10 MORE Things That SURPRISED US About the UK (Americans in England)

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 11 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,2 тис.

  • @TheMagicGeekdom
    @TheMagicGeekdom  Місяць тому +5

    Go to drinkag1.com/themagicgeekdom to get started on your first purchase and receive a FREE 1-year supply of Vitamin D3+K2 and 5 travel packs. Thanks to AG1 for sponsoring today’s video!

    • @matt01506
      @matt01506 Місяць тому +1

      Check out the 3-part drama
      "Gunpowder", it's a great mini series about Guy Fawkes. Fawkes is played by kit Harington (best known for his character "John Snow" in Game of Thrones).
      He is an actual direct decendant of Robert catesby, who was the leader of the Gunpowder plot !

    • @emdiar6588
      @emdiar6588 23 дні тому

      Guy Fawkes Night does not commemorate the attempt to blow up Parliament and the King. It commemorates the FOILING of an attempt by a Catholic terrorist to assassinate the Protestant King and restore England to a Catholic state. As such, it IS a patriotic event, not the glorification of an insurgency.
      There's a huge difference.
      Fawkes isn't the hero of the festivities. He's the villain. Hence the burning of his effigy.

  • @robbuxton8438
    @robbuxton8438 24 дні тому +31

    Driers use so much energy.
    Also the smell of laundry freshly dried outside is one of life’s simple pleasures

    • @TheClarieM
      @TheClarieM 16 днів тому +1

      Also, many of us, particularly in the older houses, just have kitchens too small (not the 'fashion' so much now) However, on talking about tumble dryers, we hear they 'eat up' electricity! Costs of power have gone up HUGELY and, particularly old people on absolute minimum pensions - plus now many can no longer receive Winter Fuel Allowance if they're just above the limit, often by a very few ££££s, for entitlement to 'Pension Credit'.,..many are this winter going to have to choose to 'eat or heat?'! DREADFUL! Yes, I also love the 'fresh' smell of our washing when hung outside; in heatwaves they can dry out there fully..

    • @nixxie2390
      @nixxie2390 14 днів тому

      Also also driers require a vent to the outside of your house - which is not do-able in lots of houses

    • @Amandoop
      @Amandoop 3 дні тому

      I'm so surprised that warmer parts of the us don't line dry. It's free, massively reduces creases and smells so nice

    • @paulspencer4631
      @paulspencer4631 3 дні тому

      ​@nixxie2390 not all dryers need a vent. Convector dryers catch the steam, and you empty the water out.

  • @davem12dim17
    @davem12dim17 Місяць тому +169

    British plugs are an engineering masterpiece
    As for drying clothes... putting them on the line, running out five minutes later and bringing them in, then putting them back out ten minutes later, then back in, then back out, is pretty much a national pastime.
    One of the big benefits of children is you can put them on weather watch when theres clothes on the line

    • @TheMagicGeekdom
      @TheMagicGeekdom  Місяць тому +18

      British plugs are so much sturdier.

    • @jonjohnson2844
      @jonjohnson2844 Місяць тому +18

      Until you stand on one

    • @GrumpyOldGit-zk1kw
      @GrumpyOldGit-zk1kw Місяць тому +20

      @@jonjohnson2844 that tends to be played up too much. Because you can switch them off at the wall you don't unplug them and leave the plug on the floor. If I unplug something it's because I don't currently need it and will put it away in a cuboard until needed again.

    • @PhilipWorthington
      @PhilipWorthington Місяць тому

      ​@@jonjohnson2844I've managed to live for 45 years without that ever happening. You never really need to have plugs lying around in the UK because you can just turn things off at the socket.

    • @garyskinner2422
      @garyskinner2422 Місяць тому

      I disagree it's when you stand on them you realise how study they are lol😊​@@jonjohnson2844

  • @PhilipWorthington
    @PhilipWorthington Місяць тому +53

    In the US convenience is king.
    In the UK convenience is only one factor, we also consider: space, history, cost and the environment.
    What I mean by that is, having a laundry room and a separate dryer is convienent.
    Space: Our houses are smaller.
    History: Our houses are often old enough to have been built without plumbing and electricity, so it's difficult to add those things.
    Cost: Dryers are expensive to run.
    Environment: Dryers are awful for the environment
    Those same factors play into a lot of our differences. Cars and roads for example. I would never buy a car in the UK that got less than 30mpg, in the US I rode in vehicles that got 10mpg! Cars are smaller here because of space (less room), history (narrow, winding roads built for horses), cost (we value better mileage) and environment (we don't want to pollute our planet.)

    • @SKIDMARKBROWN
      @SKIDMARKBROWN 11 днів тому

      If a house has a washer, it has had water electric and drain added

    • @sqshhm
      @sqshhm День тому

      ​@@SKIDMARKBROWNI don't think there's *any* houses in the UK that don't have electricity and water these days, lol! However in an older house it's often harder to add pipes and electricity in the exact places you need it. Obviously not impossible, but more disruptive and expensive (often it'll involve taking up floorboards, drilling big holes through external walls, running pipes/cables for longer distances etc). Modern houses have loads more sockets, better designed plumbing etc, and often just have a utility room designed in from the beginning.

  • @tonycasey3183
    @tonycasey3183 Місяць тому +123

    Re. bonfire night. I am an older chap and Bonfire Night as an occasion has changed significantly since I was young. It used to be that families or neighbours would have their own bonfires and fireworks and there would be only a dozen or so at each event.
    In the lead up to bonfire night, kids would make an effigy of Guy Fawkes and take it around the local streets asking random strangers for "a penny for the guy"
    The children would also go arond the neighbourhood looking for scrap wood to burn on the bonfire - we called the activity "Bunny-Wooding" though my family who lived less than twenty miles away called in "Chumpin'" - I gather it was called various names throughout the country.
    The street where I grew up would have a gathering in probably every fifth or sixth back garden. The bonfires were relatively small and the fireworks were not so grand. The food, however was home cooked and the atmosphere was cosy and family based.
    On the downside, although my parents were very cautious and we never experienced it, there were always a lot of injuries from kids (and some adults) getting burned by the bonfire and/or fireworks. Working in the NHS for over thirty years, I can tell you that this number has dropped in my experience, I suppose because most people go to large organised bonfires with professional fireworks displays. Around bonfire night, however, you still see and hear lots of individual bonfire parties and people still get burned every year!

    • @juliankaye8143
      @juliankaye8143 Місяць тому +12

      @@tonycasey3183 family bonfires seem to be a thing of the past because gardens are much smaller nowadays.

    • @TheWhisperDragon
      @TheWhisperDragon Місяць тому +16

      And people have quite rightly realised how terrifying it is for pets and any wildlife

    • @lesmarsden2058
      @lesmarsden2058 Місяць тому +14

      Ah, the good old days! Before tacky Halloween came along and practically buried our traditional bonfire nights.

    • @amandamatthews7705
      @amandamatthews7705 Місяць тому +1

      @@TheWhisperDragon but are they more terrifying then the large display ones that can be heard and seen for mills rather then only for a few streets.

    • @mels8966
      @mels8966 Місяць тому +4

      ​@@lesmarsden2058 We used to celebrate both when I was a kid back in the late 60s, early 70s, basically an excuse to have a few fireworks before bonfire night and a barbeque, my mum made little bats and other decorations, none of the US trick or treat rubbish. I didn't realise it wasn't commonplace to celebrate Halloween until one of the other kids in my class who'd apparently seen us in our garden, asked me if we were witches! Out of a class of about 30 of us, I think there was only one other kid who said they celebrated halloween.

  • @johndillon5290
    @johndillon5290 Місяць тому +68

    When you look deeper into the UK electrical plugs, it really is a clever idea that's never really changed over time. Each plug has it's own fuse, so if the appliance on the plug has a fault, it will blow the supply to the appliance but not the circuit breaker at the board. Also the earth prong at the plug is longer than the live and neutral prongs. That's so that the earth connection is engaged first to the system. Children can't stick things in sockets because the live and neutral have an integrated cover which can only be opened when the earth of the plug is inserted. Also the internal fuse is on the live side, so if it blows the appliance is immediately isolated from the electrical system.

    • @abzzeus
      @abzzeus Місяць тому +9

      There have been two changes
      Firstly the prongs are now shielded to further increase safety (I think that was a common european thing that all prongs have to be, it wasn't an issue before)
      Secondly plugs come fitted as standard now - it used to be they didn't, which is why wiring a plug was taught in schools.

    • @Graham_Langley
      @Graham_Langley Місяць тому +2

      @@abzzeus The sleeved L & N pins (never the earth - that's dangerous but the Chinese don't seem to care) was Introduced by MK on their original Safetyplug around 1975 and became a requirement in BS1363 in 1984.

    • @MrBulky992
      @MrBulky992 Місяць тому +1

      ​@@abzzeusInsulated sleeving on live and neutral prongs of UK plugs became standard 40 years ago in 1984. Many European plugs to this day have no such sleeving so I think it was once again a British idea.

    • @paulrattray8121
      @paulrattray8121 Місяць тому +3

      If you manage to pull the cable out of a plug, the wires disconnect live, then neutral, then earth. Yep all even pulling the cable out has built in safety

    • @hauskalainen
      @hauskalainen Місяць тому +1

      @@johndillon5290 the only reason for the fuse is the implicit poor safety in the ring main. Most countries don't have a ring main so the fuse in the fuse box is specific that outlet. That said, the plug fuse is specific to the device, but that could be installed on the device itself rather than in the connector plug.

  • @pamelawatson2366
    @pamelawatson2366 Місяць тому +28

    When I was a child, the shops were closed on Sundays and from midday on Wednesdays. I don't remember it being problematic.

    • @caekeherderofrabbits940
      @caekeherderofrabbits940 15 днів тому

      Even in the 1980s the tv stopped on a Wednesday afternoon and the wacked on the teletext or cefax pages

    • @nixxie2390
      @nixxie2390 14 днів тому +1

      my local high street still has 'early closing day' on Thursdays. in a big city different main streets have different days - so my next closest high street's early closing day is Tuesday! So that shop workers could have a half day off - but shoppers still had somewhere to go.

    • @carolbradley7815
      @carolbradley7815 7 днів тому

      We still have half day closing in our small towns

    • @daviniarobbins9298
      @daviniarobbins9298 День тому

      I remember Sundays as a kid being very boring.

  • @stephenlee5929
    @stephenlee5929 Місяць тому +357

    On bonfire night, we, generally are not celebrating the gun powder plot (though some might), we are celebrating that it failed

    • @chrisbrown4002
      @chrisbrown4002 Місяць тому +84

      That probably depends on how you view a current government !! HAHA

    • @PhilR0gers
      @PhilR0gers Місяць тому +35

      They said "Commemorate"; not "Celebrate". Commemorating is about remembering - not celebrating.

    • @Dave-kw7jq
      @Dave-kw7jq Місяць тому +21

      Not this fkin year we aren't. Unless you are one of the missing Liebor voters.

    • @robcrossgrove7927
      @robcrossgrove7927 Місяць тому +2

      @@PhilR0gers She definitely says celebration the first time she mentions it, at 6:04. She does say Commemorate after that though.

    • @chrysalis4126
      @chrysalis4126 Місяць тому +14

      Speak for yourself lol.

  • @doctorf1144
    @doctorf1144 Місяць тому +48

    Re all the sheep: three things - 1) we eat lamb much more than you do in the States, 2) wool cloth was so important economically for England in the Middle Ages that the Lord Speaker in the House of Lords still sits on a wool sack and areas like the Cotswolds were full of wealthy wool towns which then became much poorer when imported cotton took over, hence preserving all that old grand architecture 3) the sheep crop the grass in the fields and so contribute to the overall look of much of our countryside.

    • @rayaqueen9657
      @rayaqueen9657 Місяць тому +4

      Did you know different wildflowers grow according to whether the land has had sheep or cattle as sheep crop much closer to the soil than cattle which some plants prefer/can't handle.

    • @Charlie-ez4ts
      @Charlie-ez4ts Місяць тому +5

      Also you can farm sheep on steep and rocky ground where other farming is impossible. Many of the similarly hilly areas in the US are too forested or too arid for sheep.

    • @chrishayward9615
      @chrishayward9615 24 дні тому

      Love the fact you get the humour. Have you watched Detectorists

    • @hels4739
      @hels4739 2 дні тому

      @@doctorf1144 didn’t the Spencer’s (Princess Diana’s family) come to prominence in early Tudor times due to wool?

  • @watcherzero5256
    @watcherzero5256 Місяць тому +53

    In the UK insects only tend to come in through windows after dark as they are attracted by the light, so if you just close your window when it gets dark you never have to worry about insects.

    • @patriciachirgwin3238
      @patriciachirgwin3238 Місяць тому +3

      You do get flies coming in to the house during the daytime, and the thought of them walking on my food - 🤮! My husband told me that British houses didn’t need screens as they had net curtains!😂

    • @Hypnobunny1
      @Hypnobunny1 Місяць тому

      Bloody bluebottles get in when ever you leave a window open for fresh air hate them buzzz buzzz little shits it’s a constant battle till autumn /winter

    • @joedge6142
      @joedge6142 29 днів тому +2

      ​@@patriciachirgwin3238I put a net curtain across the back door in the summer when it's open all the time and it really does stop the flies coming in.

    • @Spamhard
      @Spamhard 10 днів тому +1

      Nah. I'm UK and had to velcro insect screens to our windows and we use a fly net door now too. In the summer when all the windows are open, the house fills with bluebottle flies and it's awful. Maybe depends on your area but we're very rural and bugs are a huge issue. Plus at night time having windows open still during summer is nice as it gets so stuffy, but like you say every bug ever wants to come in and party on the ceiling. What eventually made me buy netting was the fact that one night during the summer, I sat up til midnight playing on my computer, went to bed and suddenly realised my ceiling was basically black with midges, squitos, moths, daddy long legs etc. There was so many of them.
      I WISH screens were the norm over here, I have no idea why they aren't.

  • @helenwood8482
    @helenwood8482 Місяць тому +50

    We love Americans who get our jokes.

  • @jackirichards8789
    @jackirichards8789 Місяць тому +58

    Not all British people live on take away food!! Some of us live on healthy fresh ingredients!!

    • @paulmidsussex3409
      @paulmidsussex3409 Місяць тому

      Fakeaways.

    • @mikaruyami
      @mikaruyami Місяць тому +1

      I mean, we don't need to drive for the most part, as most stores that sell fresh ingredients are mostly in walking distance.

    • @audiocoffee
      @audiocoffee 20 днів тому +2

      due to a massive amount of food allergies, I can't 'do' takeaways as there's a risk involved with it that usually requires an ambulance. over the years, I've learnt what's best for my diet and stick to it. serial experimenter though, and yes, there are times I've made slight errors in judgement. haven't eaten out for 14 years and too scared to do so.

  • @timothyhowell8565
    @timothyhowell8565 Місяць тому +14

    British plug design is brilliant, and very safety conscious.

  • @cjuk81
    @cjuk81 Місяць тому +49

    Feels like some days that half of UA-cam is full of videos talking about UK plugs lol, never known as many people get excited over a plug before :)

    • @sarahjaneheckscher6737
      @sarahjaneheckscher6737 Місяць тому +1

      I’m English, and UK and Western European plugs and their sockets are reassuringly firm. American plugs and sockets seem unnervingly loose. It certainly felt a little freaky the first time I visited the US.

    • @kumasenlac5504
      @kumasenlac5504 Місяць тому +1

      I've just given this answer a 'thumb's up' because I thought it deserved a plug.

    • @daftirishmarej1827
      @daftirishmarej1827 28 днів тому

      It's reassuringly safe, unlike older European plugs.

  • @paulhorgan6152
    @paulhorgan6152 Місяць тому +88

    When I was growing up Wednesdays was half day closing 😊

    • @TheMagicGeekdom
      @TheMagicGeekdom  Місяць тому +1

      Oh, that's interesting.

    • @Phiyedough
      @Phiyedough Місяць тому +9

      It was a different day in different towns.

    • @kathrynmartyn2013
      @kathrynmartyn2013 Місяць тому +7

      still are in places near me

    • @RollerbazAndCoasterDad
      @RollerbazAndCoasterDad Місяць тому +4

      Still is for guided professions like butchers and fishmongers here in Edinburgh. They also still have fortnight long September closures to go on holiday.

    • @PedroConejo1939
      @PedroConejo1939 Місяць тому

      Butchers were always closed on Mondays. To do with cleaning and stocking.

  • @timothyhowell8565
    @timothyhowell8565 Місяць тому +11

    Net curtains were the traditional way providing privacy and keeping most pests out, although less popular now.

  • @susanashcroft2674
    @susanashcroft2674 Місяць тому +40

    There used to be a TV show called One Man and His Dog (not sure if it's still going) that shepherds used to compete with their sheep dog rounding up sheep into pens. I know I'm probably not selling it but it used to be on a Sunday night and people tuned in to see Mr. Bloggs with his collie dog Ben from a farm in Lancashire versus Mr Jones and his dog Megan from a farm in Wales. Again you can see sheep at agricultural shows throughout the UK, some may have sheep dog trials as part of this. Or perhaps check out in the UK any sheep dog trials in the area where you may be visiting at that time.

    • @no-oneinparticular7264
      @no-oneinparticular7264 Місяць тому +4

      I used to love that programme.

    • @panchomcsporran2083
      @panchomcsporran2083 Місяць тому +2

      Yeah " come by" sorry I'll get my coat.

    • @garyskinner2422
      @garyskinner2422 Місяць тому

      Yep , I used to watch that around 1977 i was 10 years old

    • @The2ndGreatCornholio
      @The2ndGreatCornholio Місяць тому +1

      It’s no longer a stand alone programme but it is featured as part of Countryfile at least once a year.

    • @Nobby76
      @Nobby76 Місяць тому +1

      @@garyskinner2422 Same here, it was one of those odd shows i found out my dad watched. And if i had been a good boy or dad was in a good mood, i could sit and watch it with him (It was on quite late if i remember correct) so it was a treat to be able to stay up that late.
      "Away Shep Away! Shep! SHEP.. Oh crap. FENTON COME HERE... FENTON!"

  • @markjones127
    @markjones127 Місяць тому +29

    Only time I've had a separate laundry room in the UK was when I used to live on a farm, as soon as you walked in the backdoor there was a laundry room with a shower room next to it, so when you'd been muck spreading all day you could have a shower and put your clothes in the washing machine before entering the main house.

    • @garethjones6082
      @garethjones6082 Місяць тому +3

      That's a boot room

    • @StuartHanson-fo7iw
      @StuartHanson-fo7iw Місяць тому

      Same here, chicken muck too, beautiful 👍🇬🇧Yorkshire

    • @markjones127
      @markjones127 Місяць тому

      @@garethjones6082 It wasn't an old stone farmhouse, it was a brand new house the farmer built for his son, so as you walked in the backdoor it really was a proper laundry room with a shower room attached, there was a Belfast sink and separate washer and dryer, just like an American style laundry room.

  • @hauskalainen
    @hauskalainen Місяць тому +38

    Nov 5th celebrates the FOILING of the gunpowder plot, not the plot itself. That would be silly!

    • @diarmuidkuhle8181
      @diarmuidkuhle8181 Місяць тому +3

      I dunno, Guy Fawkes has become a kind of folk hero Xd

    • @humblescribe8522
      @humblescribe8522 Місяць тому +1

      You say that but... even in 1930, '1066 and all that' argued that we were reminding the government that they needed to keep in mind the possible consequences of their actions.

  • @Steve14ps
    @Steve14ps Місяць тому +38

    At one time all shops were closed on a Sunday in UK

    • @garyskinner2422
      @garyskinner2422 Місяць тому +2

      Yes and for some reason as a kid it would bore the hell out of me, only the corner shops were open till around 12:00

    • @juliankaye8143
      @juliankaye8143 Місяць тому +2

      @@Steve14ps and they had a half day closing during the week. And were shut by 6pm in the evening.

    • @davidsummerfield2594
      @davidsummerfield2594 Місяць тому +2

      A lot of local shops opened on Sunday morning just to sell Sunday Newspapers, I can remember a town in South Lincolnshire in the 1960s that no shops opened on Sunday and Sunday papers were sold from the trunk of a motor vehicle!.

    • @Reba-123
      @Reba-123 Місяць тому

      @@juliankaye8143yep that would be Wednesday… had an uncle who had a shop and always said if he died it would have to be on a Wednesday lol and yes he died on a Wednesday

    • @gloriasmiles9821
      @gloriasmiles9821 Місяць тому

      ENGLAND IS FINISHED ANGLOPHOBIC

  • @selenityshiroiYT
    @selenityshiroiYT Місяць тому +13

    Another option for Bonfire Night is the Bridgwater Guy Fawkes Carnival. It's on the nearest Saturday to the 5th November every year and is one of the biggest illuminated night carnivals in Europe.

  • @juliefrost8079
    @juliefrost8079 Місяць тому +19

    I find a kettle being referred to as a 'tea kettle' irrationally infuriating!

    • @weedle30
      @weedle30 Місяць тому +2

      And me 👀 I just visualise murky stewed tea being unceremoniously “boiled” to make a fresh cuppa 😬🤢

  • @cilla268
    @cilla268 Місяць тому +17

    If I make myself a cup of tea, I only put water to minimum mark and it takes around 1 minute to boil.

  • @eviltwin2322
    @eviltwin2322 Місяць тому +21

    Fun fact - the reason we have a lot of sheep is down to the Black Death.
    Prior to that we were mainly a cattle farming nation, but that required whole teams of workers.
    Afterwards, when there was hardly anyone left, we focussed on sheep because that can be done with one person and a couple of well trained dogs.
    Massive oversimplification, of course, but broadly true.

    • @14Anon2
      @14Anon2 12 днів тому +1

      Sorry but this 'fun fact' is wrong. Wool was one of the main exports and British wool was considered some of the best at least a century before the earliest of the Black death. Sheep are the preferred choice in much of Britain due to the terrain.

    • @RobinSaunders-i9i
      @RobinSaunders-i9i 9 днів тому

      Lowlands tended to be cattle and Highlands/ steeper slopes for sheep. Generally not always .

  • @Sooz007-l3b
    @Sooz007-l3b Місяць тому +12

    An electric jug/kettle is used for any reason you need hot/boiling water quickly. I never think of using anything else.

  • @jag1970s
    @jag1970s Місяць тому +20

    The older I get, the more I realise that my country, England, is a very very old country. The only way to understand the present is by exploring the past in England, and sadly that past has some very hard and sad elements… but also some proud and wonderful parts too. It is not in the least difficult to find medieval buildings and landscapes in England, and it is not even difficult to find Roman ones. I recently went to a church and stood in the very spot that John Ball, one of the key people in the 1381 “Peasants’ Revolt” would have stood. He has sometimes been called the father of British democracy. It’s a lovely idea and if we keep fighting, we might have something like it one day. I am very proud that Mary Wollstonecraft was British. I am proud of John Stuart Mill. I am rather sorry that there is plenty to feel ashamed of, too. But not everything. And I would add that I have lived in other countries and the British three-pin plug is just best!

    • @davidharris4062
      @davidharris4062 17 днів тому +1

      England a very old country! The Celtic nation is older than England

    • @14Anon2
      @14Anon2 12 днів тому +2

      England is one of the oldest continuously existing nation states. The English are one of the oldest attested still existing ethnic groups, dating as far back as Roman writings by Tacitus with the Anglii (translates to modern English as 'Engli') in 98 AD.
      Although we now know with modern genetics (and much to the contrary of popular tropes) the English are actually about half Celtic Briton and half Germanic - not a mish mash of various people who temporarily invaded, nor just simply Germanic.
      It used to be fairly common knowledge that England and the English had quite a long and rich history but modern academia and the general culture has long since forgotten (arguably purposely, in some instances) this, to the point that many English no longer even think of themselves as anything more than some abstract legal category.

  • @davidburton5335
    @davidburton5335 Місяць тому +34

    Difference between American and British humour, it's the second u!

  • @andrewhargreaves504
    @andrewhargreaves504 Місяць тому +6

    Jeremy you are so right, anybody who doesn’t like food in the UK is eating in bad places. Our food is amazing. We embrace food from across the world, we have wonderful core ingredients & we have amazing quality & choice.

  • @scottythedawg
    @scottythedawg Місяць тому +27

    I think you are not understanding Bonfire night - it isnt a celebration of guy fawkes, its a celebration of a failed catholic plot against the king. They burn guy fawkes.

    • @humblescribe8522
      @humblescribe8522 Місяць тому +2

      Maybe once. Now it's an excuse for a party and a kind of veiled warning to the government of the consequences of overstepping the mark.

    • @mcncirce
      @mcncirce 24 дні тому

      originally the effigy burnt was of the pope

  • @gaynorhead2325
    @gaynorhead2325 Місяць тому +13

    When I was young the kids all used to make a life size dummy of Guy Fawkes and push it around in a wheelbarrow asking for “a penny for the guy” in order to raise money for fireworks. Then on November 5th it would be placed on top of the bonfire before lighting it. It is purely symbolic as that is not how he died.

  • @danh4698
    @danh4698 11 днів тому +2

    I'm sure people have said this, but yeah, the washing machine being in the kitchen is pretty standard. Tumble dryers are definitely not, you have to make a choice to invest in one as a home-owner rather thna it being standard white goods. Most people in my experience use airers.
    And even owning a tumble dryer doesn't mean you always use it! My mum pretty much only uses theirs to do towels and bedding or when its been wet and rainy consistently - if she can, she'll always opt to hang outside, because it saves energy!

  • @andrewpinks3678
    @andrewpinks3678 Місяць тому +12

    Shepherd and sheep farmer aren’t really the same. The shepherd is (in uk) the person who, with the aid of his trusty sheep dog, manages the movement of the sheep. A sheep farmer may be a shepherd (especially on smaller hill farms), but on larger farms the sheep farmer may employ shepherd(s).
    An interesting aspect of British humour is the fact that the audience are often left to fill in the punch line themselves; this can often mean that the real laughter can build as we individually construct the elements. I agree that a lot of American humour (certainly 20 years ago) ended with the joke being virtually explained to the audience (which for Brits was like “yeah we got it and don’t need it explains”).
    If you come to Cov’ again you should think about the castles of Warwick and Kenilworth and Stratford upon Avon.

  • @RawTopShot
    @RawTopShot Місяць тому +20

    COMEDY:
    *UK* a Sharp kitchen knife
    *USA* a Blunt Heavy Axe

  • @KeithFLOOK-wd3uw
    @KeithFLOOK-wd3uw Місяць тому +107

    You have to remember that the UK celebrating Guy Fawkes night is that we are celebrating that this is the last time in UK history that anyone has entered the Houses of Parliament with an honest intent.

    • @YorkshireTeaNiceNStrong
      @YorkshireTeaNiceNStrong Місяць тому +4

      😆Hmmm, can't truly argue with that. But Bonfire Night was intended to celebrate the discovery and defeat of the plotters.

    • @SplatterInker
      @SplatterInker Місяць тому +4

      They never walked into Parliament?!?
      They dug a tunnel/used a cellar underneath?!?!

    • @davidwebb4451
      @davidwebb4451 Місяць тому +3

      ​@@SplatterInkerThe plotters initially rented a house next to the House of Lords and started digging a tunnel. However they gave up on that when they discovered that they could just rent a cellar under the House of Lords. When the plot was uncovered 36 barrels of gunpowder were found in the rented cellar which was about 3,600 pounds of gunpowder.

    • @danielblyth2841
      @danielblyth2841 Місяць тому

      Exactly. They dug a tunnel​@@davidwebb4451

    • @mefw
      @mefw 28 днів тому

      Its an Anti-Catholic celebration, where in some towns and villages they burn an effigy of the Pope on them ..

  • @jeanauguste-f7i
    @jeanauguste-f7i Місяць тому +1

    Im going back to the 60's here, my uncle was a shepherd his dog Rover, at Christmas family gatherings was definitely in charge of where we would have to sit. Ushering each one of us to his chosen seat . This is one of my treasured memories of childhood Christmases it would always be a cause of fun and laughter no matter your age.

  • @Kari_B61ex
    @Kari_B61ex Місяць тому +12

    A place to go for Bonfire Night is Ottery St Mary in Devon to witness the tar barrels.

    • @robthurgood
      @robthurgood Місяць тому +2

      Came here to say this! It's a wild night!

    • @susanwestern6434
      @susanwestern6434 Місяць тому +1

      Who gets to carry the flaming tar barrels is passed down the local families.

  • @timmo491
    @timmo491 Місяць тому +4

    The ability to boil water is a staple for sure. Even on modern British Challenger 2 tanks, arguably the best tank on the planet, there is a water boiling/ tea-making facility for the crew.

  • @AngelaVara-i4l
    @AngelaVara-i4l Місяць тому +18

    I dry clothes outside when the weather is windy and warm but in the dryer when its cold or rainy

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG Місяць тому +3

      I think this is the most common way in UK homes. Dry them outside when the weather is right and dry them either in a tumble dryer or on clothes airers etc. indoors, when the weather says no.

    • @rayaqueen9657
      @rayaqueen9657 Місяць тому

      The shoulder seasons are when nothing dries without the tumble. Too cold and damp to hang outside and too warm for radiators yet. Nightmare!

    • @ninaelsbethgustavsen2131
      @ninaelsbethgustavsen2131 Місяць тому +1

      @@AngelaVara-i4l
      Norwegian here....
      Not a big fan of dryers.
      My building, erected in 1960, as a coop, has a laundry on the ground floor. There are four washing mashines, and two rooms with heated fans.

    • @alexwright4930
      @alexwright4930 Місяць тому

      I don't have a dryer, can take me ages to dry really heavy clothing in my flat when the weather's bad.
      People often put clothes on radiators too.

  • @pauloneill9880
    @pauloneill9880 22 дні тому +1

    Extra points for loving Garth Marengis dark place. Hilarious poke at US 60 n 70s daytime TV.

  • @markjlewis
    @markjlewis Місяць тому +13

    Sunday opening hours only apply to stores over a certain floor area and this tends to exclude smaller store. The main supermarkets have "express","metro", "local" stores that stay open much longer than the large stores on Sundays. Also the UK has a large number of stores run by families that don't observe Christian holidays such as Christmas and Easter. These shops are extremely useful when you realise that you have forgotten a pack of AA batteries for one of your kid's new toys.

    • @TheMagicGeekdom
      @TheMagicGeekdom  Місяць тому +2

      I never thought about some of the store owners not observing some of the holidays. They were some of the few days everything was closed here, but that's changed over the last few years.

    • @stephenlee5929
      @stephenlee5929 Місяць тому +3

      Also Sunday trading laws used not to apply if the shop was Jewish, but had to close on Saturday instead, don't know if that is still a thing.

    • @ChuckFickens1972
      @ChuckFickens1972 Місяць тому +4

      I feel I need to add here, a local store to my parents, where I grew up (Braintree, Essex), is owned and staffed by a Muslim family, and they are all bloody lovely, they do open on Christmas day, the store is decorated with lights, tinsel and other Christmas tat, if you go in there on Christmas day they wish you "happy Christmas" and have a table setup with free mince pies.
      They did get their shop spayed with "go home to your own country" crap a few years ago, this was reported to the Police who said they would "look into it" but the local community delt with the people that done it..... Errrr, sternly I think is the best phrase I can use.

    • @johnleonard9090
      @johnleonard9090 Місяць тому +1

      ⁠@@TheMagicGeekdomif memory serves, it’s stores over 5,000sqft and the only day that the stores have to be closed for is Easter Sunday, shops tend to be closed on Christmas Day but there’s no legal requirement. Before the Sunday trading laws were brought in, it was down to the local councils if stores could trade or not.

    • @juliankaye8143
      @juliankaye8143 Місяць тому +1

      @@stephenlee5929 I worked for a Jewish firm they opened on Saturday. I think the only Jewish shop I know that shut on a Saturday is a camera shop in New York in the US on 9th avenue if my memory serves me well.

  • @debbielough7754
    @debbielough7754 25 днів тому +1

    On the Chinese takeaway - in Newcastle Upon Tyne, in the old Chinatown area near the city walls, opposite the Chinese gate, there's a takeaway (you can eat in too, but there's not a lot of seats), where the Chinese university students eat. It's not fancy - plastic chairs and formica tables, but the food is good. (Assuming it survived the pandemic.)

  • @skipper409
    @skipper409 Місяць тому +45

    Guy Fawkes Night is really a celebration of the CAPTURE and prevention off the plot, not the plot itself

    • @emmaprocter3289
      @emmaprocter3289 Місяць тому +4

      When I was younger, my Grandmother never wanted to celebrate Bonfire Night. We were a Roman Catholic family, and Grandmother didn't want to celebrate the failure of the Catholic Gunpowder Plot.

    • @davidhines7592
      @davidhines7592 Місяць тому +3

      but we might also celebrate the man for trying and incompetently getting caught. thats a british thing, like if someone drops a glass in a pub we all go 'yay!' and laugh.

    • @davem12dim17
      @davem12dim17 Місяць тому

      thats the historic reason, but then, people burning Boris Johnsons, Tony Blairs, and Margaret Thatchers on their bonfires has raised questions about some of its modern intent

    • @HuwBass
      @HuwBass Місяць тому +2

      @@emmaprocter3289 yup. Some people still refer to it as "Burn a Catholic Day".

  • @leeherbert7851
    @leeherbert7851 Місяць тому +16

    On my first trip to America in 1982 I noticed how the electrical sockets and switches seemed primitive and flimsy compared to ours, great videos by the way ❤️

    • @philjameson292
      @philjameson292 Місяць тому +1

      Same here. The state of a typical US fuse box scared the daylights out of me

  • @_starfiend
    @_starfiend Місяць тому +37

    For British humour, you can't do better than, if you can find it, 'Yes Minister' and its sequel, 'Yes Prime Minister'.

    • @Aengus42
      @Aengus42 Місяць тому +3

      ... and Father Ted out of Ireland. Bloody brilliant!
      Although the Gay Daleks were pretty good too!

    • @FionaMacintyre-o8p
      @FionaMacintyre-o8p Місяць тому

      As a Brit? I think it's probably left to Brits to understand. I hate the program myself, My parents never missed it and howled with laughter.
      Only Fools and Horses or Fawlty Towrs are the best.

    • @Legionary04
      @Legionary04 Місяць тому +1

      Also add the Vicar of Dibley and Blackadder.

    • @Aengus42
      @Aengus42 3 дні тому

      @@FionaMacintyre-o8p Can't stand fools & horses. Truly dire!

  • @jackwalker4874
    @jackwalker4874 Місяць тому +5

    We don't really get many bugs coming indoors in the UK (usually just a solitary fly which can't find its way back out. Only places that I've seen fly screens have been restaurant kitchens.

  • @christianmoss4603
    @christianmoss4603 Місяць тому +6

    also the earth known as ground pin is longer than the two other pins is because we have a spring loaded shutter installed in the sockets which means you can not insert anything in the live snd neautral holes which is why the earth pin is longer is to push the shutters down so you can insert the plug

    • @InaMacallan
      @InaMacallan Місяць тому

      I cannot understand why shops are allowed to sell 'baby-proof' socket covers which actually make the socket more dangerous by opening the shutter to make the socket live.

  • @audiocoffee
    @audiocoffee 20 днів тому

    regarding bonfire night - there's traditional foods. treacle toffee (the real stuff, not anything in a bag individually wrapped - it's not the best.) is awesome!! get a slab of that and a toffee hammer and have at it. there's no right or wrong way to enjoy it, but it tastes better on bonfire night out in the open. preferably when there's a smokey atmosphere.
    also Parkin. get that from a bakery, not a supermarket... it's delicious!! home made is usually best. another treat that's best served on bonfire night itself.
    jacket potatoes are awesome when wrapped in tin foil and done in a bonfire (provided the fire is hot enough, and the potato cooks all the way through...) and sometimes, a good hearty hotpot hits the spot. there's no right or wrong way to make a hotpot either, so don't stress! some of us appreciate the food aspect of bonfire night, and some appreciate the fireworks and a roaring fire with a 'guy' atop it 😀

  • @oopsdidItypethatoutloud
    @oopsdidItypethatoutloud Місяць тому +3

    The sheep are lovely. When the lambs are born it's wonderful.
    The plugs, because the wire comes from the bottom you can push furniture to the wall. It would bug me if everything had to be away from the wall or it bends the cable... petty, but it's the little things that niggles
    ❤️ from Northeast England ❤️

  • @willowtree9291
    @willowtree9291 Місяць тому +1

    You can still get Bisto gravy that you cook on the stove. We call it 'old lady gravy' and we prefer it to the instant stuff

  • @adrianmcgrath1984
    @adrianmcgrath1984 Місяць тому +7

    Sunday trading in the UK is a relatively new thing. It isn’t totally possible to point to a turning point, but Sundays were initially a day of rest called for by religion, but then morphed into a day of rest called for by the workers.
    In the US you have the board game 'Chutes and Ladders'. Originally a game from India the British adapted it from its Hindu basis and converted it to a christian one. In the UK it is called Snakes and Ladders, if you can find an old antique set you'll see each ladder is labelled with a 'virtue' and each snake with a 'sin'. The game was supposed to be a life lesson how virtues - ladders - would speed you to the end point (heaven) while sins would set you back.
    The observance of Sundays in Victorian times was so strict, that Snakes and Ladders was one of the very few things kids were allowed to do for recreation on the day. - the other one begin to play with a 'noahs ark' toy - you will find a few of these still being made, but antique shops used to be full of them.
    While Sundays were supposed to be for church, under pressure from unions, workers finally became entitled to a two day weekend. However, this did not fit the needs of retail workers who were often forced to work saturdays. Instead, many retail stores, including small stores like butchers and bakers, would close at lunchtime on Wednesdays. This continued quite widely into the 1970s. In the English soccer league there is actually a team called Sheffield Wednesday. Originally an amateur team made up of shopkeepers, (butchers I think?) they were only able to play on Wednesdays, as Saturday was a trading day.

    • @billyskoda6839
      @billyskoda6839 Місяць тому +1

      In Europe, especially Germany... only petrol stations, bakers, leisure attractions and similar are open on a Sunday. RuhigTag is priceless. The UK lost its desire for rest decades ago and explains a lot about the decline of the country as a whole..

    • @stephencurran9716
      @stephencurran9716 Місяць тому +1

      I see the S word is mentioned
      The word should be FOOTBALL ⚽

  • @janinshirley
    @janinshirley Місяць тому

    Your comment about Bonfire Night and Lewes in particular brought back memories. I grew up close to Lewes and remember the 'celebrations' with affection. Good to know it still happens

  • @PhilR0gers
    @PhilR0gers Місяць тому +5

    When I was a child, all stores were closed all day on Sunday. I believe it was a religious thing about not working on Sundays. So when they changed the rules to allow them to open for 6 hours, it was a major change for us.
    Additionally, most towns and villages had an "early closing day" when all the shops closed at about midday. This was usually, but not always, a Wednesday.
    If you're ever in the UK in early November, Lewes is definitely worth visiting. Yes, there are several bonfire societies. Just pick one at random - they're all good. Burning torch-lit processions through the streets, burning crosses, flaming tar barrels, effigies of Guy Fawkes, the Pope and disliked politicians are burned. There have been as many as 80,000 people attending the Lewes bonfires.

  • @bobpockney
    @bobpockney Місяць тому +2

    Roundabouts are generally an excellent way to handle traffic flows at junctions to keep traffic moving efficiently. Sometimes traffic lights are needed because one dominant flow can lock out the others. We also have mini roundabouts which take little extra land, there's one very near me, and the central island is only about a metre in diameter.

  • @stevemockford327
    @stevemockford327 Місяць тому +4

    As an experienced "Bonfire" goer Lewes bonfire night is always the 5th November unless it falls on a Sunday in which case it will be held the day before It is the equivalent in Sussex and beyond to the Rio Carnival in Brazil or the Diseyland grand parade but with a little more risk. Bonfire season starts on the 1st weekend in September and runs through to around three weeks beyond the 5th Nov, with a different Sussex village or town having their celebrations, (bonfire, parade and firework display), on successive Saturdays. Sometimes a couple of villages/towns will hold it on the same day. Each Village and town have their own "Society" this normally comprises of members who fund raise for local charities and fund raise for the fireworks used for the display. Each Society over the years would have formed a 2 basic dress theme that a lot of members adhere too. The main one is the bonfire jerseys a loosely based on English Smugglers outfits the colours i.e Red & Black hooped jerseys means they represent one of the Societies from Lewes or Green / Black Hoops, a local town around 8 miles from Lewes,( Jerseys are always hoops). The other dress code can be a novelty theme that individual societies concentrate their interest in such as Native American indians, Vikings, Cavaliers, Tudor costume, American Civil war etc all costumes mostly hand made and trying to be as authentic as possible. Each society takes great pride in their outfits.
    If you do manage to get to Lewes check out the strong historical links to Tom Paine and a local village Ringmer connections to William Penn and John Harvard who both married gals with links to the village. Sorry I digress.
    Lewes is split into what Americans call "Wards" and each one of these have their own Society to name as many as i can, There is "Cliffe" Bonfire Society (BS), "South Street" BS, Waterloo" BS, Borough" BS, "Commercial Sq" BS, "Southover" BS, & Neville Juvenilles" BS. Each marches with invited local village/town societies on Nov 5th in a separate small parades around the town, culminating in what is called the United Grand Parade where they all join forces and put on a very noisy colourful spectacular show.
    Please be aware to grab a good vantage point you need to get there late afternoon as crowds of up to 10,000 people have been known to flood the small streets of Lewes. I will guarantee it is an experience you will never ever forget. Oh I forgot to say it's great to hang around in the town after a lot of the crowd has gone as there are a few things still going on to see.
    please watch this as a taster.
    ua-cam.com/video/gvMiYN9BGrc/v-deo.html

    • @cadileigh9948
      @cadileigh9948 Місяць тому

      you wisely missed out the religious undercurrant

    • @korma9732
      @korma9732 Місяць тому

      No Popery!

  • @nixxie2390
    @nixxie2390 14 днів тому

    In the UK we don't have fly screens - but we do have net curtains! They pretty much do the same thing but don't restrict the airflow too much! Everywhere I have lived has had net curtains (plain tulle is most common these days, but you can get fancy lacey ones) for privacy and bug prevention! (but yeah - we don't really have so many bugs here)

  • @JohnDoe-tp8mc
    @JohnDoe-tp8mc Місяць тому +7

    Bonfire night started as a celebration that we CAUGHT Guy Fawkes. It all started with effigy burning. Modern times it’s pretty much flipped around though and is very much the weird way that you see it. A nice celebration of anti-establishment dreams.

  • @chrism7395
    @chrism7395 22 дні тому +1

    On 5th November the town of Ottery St Mary, Devon has an event where townspeople run through the streets carrying barrels of flaming tar, it's very chaotic!

  • @judithjones3238
    @judithjones3238 Місяць тому +9

    Never been, but apparently in Eyam in Derbyshire, on bonfire night (5th November) they have a special torch light parade and burn a willow effigy of a rat 🐀 since it was a rat carried in a carpet being delivered from London that that took the Black Death plague to the village in 1665!! Would love to visit for this sometime!

    • @supergran1000
      @supergran1000 21 день тому

      I visited Eyam and it's fascinating. I believe that the Great Plague of 1665 was spread to the village in a bundle of cloth infested with fleas. Very sad story.

  • @JakeusMeakus
    @JakeusMeakus 6 годин тому

    A great place to go for Guy Fawkes night is Ottery St Mary where they have the tar barrels! The barrels get soaked in tar and carried through the streets. It is an incredible thing to see!

  • @stevieinselby
    @stevieinselby Місяць тому +4

    Sunday trading laws aren't unique to the UK! In France, supermarkets usually close at lunchtime on Sunday, and in Spain and Germany they are generally closed all day. So England & Wales having 10am to 4pm is pretty generous by European standards!
    Kettles are great, they boil water so much faster than a hob and more efficiently. If I'm cooking veg, I'll usually boil the water in the kettle first.
    Some great UK TV comedy, if you haven't found it yet, is Vicar of Dibley, and anything with Victoria Wood (stand-up, Dinnerladies).
    Glad to see you appreciate House of Games, one of the best shows on TV!

  • @carolinejohnson22
    @carolinejohnson22 Місяць тому +1

    We love using solar and wind power to dry washing on the line 😅 its free. Electricity is so expensive. During the winter we dry everything on radiators and hanging over the bannister.
    When i was little we used to collect wood about a week before bonfire night and build it up in the back garden. On the night dad used to light the fire and all the fireworks but we could hold sparklers. Mum always made meat and potato pie with suet crust pastry , treacle toffee, toffee apples, parkin (ginger cake). So it was a great time. We wrapped potatoes in foil and cooked them at the edge of the fire as it dwindled. It was always on 5th November, whatever night ....😅

  • @grapesodatravels
    @grapesodatravels Місяць тому +7

    Yikes! Who hung that laundry out!!?
    If you can get it in the US, try 'Green Wing' from Channel 4! It's mad, dark and brilliant!

    • @openorwap5412
      @openorwap5412 14 днів тому

      Green Wing didn't get the recognition it deserved, in my opinion.

  • @Sine-gl9ly
    @Sine-gl9ly Місяць тому +1

    EVERYWHERE has a dryer, it is wind and solar powered and called a 'washing line', rotary dryer, drying rack or something similar. We only use the plug-in ones when the weather's bad. I have drying racks and hangers which I can use indoors or out. There's nothing nicer than going to bed on freshly sun-and- wind dried pillowcases; they smell divine.

  • @ianbarnes9947
    @ianbarnes9947 Місяць тому +1

    Yes, go to Lewes, you won't be disappointed. Nice beer too! 🍻

  • @radman8321
    @radman8321 Місяць тому +52

    We don't celebrate the plot, we celebrate the failure of the plot.

    • @dean3084
      @dean3084 Місяць тому +1

      I’m a catholic so we see him as a freedom fighter but the irony of this is I’m patriotic and love the monarchy I’m English 😂

    • @dragonmummy1
      @dragonmummy1 Місяць тому

      We literally burn the protagonist - Guy Fawkes. The American invention of Halloween has become more popular here now.

    • @janebaker966
      @janebaker966 Місяць тому +3

      Any excuse for a party!

    • @timsyoutube6051
      @timsyoutube6051 Місяць тому +1

      ​@@dragonmummy1Halloween originated in Scotland. All hallows eve I believe it was called.

    • @amandamatthews7705
      @amandamatthews7705 Місяць тому +1

      @@dragonmummy1 Halloween is not an American invention it comes from a Celtic festival

  • @shelleyphilcox4743
    @shelleyphilcox4743 Місяць тому

    Gravy...we make it in different ways, and when doing a roast, we will use the roasting pan with the stock from the meat or a saucepan on the hob, and add water using the kettle to boil it or water that the vegetables have been cooked in, and cornflour/browning to thicken it.
    Some meals we like with gravy but dont have stock, so we use premade freeze dried gravy like Bisto or Oxo granules and add boiling water from the kettle.

  • @Thinkflite
    @Thinkflite Місяць тому +12

    Would it ve awfully British of me to say you were in the wrong lane on the roundabout clip? 😆

    • @eileenhildreth8355
      @eileenhildreth8355 Місяць тому +2

      We kiwis have lots of roundabouts and I was thinking the same

    • @bobpockney
      @bobpockney Місяць тому

      Yes, went ouch mentally.

    • @vintagevic4593
      @vintagevic4593 Місяць тому

      The roundabout with the palm tree on is near where I live and it has just been demolished and turned back into a normal crossing!

    • @Thinkflite
      @Thinkflite 25 днів тому

      @@eileenhildreth8355 I have allot of family living in NZ, we have close and wonderful ties the UK and NZ, Australia too of course... wonderful characters.

  • @rosie_nix
    @rosie_nix Місяць тому +2

    There are bonfire events at nearly every village and small town in Sussex, between September and December. They're smaller versions of Lewes. I recommend Lindfield as it's a pretty village.

  • @homebusiness8166
    @homebusiness8166 Місяць тому +11

    In Britain we had nets for the windows.

  • @meloshea8991
    @meloshea8991 3 дні тому

    It’s really nice to hear about the good things or our country.

  • @marklondon9004
    @marklondon9004 Місяць тому +11

    Bonfire Night: go to Ottery St. Mary for the barell run!

    • @rachelpenny5165
      @rachelpenny5165 Місяць тому +1

      I used to go there when I was a child and it wasn't so crowded. I grew up in Devon. It was fun then.

    • @richardsmith5249
      @richardsmith5249 Місяць тому

      ...or go to Northern Ireland for the 12th of July. Although the bonfires are on the night before. Also some places have New Year bonfires, like Biggar in Scotland.

  • @yanhunt
    @yanhunt 29 днів тому

    When I grew up there were 5 or six seperate bonfires stagered out so not to clash with each other, The biggest getting the Saturday closest to November the 5th (actual bonfire night). Some were free, others took donnations, and a few charged a couple of pounds for entry to cover the cost of fireworks. As years went on, insurance costs forced a lot of the smaller ones to close, but on the upside, the firework displays grew more proffessional. The biggest in my area was Brookham village - a tiny village in Surrey. Every year they built a massive 3/4 storey high bonfire and a firework display lasting 45min to an hour with 250,000 people coming from all over to watch. The night would start with a torchlight procession where they'd carry "the guy" (an effigy of guy fawkes) around the village before putting him on top of the bonfire and everyone throwing their torches onto the bonfire to start it. The night would tail off around midnight, but some people would stay till dawn. Bonfire night isn't really a celebration of the foiling of the gunpowder plot, but an excuse to have fun, with the resons behind it being lost to tradition.

  • @Pollyaula
    @Pollyaula Місяць тому +3

    All British cities have something on bonfire night - either big public shows or small household ones. His old school in York didn't celebrate - a past headteacher said 'we don't burn old boys'! There's a very nice hotel in York called the Guy Fawkes Hotel which I think you'd like to stay at - it's very quirky and the dining room is lit by candles.

  • @flybobbie1449
    @flybobbie1449 Місяць тому

    It was nice when all shops closed on Sundays. Roads were quieter people were contented cutting the lawn or washing the car.

  • @jackiejo3812
    @jackiejo3812 Місяць тому +4

    Lewes Bonfire IS overwhelming! But well worth a visit if you can get there - the town basically closes to traffic and most public transport as they try to restrict the number of peope crowding into a very small town.
    The other thing Lewes is famous for is that Thomas Paine, one of the American Founding Fathers, lived and worked there before he met Benjamin Franklin and moved to America.

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG Місяць тому

      However if people want to get away from England, while visiting the UK, then Inverness has done a great Bonfire night for decades. Bug parade through the streets to a giant bonfire, followed by a huge fireworks display, hot food and drinks available too.

  • @rachelbrown5139
    @rachelbrown5139 Місяць тому +1

    Sussex is the best place for bonfire night. All the big towns have their own Bonfire Societies and they usually burn an effigy of something or someone relevant to the year. The processions are awesome!

  • @richardhargrave6082
    @richardhargrave6082 Місяць тому +4

    We need to celebrate bonfire night more.
    Its been hijacked by Halloween.
    You don't need bug screens
    When you move in to a house, the first thing you unpack is the kettle

  • @incrediblefruit
    @incrediblefruit Місяць тому +2

    I never get tired of watching you guys ♥

  • @janewilson8676
    @janewilson8676 Місяць тому +13

    I remember watching an episode of M.A.S.H once when they’d accidently left the laughter track on! (The BBC usually removed it). It’s was awful,just so inappropriate.

    • @bobpockney
      @bobpockney Місяць тому +4

      I remember that. It was awful and totally ruined it.

    • @eurouc
      @eurouc Місяць тому +1

      I recall some pretty obnoxious laugh tracks on UK sitcoms

    • @stephencurran9716
      @stephencurran9716 22 дні тому

      Mash is better without the laugher track

  • @0409clearly
    @0409clearly Місяць тому +1

    When I was young shops didn’t open AT ALL on a Sunday & when they first started Sunday opening you couldn’t buy alcohol until 12 midday.

  • @leedavies4589
    @leedavies4589 Місяць тому +10

    sadly UK schools don't teach Gunpowder plot anymore Haloween taking over bonfire night and it anoys me

    • @willowtree9291
      @willowtree9291 Місяць тому

      When did that happen? It used to be in the KS1 history curriculum.

    • @cfowler7936
      @cfowler7936 19 днів тому

      Halloween has history too

    • @davidharris4062
      @davidharris4062 17 днів тому

      Halloween, All Hallows Eve, its Samhain a Celtic festival

  • @DavidBrown-ut5qi
    @DavidBrown-ut5qi Місяць тому +6

    Please watch Stephen Fry on why American and British humour differ , It will answer your question, :) All the best from Wales Bhaaaa Bhaaa ( Sheep noise ) x

  • @TIDYJOKER
    @TIDYJOKER Місяць тому

    Ive not been on UA-cam for a month or so. I commented on another video, that you should advertise more. I'm glad you are. You are brilliant at it.
    You're not supposed to, but put your clothes on the radiator for a few hours. If there is cooling rack, they work better. You need to air them out every few hours(move around), to stop the stale/damp smell setting into your clothes.
    You guys are amazing!! I'd forgotten 'Are you being served'. Such a great show, that kinda shows what we are all about.

  • @juliankaye8143
    @juliankaye8143 Місяць тому +4

    Instead of screens we have net curtains. It deters flies and nosey Parker’s looking in your living room.

  • @JillHughes-n1h
    @JillHughes-n1h Місяць тому +1

    When I grew up shops were closed on Sunday small local shops were open for Sunday papers

  • @PaladinesAngel
    @PaladinesAngel Місяць тому +4

    We just put our washing on the radiators if the weather is wet.

  • @wayneprewett6114
    @wayneprewett6114 Місяць тому +2

    Personally think British and American Humour are two sides of the same coin, I grew up watching all the British humour but also Taxi, Cheers, Friends, Frazier etc. They both have a place in my heart, Stephen Fry has an excellent Ted talk on the subject which I would highly recommend watching.

  • @English-folker
    @English-folker Місяць тому +8

    Cara you should check out an old British tv show called 'One man and his Dog'. The skill of the shepherds to work their dogs to herd sheep.

  • @wildatheart7704
    @wildatheart7704 Місяць тому

    Love your videos, thanks for sharing, much love xx UK 🇬🇧

  • @barneylaurance1865
    @barneylaurance1865 Місяць тому +4

    Sheep are not just in the countryside, they are arguably responsibly for creating a lot of the countryside as we know it. Without the sheep there might be a load more forests, which would probably be much better environmentally. But you wouldn't have the wide open views of the hills if you were standing in a forest.

  • @vikkirobinson4131
    @vikkirobinson4131 Місяць тому +1

    Remember that bonfire night is in November, in England November is dark, cold and wet. A bonfire with hot soup, baked potatoes etc while bundled up in coats and hats , is a great way to keep warm while watching fireworks! Also the wool industry was one of the major financial powerhouses of Britain from mediaeval times , even today the Speaker of the House Of Lords in Parliament sits on The Woolsack- a cushion type sack of wool, because it was so vital

  • @pureb7235
    @pureb7235 Місяць тому +5

    I'd love to know where Americans go to eat when they say "I didn't like the food in England" because like you said there's so much variety from around the world to choose from. You'll have to catch a new BBC comedy called Daddy Issues. It's hilarious.

    • @TheMagicGeekdom
      @TheMagicGeekdom  Місяць тому +5

      You do have such a great amount of choice in the foods available. We'll have to check out Daddy Issues.

  • @kimberleyelizabethbailes-ql9qk
    @kimberleyelizabethbailes-ql9qk Місяць тому +1

    I was a member of the Waterloo Bonfire Society in Lewes. Arrive early as the town gets packed. The costumes of the various societies are wonderful.

  • @garymatthews4323
    @garymatthews4323 Місяць тому +25

    Bonfire night is weird because most people miss the point , including I think some British people.
    We don’t celebrate the plot, even though it failed, we celebrate the failure, as in the King lived, and Parliament wasn’t destroyed.
    Basically after the plots failure the King forced the whole country to celebrate with a huge party, and we the British people said Ok that sounds cool, and we have done that ever since.

    • @jonjohnson2844
      @jonjohnson2844 Місяць тому

      And now it's £50 for a family to watch an underwhelming firework show!

    • @alanmon2690
      @alanmon2690 Місяць тому +7

      The actual plot was to force Roman Catholicism back on the people. This is why the failure was celebrated..

    • @timhannah4
      @timhannah4 Місяць тому

      'Bow Locks', It's celebrating the Catholic Terrorists being stopped!

    • @TheMagicGeekdom
      @TheMagicGeekdom  Місяць тому +3

      That makes sense. I don't know that we all always know why everything we celebrate is celebrated either.

    • @watcherzero5256
      @watcherzero5256 Місяць тому +1

      @@TheMagicGeekdom Also because it was a Catholic coup attempt which failed, so as a majority Protestant country it was celebrated. Maintaining the independence from the Catholic Church in Rome. The effigies that are burned are effigies of the failed coup plotters.

  • @julianryll755
    @julianryll755 Місяць тому

    Back in the day shops shut on Wednesday afternoons and all day Sunday and only opened 9-5 , now they open 8-8 and 10 -4 on Sunday but small shops and garages open when they want.

  • @alansmithee8831
    @alansmithee8831 Місяць тому +3

    Hello Cara and Jeremy. I heard US comedy described as the hero wise guy making fun of the clown. Top Cat gets the better of officer Dibble. British humour was described as the clown being the hero, suffering all life throws at him, but making the best of his lot, like the majority of the audience. Examples you would know are Charlie Chaplin and Stan Laurel.

  • @carolynthompson3291
    @carolynthompson3291 Місяць тому +2

    I’m aged 63, have 3 children and have never had a dryer for my washing. I either put the washing outside on a washing line which every garden had in those days and some still do now, or dried the clothes etc indoors on a clothes airer which’s what I use today either indoors or out. Indoors it mostly within 24 hours as I place the airer in the bathroom that has an a ceiling extractor fan. The cost of electricity is exorbitant compared to the US!

  • @davem12dim17
    @davem12dim17 Місяць тому +5

    Oh, and humour.. I'm generalising, but, US Comedy - laugh at others, British Comedy - laugh at ourselves
    British humour generally is very self-depracating

    • @patriciachirgwin3238
      @patriciachirgwin3238 Місяць тому

      And I find US humour much more ‘slapstick’, I.e. hit you in the face obvious. Good British humour is more subtle.

  • @paulwilliams6163
    @paulwilliams6163 17 днів тому

    If you travel to the UK in spring time
    You can go to any local farms, for a lambing event and see the lambs being born, lots of locals take their children to give the lambs a bottle of milk to give the ewes a rest from feeding

  • @Yandarval
    @Yandarval Місяць тому +3

    Guy Fawkes/Bonfire Night. It is a celabration of the king and lords NOT bleing blown up. It was an actual law from that time. Observance of 5th November Act 1605 put into law a spontanious lighting of bonfires when news of the Catholic plat to kill the king had failed.
    Compared to today, up until the 80s, there were many more celebrations and bonfires across the county. The cebebrations are mild compared to earlier times.