used but its used in other places too, like the pubs :) Got the colour wrong, look for more info down below
There's also a Scottish flag called the Lion Rampant. Bright yellow background with the Red Lion reared up on its back legs and its 2 front paws out and ready to punch somebody.
If you’re looking for The Quiet Woman pub on a night out in Buxton, you won’t find it. It’s in Earl Sterndale, a village 5 miles from Buxton and it’s been closed for a while now.
You should have a good look at how the top stones are joined to the uprights on Stonehenge. They're not just laid flat across, they have something akin to a ball & socket joint kinda like prehistoric lego. Mindblowing💪🇬🇧😂
No. 14, the castles, it needs to be said that this can cause huge disappointment because many of these are just a few stones in the grass, not even a building. So, check it out carefully before rushing off to see one. But some of them are just fabulous, if course.
And the number is too low, theres about 3000 in various states of repair in Scotland alone, Wales has more than 600 and from what I can find England has at least 4000.
That is the case for the current King and Queen, however for her late majesty and the duke of Edinburgh they preferred to stay in Windsor most of the time. @@isabellajones-hyde9194
We haven't had an official flag since 1973. The flag we use is what we have chosen for ourselves, that's the Ulster Banner. The saltire is in the Union Jack. Both great flags.
The flag you have described is called the Ulster banner which was used from 1953-1973 but since then there has not been an official flag of Northern Ireland.
@@NordieJMany of us Scots prefer 'The Lion Rampant' for our flag. Takes away any religious connections, as we're not into that stuff as much as others are.
Hi, you should take a look at Woolacombe Beach in North Devon it is 3 miles of beautiful golden sands with lovely sand dunes and rolling hills and valleys as a background . It is my favourite place to go on holiday when I can 😊
I'm a Scotsman so I will in fact stick up for haggis. It's incredibly tasty and even more versatile than one would think. If you had no idea what it was, you'd quite simply love it.
you have such a soothing voice....you need to do audiobooks.....btw...im British and am learning things about our great Kingdom...so this is pretty cool.....:-)
The amount of times I went up the escaltor in Angel after a night out and felt like I was going to die. bonus info, there's also a Red Lion pub just down the road from there.
There is a good reason for so many pubs being called the red lion. Many buildings are extremely old and when pubs operated back then, the majority of customers couldn't read, so they used pictures to advertise their pubs, the red lion, being an English symbol was common. The names stuck and today you have many pubs called the kings head or golden ball simply because that was the picture hanging outside.
Northern Ireland does have it's own flag called The Red Hand of Ulster although Republican Catholic Northern Irelanders refuse to recognise it as it is a protestant loyalist flag. It's a Red Hand on a St George's Cross. Wales is not included in the union flag as it was not considered a kingdom only a principality hence the next direct heir to the English Royal throne is always The Prince or Princess of Wales
The clock is called the great clock of Westminster and the tower is the Elizabeth tower, big ben is the nickname of the "Great Bell" inside and the three Lions in heraldry are Leopards but no one had seen one so they drew a Lion.
16:10 Yes, football is that old - sort of. The oldest surviving written reference to Foot Ball (it was written as two words) was from a famous ordinance from 1314; but since this was an attempt to ban the game, one presumes the usage was much older. However, mediaeval football was very different from the game we know today. Back then, it was basically a legal riot with a ball in the middle. There were two teams, each of which had to get the ball to a stated objective, but other than that there were few, if any rules. A survivor of mediaeval football (called the Ba' Game) is still played in Kirkwall, in Orkney. Whereas in most ball sports punching an opponent in the face is regarded as foul play,, in the Ba' Game it's positively encouraged.
Karl Marx wrote the communist manifesto in cheethams library, Manchester, NOT in London as this video states. ALSO, northern Ireland DOES have a flag. It's a red cross, with a hand in the centre.
Two American tourists visiting Windsor Castle, the husband comments his wife as a plane flys over to land a Heathrow airport, fancy building a castle close by an airport!
It was not East Peckham where the first speeding ticket was given out it was actually Paddock Wood which was only constructed for the railway line that goes through it I know this as I'm very close and was forced to learn the history😂
A lot of uk pubs are named after the heraldic ( coat of arms creature) of the family that used to own loads of land in the area, they were often dukes and royalty!
My sister-in-law's mum's ashes are in the dame cemetery as Pocahontas. When I visited it as a child I thought the town was called Gravesend because her grave was there.
The NHS (health service) is the biggest employer in Europe and the fifth biggest employer in the world. Think about that for a moment. That's what's wrong with our 'model' - it turned into a bureaucratic nightmare.
I realise this was made a few years ago, but the highest temperature was beaten a couple of years ago when it got above 40 degrees, it got to something like 40.3 in some areas, maybe higher? It's also a wet heat so humid especially at night, so it can be horrible.
It was horrible. Even the night time was bad. I was sat in my living room with two fans on me and it was still 36 degrees in there. I actually went to Lidl for some stuff and there was actually a breeze, it was so hot it was like a dragon breathing on me. My enduring memory of that day was getting to Lidl and it feeling like heaven walking around the cooler aisle with everyone moving suspiciously slow.
I don't like heights and had to do the Angel escalator the other day. I knew it was very long, had been on it before a long time ago and been terrified. My husband stood behind me and I just stared at the step in front of me. It takes ages but I made it. Refused to go back down though.
There's a higher one at Universal Studios in California, but it's less scary because its outdoors and seeing the sky helps with the the trapped feeling.
I was told by a English professor that Paraguay, is the only country that can drink tea as much as UK, we're just a population of 7 millions but we drink yerba mate everyday, all day as terere (cold infusion with fresh herbs), mate (hot infusion with dry herbs, cocido (burned yerba mate, boiled and mixed with milk) and the traditional tea.
10:59 If you ever decide to do movie reactions, either on this channel or possibly a new one, _The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy_ would be a great place to start!
The rain at the end is the chorus of the first two, and also a theme - Genesis - Noah etc. beer and circuses / Romans also distracted their plebs. Loved your reaction / got pateon while watching 👍
4:41 my granny was taking a walk through a village and there was a pub which was yet to be named so it was unofficially called, “ye olde pubby mc’pubface.”
Old money: two farthings made a ha'penny, two ha'pennies made a penny, three pennies made thruppence (the thruppenny bit), six pennies made sixpence (a tanner), two sixpences made a shilling (a bob), two shillings made a florin, a florin and sixpence made a half crown and five shillings made a crown. Four crowns made one pound sterling (a banknote). I remember all of those coins but not the groat (fourpence), the half sovereign (ten shillings), the sovereign (one pound sterling) or the guinea coin (one pound and one shilling). Guineas were still in regular use as a denomination until 1971 but the coin had disappeared many decades before. Maybe they still are somewhere.
I think it was a great pity that we lost our old coins. I was 25 when we were forced to (sort of!!) convert to metric. The 'shilling' had been in use since the seventh century AD, I believe, and the 'penny' (written as 'd' for denarius), since Roman times. We still have pennies (but now written as 'p', but what a shame that we lost the old name 'shilling'. 😕🇬🇧
Shillings were still legal tender until end of 1990. UK was very slow in upgrading to decimal currency. Russia being the first in 1704. France in 1795 . Mexico in 1860. USA have only ever had decimal dollars. (Since 1862) . Only 2 countries are still to go decimal.
@@HamnaTabuuThat's right in the sense that the coins were still in circulation because they were identical in shape and size to the "5 New Pence" piece. They were never referred to as shillings after 1971 (gas excepted, see below), however. The same applied to the two shilling piece which equated to 10 new pence. The tanner (6d) was also in circulation for a time too, equivalent to 2 and a half new pence. For a limited period, you could even spend the old copper pennies and threepenny bits as long as you did so in batches to the exact value of 6d (2.5 p in new money). It didn't seem confusing at all to me as a 16 year old but everyone agreed that the whole exercise was a rip-off as every price in the shops was always rounded *up* to the nearest equivalent in new money, *never* down despite government promises. Shillings were what you put in your gas meter at the time of the changeover to new money. Quite possibly elderly people referred to the new 5p coins as shillings for that purpose. One of the delights of the old money was that it was not uncommon to be given pennies with 19th century dates and with Queen Victoria's head on them, most often where she is wearing widow's to mourn Albert and her small crown, but, occasionally, her younger portrait with her hair in a bun. Edward VII pennies were common, as were George V florins (2 shillings = 10p). Since 1971, every single coin has Elizabeth II and no one else.
It would be nice to have a video or two or three which spend time saying more about Wales, Scotland and Ireland. This one was very heavily slanted towards being Anglocentric.
Hi HI I'm a recent subscriber. I'm enjoying your reactions to all things British. I must say i find your voice very soothing , and it was driving me and trying to recall who your voice sounds like and it's just come to me. Eric Stoltz, have you ever been told this? Hopefully you have not taken this as an insult as that was not my intention. As an actor you'll probably know who I mean.
with llanfair-P.G (shortened vison) it was called that to attract tourists and it is one of the longest words in the world (I think) In the UK there are many other sports like swimming, cricket, Rugby (my favourite) and of curse football/soccer and many more.
Northern Ireland officialy has no individual flag, other than the Union Jack, however there are three alternatives - the Ulster Banner (a St. George Cross with a crown atop a white six pointed star and a red hand in the middle), the Irish Tricolour (Green, White and Orange), and as an appeasement the Saint Patrick Cross.
Zipper injuries will mostly be men catching their genitalia in their trouser flies (zips on their jean/pants for non-Brits). Slipper injuries probably classifies every footwear without that 'slips on' or lacks the support of normal footwear. Accidents will be due to slipping on floor surfaces, down stairs, the slipper coming partly or fully off of foot, or tripping over. Accidents that 'may' have been avoided wearing normal shoes or just not wearing slippers.
A great list, but you don't need to be 18 to drink in the UK. You DO need to be 18 to be sold alcohol, but it is legal for an adult to buy alcohol for a 16-17yr old if accompanied by a meal in a licenced establishment (e.g. a pub or a restaurant), while it is also legal for a child 5yrs+ to drink a moderate amount of alcohol at home or in a private setting.
You are only about 120 + years out of date... But hey! whose counting. 😃 FYI: The Union Jack, or Union Flag, is the 'de facto' national flag of the United Kingdom. According to the Flag Institute (the vexillological charity), "the national flag of the United Kingdom, the Crown Dependencies and Overseas Territories is the Union Flag, which may also be called the Union Jack." Additionally: The Admiralty used both names (Flag and Jack) interchangeably from the seventeenth century onwards, irrespective of use. An Admiralty Circular of 1902 pronounced that either name was officially valid. And in 1908 Parliament approved this verdict, confirming that 'The Union Jack should be regarded as the National flag'.
Contrary to popular belief and as mentioned, we don't elect a Prime Minister. Voters, elect Members of Parliament. The party having the most MPs forms a government, the Prime Minister being the leader of the ruling party.
It doesn't - the flag you are referring to is the ULSTER flag. Quote “ The Ulster Banner Saint Patrick's Saltire The only official flag for Northern Ireland is the Union Flag or Union Jack, the flag of the United Kingdom; there is no official local flag that represents only Northern Ireland.[1][2][3][4] The flying of various flags in Northern Ireland is a significant sectarian issue, with different communities identifying with different flags.[5]
Just an FYI the English red cross on white background was originally the French flag of the Crusades, the English flag was the reverse a white cross on a red background.
So the Union flag is ONLY called the Union Jack when flown from a ship of the line. Northern Ireland does have a flag as some one has already pointed out…
This guy is a genuine guy that wants to learn, notice if he doesn't get a reference he googles it.. that is where all the other UA-camrs go wrong, they just here some shit and ask you to tell them in comments.. he's actually learning things but also shows the willingness to learn right in front of you other than behind a keyboard.. Loving the work JJ
And he has an awesome voice. Very calm and soothing. After the strike is over with (hopefully) the people on strike getting what they deserve, I want to hear his calm smooth tones in more media. Movies, TV, Video Games, etc.
Tyler Rumple (British reactions)
/ Tyler Bucket (Canadian reactions)
also looks stuff up if he hears things that he doesn't understand though he poauses far too frequently, and seldom seems to really listen. He hears how things are pronounced and repeats them correctly but then goes ahead and mispronounces them anyway, which is annoying. He also asks for comments but does not seem to read any and has only ever once responded to any. Unlike Tyler,
JJ is one of the, (if not _The_) best reactors, imo. 🖖
Agreed! His reactions are a pleasure to watch. An intelligent and charming guy, for sure.
Steve (Reacting To My Roots) from Indiana, also requests help, links, advice etc, in the comments - and, like JJ here, he actually reads and responds to them.
(Steve also "hearts" in response to his "favourite' comments Steve learns from them and the videos he watches).
It's as pleasing to watch and follow Steve, as it is to JJ. ☺️☺️
... It is a tad 'less' enjoyable responding to Tyler Rumple - UK (aka Tyler Bucket - Canada) and to Ryan Wuzer - Australia
(also both from Indiana) as they both request our comments, yet both seem not to read the comments, to interact with, or learn from the comments...though Tyler does often Google stuff he doesn't understand and both seem to learn from the videos they watch, at least. (...though it surprises me at times, how little they all seem to know about, or have heard of, regarding the countries they're reacting to, but then,that's the whole point of these videos of course. 🤔☺️ Sometimes, we learn too, so that's always a bonus, imo. ☺️❤️☺️❤️☺️❤️🖖
He's an actor, I believe. With a voice like his, he should get a lot of voiceover work.
This is easily becoming my favourite American reactor channel. I love how keen he is to learn stuff, not to mention his quite naughty sense of humour that sneaks out occasionally. Oh, and that voice!
Yes! I want him to do a mindfulness or sleep podcast....
There are so many inaccuracies in this video:
-Northern Ireland DOES have a flag
-England and Scotland Joined in 1605
-Gaelic (pronounced Gay-lick) is Irish while Gaelic (pronounced Gah-lick) is Scottish
-Scots isn’t a language it’s a dialect
-England hasn’t officially had a monarch have all the power since the Magna Carta was signed in 1215
-Queen Elizabeth isn’t just the head of state for the UK but for the majority of the Commonwealth
-French was actually only the official language for Nobles and wasn’t spoken by most common men
-it’s also illegal to eat a Swan in the UK
-Oliver Cromwell also tried to ban celebrating Christmas except for attending Church
-We do know how Stonehenge was built( or we have a pretty good idea at least)
-This British Library is NOT the largest library in the world
-Shakespeare created 3,000 words AND PHRASES
This is what I can correct without researching
Northern Ireland doesn't have an official flag.
The Act of Union was in 1707. Just because the Monarch was the same doesn't mean that England and Scotland weren't two separate countries.
Scots is an officially recognised language.
The Monarch has a lot more powers than you imagine. The Monarch can veto laws, dismiss the government on a whim and also choose who the Prime Minister is. The Monarch can pick anyone to be PM. Doesn't have to be an MP.
The last Queen of England died in 1603 btw.
England and Scotland were separate countries until the Act of Union in 1707. They shared the same monarch but otherwise were independent. The Magna Carta was torn up and ignored by King John soon after he signed it and put very few limits on his powers anyway. It was centuries later that parliament took any real power to govern away from the king. Only certain swans (mute swans in open water have legal protection) this thing about all Swans being the property of the monarch is an urban myth.
I think it's hilarious when someone calls out someone else for inaccuracies, only for themselves to be inaccurate.
Several things you said wasn't true, was true.
42 is a reference to Douglas Adams novel "hitchhikers guide to the galaxy" they made a movie or three of it. Its hilarious. No spoilers, mate.
Something I forgot to add in my previous reply the lions of England are not actually lions, they're leopards. Historical they were adopted at a time in history when Northern European people didn't know the difference between lion's and leopards.
In heraldry you can only have one lion at a time. If there's more than one they're leopards. Yeah, I know, pretty obvious innit.
But many don't know
I saw this fact mentioned on qi, a rerun, quite recently
Usual England based nonsense, which cannot differentiate between England and Britain. Probably because the guy making the video knows almost nothing about Scotland, Wales and N Ireland. The product of an English education.
He called Elizabeth II Queen of England In fact England like Scotland hasn't had it's own Monarch since the Union of the Crowns in 1603
She was also technically Elizabeth II of England and Wales and First of Scotland (cf James VI/I and James VII/II)
The UK Flag is NOT called the UNION JACK - It is the UNION FLAG. Jack refers to the pole it is attached to on ships.. Wales was already part of Britain before the final union and therefore does not have an inclusion of its own.
You are a bit out of touch there -
The Admiralty used both names (Flag and Jack) interchangeably from the seventeenth century onwards, irrespective of use. An Admiralty Circular of 1902 pronounced that either name was officially valid. And in 1908 Parliament approved this verdict, confirming that 'The Union Jack should be regarded as the National flag'.
Also Wales was not included as it was a Principality of England at the time and Wales only got officially recognised as a country again in 2011.
Only about 120 + years out of date... But hey! whose counting. The Union Jack, or Union Flag, is the de facto national flag of the United Kingdom. According to the Flag Institute (the vexillological charity), "the national flag of the United Kingdom, the Crown Dependencies and Overseas Territories is the Union Flag, which may also be called the Union Jack."
@@stewedfishproductions7959
never heard the word "vexillological" before but I know what it means now.. Thanks for getting my daily "learning moment" out of the way before lunch 👍.....
Just can't wait to use the phrase "Big Vexillology" next time I'm winding up the symbology crowd 😉..
@@Rachel_M_
Nice to learn new things... I too learnt several today - the hardest part is remembering it all... 😎
@@stewedfishproductions7959 i recently started exploring Welsh.. Some lessons are harder than others 😂
This video is a few years old, so some things might have been updated. Like we now have a king.
Also, not all swans belong to the king. This was debunked a while ago. The crown count swans on a certain part of the river Thames pronounced ri·vuh temz
There's a lot more, and serious things, wrong with it than that.
@sunnyjim1355 I know, but let's have fun at least for a little bit.
Only some of the people in the London area say 'ri-vuh', most of the rest of us Brits actually say River correctly. I'll let you off with 'temz' though.
The first swans shown had black bills and so were trumpeter swans, an American species definitely not occurring in the UK. The second was a single orange-billed mute swan which is the British species.
@Thurgosh_OG, it's just easy to show how to pronounce it. Yes river is pronounced correctly. But if your trying to teach someone how to say something by text how can you.
7:52 - The minimum age for alcohol consumption is 5 when you are at home or 16 with a meal. - "In England, Scotland and Wales, it’s not illegal for someone between the ages of five and 17 to drink alcohol at home or on other private premises". "Someone aged 16 or 17 and accompanied by an adult, can drink (but not buy) beer, wine or cider with a meal at a licensed premises (except in Northern Ireland). But it’s illegal for people this age to drink spirits in a pub anywhere in the UK, even with a meal".
I put your channel on when i go to sleep. Your voice and temperament are so calming. You are a good soul. I need this easy listening stuff. The world is pretty dark rn. Thanks for being you.
JJ - if you think Stonehenge is old and cool, have a look at Skara Brae Village. It's on the Orkney Islands off the Northern Coast of Scotland.
Skara Brae is on another level .I'd love to see it at some point. Those houses looked like they'd have been quite warm and cosy inside
I was always taught that the Scottish flag has a diagonal cross because St Andrew, the patron saint, was crucified on a diagonal cross.
Yep, me too. 😕🇬🇧
Its also the oldest and first flag created.
Yep. That’s what I was taught up here in Edinburgh too.
This has so many underlying jokes that are missed and is actually very clever, I would love to explain them...
I live in Northern Ireland have done for 58 years, we actually do have a flag and it's called "The Ulster Flag" or "Red Hand of Ulster Flag" white background with red cross and red hand of Ulster on it. We also fly the union jack.
Ulster flag has a yellow background.
@justlikebuttah there is one with a yellow background but I have never seen it flown here
I have. The white background is thyNi banner.
What about the Saint Patrick's Saltire diagonal cross?
Scotland's flag is called the Saltire and commemorates the shape of the cross that St Andrew was crucified upon. Nothing to do with clouds in the sky etc. Quite a few of these facts should be taken with a pinch of salt
He says the London Underground is one of the oldest in the world, it’s the oldest opened 10 January 1863 , but some stations are a lot older the oldest is Harrow& Wealdstone 1837 . JH
The stones for Stonehenge came from mid wales...
The St George cross was the flag of the Plantagenet family once kings of England from about 1154 (henry 2nd) so its been around a bit longer than you think.
Its actually not all swans it's just mute swans and only a specific stretch of river/lakes that are protected by the crown
You don't have to 18 years old to drink alcohol,you have to be 18 years old to buy alchol ,5 years of age is the legal age to drink alcohol.
The UK originally applied to join what is now the European Union in 1963 but it was vetoed, by Charles De Gaulle of France, because of our 'too' close relationship with the USA. We applied again, successfully, and joined on Jan. 1st 1973, not 1979 as stated in the video!
After de Gaulle died. Just think how much better things would be if we'd stayed out back then and not got conned by yet another Government with an agenda.
Remember to say we were taken in to the 'common market' as it was called at the time by Ted Heaths government without a vote. The referendum (to remain in) came along in 1975.
and that was of course before it morphed into the over reaching and unrepresentative political force that it is now that dictates laws to it's members from an unelected elitist council. @@petergordon4525
The red Lion is a popular symbol for England - usually the football team is the most well known symbol for the red lions being used but its used in other places too, like the pubs :)
Got the colour wrong, look for more info down below
For Scotland, actually. England's lion is gold.
@@neuralwarp Welp, thanks for pointing that out, I did also just remember the lions were blue not red on English football t-shirts as well, oops.
Follow joolz guides for far better information about London and the uk
@@neuralwarp They are blue on the football logo (for some reason)
There's also a Scottish flag called the Lion Rampant. Bright yellow background with the Red Lion reared up on its back legs and its 2 front paws out and ready to punch somebody.
We do have a constitution. Its called the Magna Carta.
The Welsh flag has a big and ancient story to it. Stonehenge is conncted with Astronomy and sacrifice.
Wow, you know what Stonehenge is for.
I think there are lots of historical societies want to talk to you.
lots of people know what Stonehenge is for... it's essentially a big calendar.@@Cheezsoup
This bloke is the king of these type of videos.
If you’re looking for The Quiet Woman pub on a night out in Buxton, you won’t find it. It’s in Earl Sterndale, a village 5 miles from Buxton and it’s been closed for a while now.
Our highest recorded temperature is now 40 C, so 104, last year :)
40.3c to be exact.
Taken from Heathrow Airport runway, doesn't count.
@@worldVHS Heathrow is not in Lincolnshire.
You should have a good look at how the top stones are joined to the uprights on Stonehenge. They're not just laid flat across, they have something akin to a ball & socket joint kinda like prehistoric lego. Mindblowing💪🇬🇧😂
No. 14, the castles, it needs to be said that this can cause huge disappointment because many of these are just a few stones in the grass, not even a building. So, check it out carefully before rushing off to see one. But some of them are just fabulous, if course.
And the number is too low, theres about 3000 in various states of repair in Scotland alone, Wales has more than 600 and from what I can find England has at least 4000.
Wales has only 600, but that is more per square mile than anywhere else in the world
Windsor castle is the home of the royal family.
Buckingham place is the office and a place to conduct official events 😉
Windsor Castle is more weekend/country retreat for King and Queen, as when they are in London they live in Clarence House
That is the case for the current King and Queen, however for her late majesty and the duke of Edinburgh they preferred to stay in Windsor most of the time. @@isabellajones-hyde9194
Northern Ireland DOES have a flag,it's the English one with a white star in middle with a red hand on it🎩
Beat me to it.
We haven't had an official flag since 1973. The flag we use is what we have chosen for ourselves, that's the Ulster Banner. The saltire is in the Union Jack. Both great flags.
The flag you have described is called the Ulster banner which was used from 1953-1973 but since then there has not been an official flag of Northern Ireland.
With a raised middle finger by any chance?
@@NordieJMany of us Scots prefer 'The Lion Rampant' for our flag. Takes away any religious connections, as we're not into that stuff as much as others are.
Big Ben, is the bell, not the Tower. When cast, it developed a small hair line crack which gives it it's distinctive note!
Hi, you should take a look at Woolacombe Beach in North Devon it is 3 miles of beautiful golden sands with lovely sand dunes and rolling hills and valleys as a background . It is my favourite place to go on holiday when I can 😊
Just to confirm the London Underground is THE oldest in the world not just ONE of.
Yeah, and the UK didn't join the EU in 1979, firstly because it didn't exist until 1993, and secondly we joined its forerunner the EEC in 1973.
Yes and we got dragged into the later politically domineering version without being asked if that is what we wanted it to become. @@flashmcglash
And the monarch doesn’t own all the swans only most swans on one stretch of the Thames.
I'm a Scotsman so I will in fact stick up for haggis. It's incredibly tasty and even more versatile than one would think. If you had no idea what it was, you'd quite simply love it.
I love haggis and I'm English 🇬🇧
you have such a soothing voice....you need to do audiobooks.....btw...im British and am learning things about our great Kingdom...so this is pretty cool.....:-)
Cross between sounding like Michael Jackson and looking a bit like henry cavill😂
You have a lovely calming voice 😊
The long Welsh place name was invented to attract visitors/ to make better known.
And it's not even the longest in the world, as I think a place in New Zealand holds that title.
The amount of times I went up the escaltor in Angel after a night out and felt like I was going to die.
bonus info, there's also a Red Lion pub just down the road from there.
10:59 love the hitchkikers guide to the galaxy reference and also the confusion on his face 😂 if you know, you know
Yep, 42 is the answer to life, the universe and everything.
Indian Queens, 8 miles from Newquay in Cornwall, is named after Pocahontas. She spent her night in a Coaching House there, after landing at Newquay.
There is a good reason for so many pubs being called the red lion. Many buildings are extremely old and when pubs operated back then, the majority of customers couldn't read, so they used pictures to advertise their pubs, the red lion, being an English symbol was common. The names stuck and today you have many pubs called the kings head or golden ball simply because that was the picture hanging outside.
The union flag, is only correctly known as the union jack, when it's on a ship.
You looked confused at 42 "The Meaning Of Life"
You really should read The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy trilogy by Douglas Adams.
42 is a reference to the hitchhikers guide to the galaxy.
The number 42 is the answer to the meaning of life.
But what was the question?
So long, and thanks for all the fish. 🐬
This was rather humoured entertainment ... I had a chuckle!
the factual and historical veracity is open to question, Mein Herr!
😂❤
Northern Ireland does have it's own flag called The Red Hand of Ulster although Republican Catholic Northern Irelanders refuse to recognise it as it is a protestant loyalist flag. It's a Red Hand on a St George's Cross. Wales is not included in the union flag as it was not considered a kingdom only a principality hence the next direct heir to the English Royal throne is always The Prince or Princess of Wales
True. Wales only regained it's official recognition as a separate country in 2011.
Hilarious that Americans think haggis is disgusting, but hot dogs aren't 😂 (eyes, lips, testicles )
It's sunny 🌞 today and those 2 pints of beer used on the video for the numbers are looking amazing 👌👌
The clock is called the great clock of Westminster and the tower is the Elizabeth tower, big ben is the nickname of the "Great Bell" inside and the three Lions in heraldry are Leopards but no one had seen one so they drew a Lion.
16:10 Yes, football is that old - sort of. The oldest surviving written reference to Foot Ball (it was written as two words) was from a famous ordinance from 1314; but since this was an attempt to ban the game, one presumes the usage was much older.
However, mediaeval football was very different from the game we know today. Back then, it was basically a legal riot with a ball in the middle. There were two teams, each of which had to get the ball to a stated objective, but other than that there were few, if any rules.
A survivor of mediaeval football (called the Ba' Game) is still played in Kirkwall, in Orkney. Whereas in most ball sports punching an opponent in the face is regarded as foul play,, in the Ba' Game it's positively encouraged.
We were told at school that the 'ball' in the game's early versions was a Frenchman's head!! 🙄🇬🇧
Karl Marx wrote the communist manifesto in cheethams library, Manchester, NOT in London as this video states. ALSO, northern Ireland DOES have a flag. It's a red cross, with a hand in the centre.
Two American tourists visiting Windsor Castle, the husband comments his wife as a plane flys over to land a Heathrow airport, fancy building a castle close by an airport!
Thank-you for your reaction, very enjoyable to watch.Stay safe and well.
Birmingham went bankrupt this week as a city. Fun fact their council ran out of money.
It was not East Peckham where the first speeding ticket was given out it was actually Paddock Wood which was only constructed for the railway line that goes through it I know this as I'm very close and was forced to learn the history😂
A lot of uk pubs are named after the heraldic ( coat of arms creature) of the family that used to own loads of land in the area, they were often dukes and royalty!
Lots of pubs are also Spoonerism. Like Boar's Head, for example.
It's actually only called a Union Jack when it's flown on a warship. It's otherwise called a Union Flag.
No it's not. You can call it the Union Jack OR Union Flag, whenever. They are both correct.
My sister-in-law's mum's ashes are in the dame cemetery as Pocahontas. When I visited it as a child I thought the town was called Gravesend because her grave was there.
"Grave" does not the grave of someone, it actually means "land" hence "Lands end"
Acute angle is less than 90°. As seen in the picture.
The NHS (health service) is the biggest employer in Europe and the fifth biggest employer in the world. Think about that for a moment. That's what's wrong with our 'model' - it turned into a bureaucratic nightmare.
I work in a shop near the bus station in Canterbury and the National Express service from there to London is indeed numbered 007!
UK Joined the EEC in 1973. The first European Parliament election took place in 1979
My Father’s Moustache is in Louth Lincolnshire 16 miles from Grimsby where I live. The temperature mentioned in the video was beaten last year.
Portsmouth has a pub called 'The Jolly Taxpayer' in the Copnor area.
The red lion is a common name for pubs in England. It comes from King Richarx 1st. Known as Richarc the lionheart.
I realise this was made a few years ago, but the highest temperature was beaten a couple of years ago when it got above 40 degrees, it got to something like 40.3 in some areas, maybe higher? It's also a wet heat so humid especially at night, so it can be horrible.
It was horrible. Even the night time was bad. I was sat in my living room with two fans on me and it was still 36 degrees in there. I actually went to Lidl for some stuff and there was actually a breeze, it was so hot it was like a dragon breathing on me. My enduring memory of that day was getting to Lidl and it feeling like heaven walking around the cooler aisle with everyone moving suspiciously slow.
The 4 meters for Scotland means for the hole of Scotland if rain covered Scotland all at one time it would be covered in 4 meter tall water
Haggis is actually a very tasty dish as Americans' who come to Scotland find out when they actually try it
It's delicious
The Americans I know hate it.
I don't like heights and had to do the Angel escalator the other day. I knew it was very long, had been on it before a long time ago and been terrified. My husband stood behind me and I just stared at the step in front of me. It takes ages but I made it. Refused to go back down though.
There's a higher one at Universal Studios in California, but it's less scary because its outdoors and seeing the sky helps with the the trapped feeling.
I was told by a English professor that Paraguay, is the only country that can drink tea as much as UK, we're just a population of 7 millions but we drink yerba mate everyday, all day as terere (cold infusion with fresh herbs), mate (hot infusion with dry herbs, cocido (burned yerba mate, boiled and mixed with milk) and the traditional tea.
10:59 If you ever decide to do movie reactions, either on this channel or possibly a new one, _The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy_ would be a great place to start!
14:35 Hey! Keeping Up Appearances is great. The Bouquet residence! Lady of house speaking!
The rain at the end is the chorus of the first two, and also a theme - Genesis - Noah etc.
beer and circuses / Romans also distracted their plebs.
Loved your reaction / got pateon while watching 👍
very impressed at how quickly you got the chicken tikka masala lol! welldone!
This guy is such an underrated youtuber he deserves alot more views and subscribers.
4:41 my granny was taking a walk through a village and there was a pub which was yet to be named so it was unofficially called, “ye olde pubby mc’pubface.”
On the subject of silly pub names, I live a few miles away from a Fawcett Inn.
Your face when he mentions taxes and lobbying haha oh priceless bro hehe 😂😂😂
4:29 Because the Red Lion is on the coat of arms of the kings of Scotland. The Blue Boar and White Hart have similar origins.
In Scotland the legal age to drink alcohol is actually 16 but 18 to buy it
Old money: two farthings made a ha'penny, two ha'pennies made a penny, three pennies made thruppence (the thruppenny bit), six pennies made sixpence (a tanner), two sixpences made a shilling (a bob), two shillings made a florin, a florin and sixpence made a half crown and five shillings made a crown. Four crowns made one pound sterling (a banknote).
I remember all of those coins but not the groat (fourpence), the half sovereign (ten shillings), the sovereign (one pound sterling) or the guinea coin (one pound and one shilling).
Guineas were still in regular use as a denomination until 1971 but the coin had disappeared many decades before. Maybe they still are somewhere.
I believe horses are still sold in guineas.
I think it was a great pity that we lost our old coins. I was 25 when we were forced to (sort of!!) convert to metric.
The 'shilling' had been in use since the seventh century AD, I believe, and the 'penny' (written as 'd' for denarius), since Roman times.
We still have pennies (but now written as 'p', but what a shame that we lost the old name 'shilling'. 😕🇬🇧
Shillings were still legal tender until end of 1990. UK was very slow in upgrading to decimal currency. Russia being the first in 1704. France in 1795 . Mexico in 1860. USA have only ever had decimal dollars. (Since 1862) . Only 2 countries are still to go decimal.
@@HamnaTabuuThat's right in the sense that the coins were still in circulation because they were identical in shape and size to the "5 New Pence" piece. They were never referred to as shillings after 1971 (gas excepted, see below), however. The same applied to the two shilling piece which equated to 10 new pence. The tanner (6d) was also in circulation for a time too, equivalent to 2 and a half new pence. For a limited period, you could even spend the old copper pennies and threepenny bits as long as you did so in batches to the exact value of 6d (2.5 p in new money). It didn't seem confusing at all to me as a 16 year old but everyone agreed that the whole exercise was a rip-off as every price in the shops was always rounded *up* to the nearest equivalent in new money, *never* down despite government promises.
Shillings were what you put in your gas meter at the time of the changeover to new money. Quite possibly elderly people referred to the new 5p coins as shillings for that purpose.
One of the delights of the old money was that it was not uncommon to be given pennies with 19th century dates and with Queen Victoria's head on them, most often where she is wearing widow's to mourn Albert and her small crown, but, occasionally, her younger portrait with her hair in a bun. Edward VII pennies were common, as were George V florins (2 shillings = 10p). Since 1971, every single coin has Elizabeth II and no one else.
It would be nice to have a video or two or three which spend time saying more about Wales, Scotland and Ireland. This one was very heavily slanted towards being Anglocentric.
Strangest pub name i have come across is the "who'd of thought it Inn"
23:20 Doctor Whooooooooo!!!!!!!!!
I've just finished a large cup of tea, time to put the kettle on.
I lived just around the corner from that, my father's mustache pub, louth Lincolnshire.
Hi HI I'm a recent subscriber. I'm enjoying your reactions to all things British. I must say i find your voice very soothing , and it was driving me and trying to recall who your voice sounds like and it's just come to me. Eric Stoltz, have you ever been told this? Hopefully you have not taken this as an insult as that was not my intention. As an actor you'll probably know who I mean.
with llanfair-P.G (shortened vison) it was called that to attract tourists and it is one of the longest words in the world (I think) In the UK there are many other sports like swimming, cricket, Rugby (my favourite) and of curse football/soccer and many more.
Great Reaction from our LA mystery Man,who I have subscribed to,but don't know his name:)
Northern Ireland officialy has no individual flag, other than the Union Jack, however there are three alternatives - the Ulster Banner (a St. George Cross with a crown atop a white six pointed star and a red hand in the middle), the Irish Tricolour (Green, White and Orange), and as an appeasement the Saint Patrick Cross.
Zipper injuries will mostly be men catching their genitalia in their trouser flies (zips on their jean/pants for non-Brits). Slipper injuries probably classifies every footwear without that 'slips on' or lacks the support of normal footwear. Accidents will be due to slipping on floor surfaces, down stairs, the slipper coming partly or fully off of foot, or tripping over. Accidents that 'may' have been avoided wearing normal shoes or just not wearing slippers.
The Union Jack is flown on ships the Union Flag is on land.
A great list, but you don't need to be 18 to drink in the UK. You DO need to be 18 to be sold alcohol, but it is legal for an adult to buy alcohol for a 16-17yr old if accompanied by a meal in a licenced establishment (e.g. a pub or a restaurant), while it is also legal for a child 5yrs+ to drink a moderate amount of alcohol at home or in a private setting.
the Union Jack is only called a Union Jack when flown on a sea going vessel otherwise it is just the Union flag.
You are only about 120 + years out of date... But hey! whose counting. 😃
FYI: The Union Jack, or Union Flag, is the 'de facto' national flag of the United Kingdom. According to the Flag Institute (the vexillological charity), "the national flag of the United Kingdom, the Crown Dependencies and Overseas Territories is the Union Flag, which may also be called the Union Jack."
Additionally: The Admiralty used both names (Flag and Jack) interchangeably from the seventeenth century onwards, irrespective of use. An Admiralty Circular of 1902 pronounced that either name was officially valid. And in 1908 Parliament approved this verdict, confirming that 'The Union Jack should be regarded as the National flag'.
Contrary to popular belief and as mentioned, we don't elect a Prime Minister. Voters, elect Members of Parliament. The party having the most MPs forms a government, the Prime Minister being the leader of the ruling party.
Northern Ireland DOES have its own flag. So it does...
It doesn't - the flag you are referring to is the ULSTER flag. Quote “
The Ulster Banner
Saint Patrick's Saltire
The only official flag for Northern Ireland is the Union Flag or Union Jack, the flag of the United Kingdom; there is no official local flag that represents only Northern Ireland.[1][2][3][4] The flying of various flags in Northern Ireland is a significant sectarian issue, with different communities identifying with different flags.[5]
Just an FYI the English red cross on white background was originally the French flag of the Crusades, the English flag was the reverse a white cross on a red background.
There’s a pub in my area called the wackum inn 😂
So the Union flag is ONLY called the Union Jack when flown from a ship of the line. Northern Ireland does have a flag as some one has already pointed out…