You accurately described the month of July we had in kansas last year, but why did we get a southern summer up here? All the folks I knew had to deal with their air conditioning breaking down. It was intense. Heat warnings day after day is stupid. Even the students at the college from Saudi Arabia said, "how does it get this hot, it's not this hot back home." 🤣
With love and respect, Matt...please take a walk each night and start eating salads. NOT potato, chicken, ham or crab "salad", but actual greens. We are starting to really worry about you and want you around for a long time. Love, Jake, Mike, Stevie and families.
@mattmitchell California born but southern bred by virtue of my dad , mother, godmother and grandmother ( who i affectionately referred to as nana ): they are from Louisiana , Georgia , Alabama and Texas respectfully
No joke, on that swamp alligator trapping show a while back, I had to turn on closed captioning because I couldn’t parse what they were saying in real time.
In "winter" season, make sure to check your weather ap every morning to see if you need long sleeves, short sleeves, jeans, shorts, and maybe that lonely jacket in the back of your closet.if it's cool in the morning and warmer in the afternoon wear short sleeves and a light jacket under a heavier jacket, so you can take your heavier jacket off at 10:45 and your lighter jacket off at 12:56.
Spot on! My Wife's Uncle passed away a few years ago and we got some of his stuff. He had some clothes from all the work he'd done as an Electrician all over the US. Some of it is great for icy cold Northern Weather... I have yet to touch it again after it got shoved into an old Marine Corps duffle bag at the back of the coat closet. That was like 3 or 4 years ago.
Yup! Sometimes I have to keep a jacket in the car or bring a short-sleeved shirt as a backup to work. I work in an office, but that humidity will FIND you
Now I am an old woman, California-born, but raised by a displaced southern mother. I have to let you know how much I enjoy your videos...it is almost like she is sitting next to me again. Putting me in my place with that razor wit...
You're just like my mom and me about my grandma! We're Californians through and through, but she was from tiny town Kentucky, and now that we live in Texas, these videos have layers upon layers for us. 😍
@@shirw same here. My dad was born and raised in the south. His family here for 170 years. My mom was a transplant from Massachusetts. She taught me the proper pronunciation of every word. We had civil war in our household every night... Her famous phrase was we whipped your butt once before in the civil war and will do it again
That heat part is spot on. I'm from East Tennessee and joined the army in 1998. Some of those guys were talking about how hot it gets where they were from. I smiled when the kid from Minnesota was telling me how hot and humid it's gets back home. The third day it got to 97 degrees and 89% humidity at Ft. Jackson SC and those boys almost died.
I was talking to a guy from Finland a while back. He was making fun of me when I told him I can't handle the cold. It was funny when he took a trip to Florida in July and nearly passed out on the tarmac after exiting the plane. Lol
My first job out of college was in Connecticut (I was born in Alabama and raised in Georgia). We used a test facility in central Tennessee. Several of my coworkers told me that if I had a chance to go there, watch out because no one could understand the locals. When I was finally able to finagle a trip there, I was confused. No one talked funny like they did up north. Everyone I met in Tennessee talked normally.
Connecticut has the least amount of accent of ANY northern state! LOL Either you were drunk, high or you should ask for a refund from that 'college' you went to! LOL
"Go straight to the ATL airport and go somewhere else" best advice from those that want to tell you that is not how they did it back home. We don't care how you did it up north or out west, you are in the south now.
they been coming down here for the past 100 years inbedding yankees in our land, very few actually born here are actually southerners, if your family aint been here since at least the civil war or before y'all aint truly southern. like a majority of florida.
Nailed the seasons perfectly! I actually charcoal grilled this past week. Also I went shopping yesterday and I saw a volunteer daffodil in bloom in my yard and here it is only the 17th of February. That and someone's Forsithia was blooming. The good Lord may have said as long as th eEarth endures the seasons will continue but he didn't say they couldn't be messed up some. 🙃
Roll Tide Roll!!! Thunder Struck! Elephant Stompin'! We don't PLAY football, WE LIVE IT!!! Aaawww, you get it....we crush any other conference.....yearly!
Well, according to this I'm the IDEAL guide/translator for the newcomers to the south. I was born and raised in northern Maine so I speak the original French dialect of the Cajun. I've lived in Florida for over forty years so I know all about the weather patterns and seasons, and I married a girl from central Tennessee so I can understand the dialect and accent of people who pronounce the name 'Jim' in two syllables and have a working knowledge of the intense rivalries during March Madness and Bowl season. I've got it ALL covered.
I explain " we're refugees from.NYS" and immediately we're accepted. I love learning about Southern culture and experiencing everything. I live in a sweet little Tennessee town , close to the Alabama. It's so refreshing! The price to pay is hellish hot summers and murdering bugs that extend for about two and a half seasons .. but we've seen enough snow to last a lifetime! I love the South!
The most absolute Southern things my WWII era grandfather ever did were 1) teaching me to shoot his father’s .22LR Remington pump action rifle in his unfinished basement by putting hay bales against the foundation wall and turning an old couch over for us to kneel behind. 2) paying me $1 each for every blue jay I killed that tried to eat his cucumbers and tomatoes out of his garden with his Crosman pump air rifle. After I got to $11 one day he wouldn’t pay me anymore. Ahh the South.
My uncle convinced my brother that he was going to have to eat the first blue jay he shot. Put the bird in the freezer and everything, and pretended to cook it and served him a thin slice of chicken.
Y'all, I seriously don't think I'd survive anywhere else, but here in the South. Not because I wouldn't be able to survive, because, y'all know a country girl can survive. But where I come from when we talk about 'the war' in my family, there's still some prejudices that lie deep within. I fear rather than teaching a few of them yanks how to bag a few blue jay's, I'd likely take a few hunting for snipe. Which are real, but idk that they even got any up yonder. Yeah, I'll be in Georgia if anyone needs me til Jesus comes.
My great-uncle told us if we could catch a calf we could keep it. My brother wanted to try and uncle said, "Just watch out for the bulls." Brother asked, "Which ones are the bulls?" "The ones that aren't running away," said Uncle. After my brother was out running after the calf I asked my uncle if he could actually catch a calf and he replied, "No, but it's fun to watch him try." He also told us the green gooseberries are good to eat.
Grandpa was also no nonsense too. When I was 16 or so we took my 5 year old cousin fishing with us to a friend of my grandfather's pond. The man had some cows and a low voltage electrified wire fence that ran along the other side of the road from the pond we were in. My cousin, bless his heart, kept going across the road and I kept going to get him to keep him from getting hurt, grandpa a couple times too. We kept telling him leave that alone because it will hurt. But nooooo he kept going over to it. Finally he went one too may times. "Grandpa, Lee's going after the fence again." Long look, long pause from grandpa then "He'll learn" and makes a cast into the water and sure enough about a minute later I see him grab the fence with both hands and go GAHHHHHHTTTTPPPP as he shook and then came running back crying with little red lines on his palms and fingers. He holds his hands up to grandpa and grandpa looks at him and said "Hurt, didn't it." Lee sat there with us the rest of the time we fished and didn't move anywhere near that fence again.
I was born in Staten Island and raised 2 1/2 hours north of there. Lived in alabama now 17 years and this made me spit out my lunch. Thank you. You saved me some calories while burning some extra with laughing so damn hard.
After 19 years of living in Southern Louisiana, I can understand enough to get by... As long as we don't go into full-on Cajun French. Then I just smile and agree. But seriously, these are the best people I've ever met. I love it here, and the additional 40 lbs I've gained shows it 🤣🤣
Spot on! But now we need a Southerner's survival guide for when we gotta go up north. Edit: So I actually moved to New Jersey 3 years ago, for life saving medical care I couldn't get back home in Tx. It's a culture shock, but honestly, it's not too bad. My local store even carries Milo's sweet tea!!! Actually, my one piece of advice is to always carry hot sauce. Mild back in Texas is spicy/hot up here, no joke.
Why would you wanna go up North? Unless your a trucker or you travel for work, I wouldn't suggest going up North. If you do have to make that wicked trip, don't forget to take grits with you. Because all they is cream of wheat or oatmeal.
Loved this one. I was raised in South Georgia, now I live in Texas. It gets hotter here, but never as humid, and I just watch people "melting" and shake my head. Very accurate, right down to the terms of endearment.
Spent the first 50 years of my life living in PA. Moved to NC 9 years ago and all your videos are hilariously true about moving to the South 😂 love your channel!
But why? LOL The bigger cities are notorious for the not talking to strangers. Go somewhere more rural, and you will find people more relaxed.I have DEFINITELY had good conversations with people in a grocery store and NONE of us were from the south! Miracles CAN happen! LOL
My mama was from the South but she ended up here in Ohio and we always knew we had done something really bad when she said bless your heart and I picked that up and said still people think I'm from the South lol but note I'm a Buckeye through-and-through. Love your content Matt I lived in the South myself for awhile several years and I have to admit I didn't enjoy the pace better than up North here And the sweet tea
LOL, that whole "you'll wonder if you will ever be dry again" really hit home. Living in Arkansas, the simple act of drying yourself off after a shower is enough to make you sweat... and be damp all over again. Seriously, I'm pretty sure hell has nothing on an Arkansas summer. 😅
I never knew how regionalized I was until I moved from Massachusetts to Florida years ago. I know that Florida isn't southern to a lot of people but it was more than enough for us. We left after 3 months. Came back to Massachusetts with no jobs, no place to live in February. Heaved a huge sigh of relief and haven't regretted coming back once.
Truth! Thank you so much Matt for your honest, humorous, real videos of "the south." It's diversity, and humidity, keep up always entertained and on the local church prayer list. Your videos always bring a smile to my heart. As a disable Veteran, I've lived all over the world, but here I am still in the south. It's home, it's familiar, it's where my family is to this day. I would move away in a heartbeat, especially during the high humidity of summer, or an random ice storm, but there's no place quite like the south. And the food! OMG! We got it all! Keep 'em coming!
Keep the vids comin' Matt. I'm originally from New Orleans but have lived overseas for many years. I don't even TRY to describe the New Orleans language and social constructs to the people I live and work with.
Wish my southern grandparents were still alive to relearn the language. ❤😂 One expression my grandma from KY would say when something went wrong in the kitchen was sh!t fire.
To which people standing around reply “Save matches” in tones of sympathy. My Mamaw said,” Aye law.” You knew someone was fixin to get it. Catholics have nothing on the guilt of a southern child running through the list of things you did that day that might be about to get you killed.
It's not just to the south. You hear constantly about people moving from the city and get all bent out of shape about the farm they just moved next to.
I used to live in an area where they actually passed "right to farm laws" due to the city people. City people would move in next to 100+ year old farms, then bitch about the farmers working their fields or smelling manure.
One day this winter here in Texas, I check the weather channel site, and it's 80 F. And there's an ad for campbell's soup! Just what I wanted when it's 80 degrees 😂
I’m from Alabama and was engaged to a guy from Southern Louisiana. It took me months to understand what his family was saying! That’s not even including other friends and extended family. And they didn’t even live that far away!! They were awesome, tho, and the partying most ppl I’ve ever met!
I'm originally from NJ, but I lived near New Orleans for college, and I got a chance to work with a bunch of people from Lafourche parish over a couple of years for summer high school band camps. I had taken 6 years of French classes before college, so the parents loved me because they thought it was awesome that the Yankee fella was the only one who understood them with no problems. 😂⚜⚜😂
Love to see you do a series of "Southerner visits foreign lands," like Philadelphia, Chicago, Minneapolis, Salt Lake City, Boston, the Jersey Shore, etc. Kinda a Stranger in a Strange land theme. Skip NYC -- its overdone.
How about do one from OUTSIDE the big cities! To be honest, the big cities are odd compared to the rest of area outside! Big cities are big cities, so they arent THAT strange! Unless you lived in a cave somewhere for too long.
As a Virginian who has lived in South Carolina and just got back from a week of Mardi Gras in New Orleans, I can confirm that I had no idea what anybody was saying.
I’m southern Louisiana born and raised. I can confirm nobody outside of 100 miles of here knows what I’m saying half the time 🤣. I went to Dollywood last year and almost everyone I talked to first looked at me like they were lost then hit me with some variation of where the hell are you from😆
I actually do understand the heat of the south despite living in the north, only during the north's summer though and shockingly only when i walk inside my place of work. Factories are a joy.
This is so true! We lived in Dallas for 2 years & I have never felt heat & humidity like that. Can't say I want to again. And it never really cooled down at night. The day the movers came to get us out of there, it was 108, felt like 115 with the humidity. I had plenty of ice cold water for the moving guys & they went through an entire case & then some. Gave the foreman money to take the guys out for beer afterwards. Best BBQ we've ever had, though...and Shiner Bock is life. Luckily we can get Shiner here now. Thanks for always making me laugh, Matt.
I’m from the southwest , which is different then the South and when I’m trying to help my family, who are all west of the Mississippi River, understand Southern culture I send either Matt’s or It’s a Southern Thing videos to them. Matt, I especially love your observations on the weather here - and I still get mad when the temps Drop during the Day!!! But at least I know now to have every sweater, coat, rain jacket -whatever! With me at all times 👍😂🤷🏻♀️.
Hello from Knoxville TN. This video is fantastic! Last summer, (pretty sure it was the 3rd one) I was in the DMV waiting. Just being neighborly I asked where everyone was from. There were 4 from California, 2 from New Jersey, and 1 from New York. I did give 1 piece of advice to all the refugees from “California’stan”. -Buy a Bible, a good gun, and learn to love sweet tea.
Matt you forgot to mention the ice storms in the winter, and hail the size of oranges. I thought I was prepared for winter until I tried to drive on ice. I lived in the bootheel of MO. I remember the humidity. Weatherman saying the humidity was at 100%. I never understood how that could be and I could still breathe, lol.
Summer SUMmer SUMMER!!!!!!😂😂😂😂❤ I am from Florida soooo true. And I have always wished to tell some new residents to go back home😂😂😂 love y’all’s work.
Humidity? Prepare to feel like you're trying to breath through a sponge.......... You can feel drier taking a shower ........... Out in the desert you sweat it evaporates and it helps your sort of feel a little cooler......... Here? It's already humid so when you sweat you just feel sticker and hotter. But I do love the food, the ability to wear flip-flops in the winter (summer-lite) and calling friends up north in February bragging about my tomato and strawberry plants. About the only serious drawback here in FL, are northerners who come down here and proceed on trying to turn things around and make it like, well, the north. No, I do not want to hear 'Up North, this is how it's done - the right way." "Really, precious? Well, bless your heart, darling" "We'll say 'Isn't that interesting' because that seems more polite than just telling someone where they can stick it"
Bless you for being real about people who don’t like the way we live but KEEP moving here. We have had a crazy influx of them in the last 5 years. I understand wanting to get out of that too… but if it’s that bad why recreate it here??? We didn’t want it to start with.
@@navykip we have a lot from California and New York moving here to east Texas. The ones that move because they can’t stand the laws and culture that have taken over those areas are pretty decent people BUT there are a lot that are simply creating what they left behind.
It's not that it's bad and that's why they move. We move for other reasons (kidnapped by a Southerner) and we're excited and then there's culture shock. I'm in Louisiana and black mold is in all the apartments, the Mexican food is horrible, and the only grocery store for 100 miles is Walmart. If you don't buy watermelons the minute they open, people buy them and sell them out of their truck in the parking lot for $10 each. Also, there's no snakes, and certainly no venemous ones. Ya'll got Buc-Cee's, Whataburger, I can wear shorts on Thanksgiving, and Bama football. When we say "that's not how it's done where I'm from" that means I'm not paying $400k for a house just because it has an attached garage and rain while you're driving is not a reason to be paralyzed with fear.
I just came back from my first trip to Alabama. Matt’svideos made me want to visit the true south, not Atlanta. I recommend February for hiking and outdoor see sighting. Alabama definitely has 5 different regions and accents. Keep the videos coming Matt!😁
I am so impressed how every single one of your videos is hilarious. There are plenty of “southern” channels on UA-cam but yours is the only one with consistently funny content. Those other channels definitely could use some of your writing.😉
I served a mission for two years in Alabama, Mississippi and Tennessee, I can attest that everything Matt was schooling you on is true! I miss the south often, If it wasn’t for my love of snowboarding I’d move to Clanton Alabama or Fayetteville Tennessee in a heartbeat. Love your channel Matt and crew!
Yep…I lived in Clanton for 5 1/2 months give or take when I was on my mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. We covered all of Chilton county.
Born & raised in Portland OR. HORRIBLE rain/clouds Oct thru May but ABSOLUTELY lovely June-Sept. No bugs, nice & dry summer, all the outdoor stuff!!! So, I just moved to TN & while I LOVE the politics & friendliness, the last two summers have had me (and even my DOGS) thinking I MAY have made a mistake. I've never, EVER experienced heat & humidity like this and it's got me wondering how the first settlers to this region, the ones that survived that first summer w/o air conditioning, didn't just. keep going.... This is a serious question I have.
Yay! I'm that yankee transplant and I ingratiated myself to my new southern neighbors by making them apple butter and a pie. I havent gotten a "bless your heart" or a stare yet! One thing I did notice as a transplant from Maryland is... at least in South Carolina, you can escape the 110 degree summer heat by standing in the shade. That wasnt possible before! So I love the south!
"Go to your nearest dollar general and if there isn't we'll build immediately!" So true! I've visited the south for family members and I swear there's one on every corner it seems like 😂
I love this video! My hubby and I moved from Southern WI to Northern Kentucky at the end of Jun. When we moved it was past 95 degrees with a heat index of almost 100. That heat was bad last year. We felt sorry for the crew that we hired because they had to take breaks in the air conditioning because it was so hot and humid. They actually had to call another person to come help so they could get done quicker. Thank heavens for Central heat and air conditioning. We never really had central anything in the places where we lived. I think a few apartments that we lived in had central heat but window units for air. This is the first place where we have both. Seriously do the videos on the different regions.
I worked for a company that had a plant and corporate offices in N WI and several plants in the South. Living in the Midwest, but mostly in the South, I was the translator. Explaining the “bubblier” was the funniest
Fun fact, my mom stopped wearing makeup when we moved to TX because it would just melt off of her face it was that humid, and when we moved to East TN, we were rather surprised at the Tennessee Twang some people had. Also, the seasons here are as follows: winter, is it still winter?, I think its spring? nope, the weather can't make up its f--ing mind (this is a very long season that can bleed into the next,) Allergies because everything grows here (good luck successfully breathing through your nose during parts of mid march to early june), HOT, FOOTBALL, ooo I can be outside for 5 min without being a hot sweaty mess, fall, and winter. Fall is actually pretty nice here because you can actually tell when it happens. Pretty colors and you can no longer tell who's in Marching band or sports by their half-gallon water jugs that they need for practice so they don't have to worry about passing out because of the heat. (no joke, I almost passed out one time because the heat got to me and I didn't have my half-gallon at the time, I was working with my puny 28-ounce) Hydrate or Die-drate people! And wear sunscreen! my brother came home after practice one day lookin like a lobster
I was born in Maryland (I know) raised all over (military),married a man from New Orleans (met him in ND, we are AF). He didn’t have an accent, he was in speech, debate and drama in HS. Then I went to NOLA to meet the family. 😮 it took me a week to understand what they were saying to me.
But sometimes, you people do DUMB things (where ever you are at, not just the south)! I understand and would agree if someone is trying to change EVERYONE to be like themselves, but seriously, a little progress wont hurt you if you have ridiculous traffic laws or somesuch!
@@inconnu4961 Living in a tourist area it's normally they can't follow the basics and not be rude. I get the more local laws are hard to follow, but stop signs always mean stop. As well as just pretending you know how to drive in certain weather because you experience a lesser version or see the locals driving more comfortably.
I have to say, since moving to the (technical) south a year and a half ago, I really love the terms of endearment perfect strangers use. Darlin' is my favorite. Almost all of them beat the rudeness of the north.
sittin' on the back porch in folding chairs with grampa - shootin' at pie-tins hanging off the clothesline. That is one of my best southern memories...that and all-you-can-eat fried catfish at "The Catfish King" somewheres in Atlanta vicinity.
Subscribe or switch to organic free-range deodorant
Matt did you just ❤️ my comment?
Are you the Car Wizard's long-lost brother? One of yous parents has got some explaining to do!
You accurately described the month of July we had in kansas last year, but why did we get a southern summer up here? All the folks I knew had to deal with their air conditioning breaking down. It was intense. Heat warnings day after day is stupid. Even the students at the college from Saudi Arabia said, "how does it get this hot, it's not this hot back home." 🤣
With love and respect, Matt...please take a walk each night and start eating salads. NOT potato, chicken, ham or crab "salad", but actual greens. We are starting to really worry about you and want you around for a long time. Love, Jake, Mike, Stevie and families.
@mattmitchell California born but southern bred by virtue of my dad , mother, godmother and grandmother ( who i affectionately referred to as nana ): they are from Louisiana , Georgia , Alabama and Texas respectfully
Fall in the south is undoubtedly my favorite three days of the year.
@@susanjspaulding Sorry, you're right. That was just second summer, again.
Wait a minute, who gave you three whole days?! I got right at 10 whole hours between one sunset and sunrise 🤣
It would be nice if those three days were lined up and not mixed in between either baking hot or freezing cold.
Also known as "wet summer"
I’m impressed. Are they consecutive?
As a southern Louisianan... yeah, even us natives have issues understanding each other from time to time.
No joke, on that swamp alligator trapping show a while back, I had to turn on closed captioning because I couldn’t parse what they were saying in real time.
Can we make Matt, President of the South already!!
😬 Last time someone tried to be President of the South, a whole ass war started. Let's not do that again.
He can be an ambassador.
We tried that already
We'd have to succeed again and that's not the worst idea I ever heard
@@faulknersealock5575 I'm not sure what history they taught you, but the South didn't succeed the first time they did it.
I was going to point out the problem with that statement, but other people got there before me.
When we old ladies in Louisiana say, “Bless your heart”, we are really asking God to bless you.
In "winter" season, make sure to check your weather ap every morning to see if you need long sleeves, short sleeves, jeans, shorts, and maybe that lonely jacket in the back of your closet.if it's cool in the morning and warmer in the afternoon wear short sleeves and a light jacket under a heavier jacket, so you can take your heavier jacket off at 10:45 and your lighter jacket off at 12:56.
I just wear a T-shirt under a coat. You're gonna need one or the other so it doesn't hurt to bring both.
Preach 😂
My life-long motto for surviving Nashville's weather: Wear shorts, but bring a jacket.
Spot on! My Wife's Uncle passed away a few years ago and we got some of his stuff. He had some clothes from all the work he'd done as an Electrician all over the US. Some of it is great for icy cold Northern Weather... I have yet to touch it again after it got shoved into an old Marine Corps duffle bag at the back of the coat closet. That was like 3 or 4 years ago.
Yup! Sometimes I have to keep a jacket in the car or bring a short-sleeved shirt as a backup to work. I work in an office, but that humidity will FIND you
Now I am an old woman, California-born, but raised by a displaced southern mother. I have to let you know how much I enjoy your videos...it is almost like she is sitting next to me again. Putting me in my place with that razor wit...
Lol. My Tennessee mom's, "You don't need that", still echoes in my head many years after she went home.
Haha, my mom was a California transplant to the South. She was forever trying to get us to pronounce words correctly! 😄
You're just like my mom and me about my grandma! We're Californians through and through, but she was from tiny town Kentucky, and now that we live in Texas, these videos have layers upon layers for us. 😍
@@shirw same here. My dad was born and raised in the south. His family here for 170 years. My mom was a transplant from Massachusetts. She taught me the proper pronunciation of every word. We had civil war in our household every night... Her famous phrase was we whipped your butt once before in the civil war and will do it again
Them’s fightin’ words, down here. Bless her heart…
That heat part is spot on. I'm from East Tennessee and joined the army in 1998. Some of those guys were talking about how hot it gets where they were from. I smiled when the kid from Minnesota was telling me how hot and humid it's gets back home. The third day it got to 97 degrees and 89% humidity at Ft. Jackson SC and those boys almost died.
We get triple digits and "hi-midity" way up north but nothing like what you guys get. I'll take -60 windchill ANY day over that!
@@katie7748 I'm the exact opposite. This winter it got down to -15 and I thought I was going to die.
I was talking to a guy from Finland a while back. He was making fun of me when I told him I can't handle the cold. It was funny when he took a trip to Florida in July and nearly passed out on the tarmac after exiting the plane. Lol
@@thehappydragon9491 Yeah in many parts of Europe temperatures above 80F is considered a heat wave.
@@michaelholt8590 That's so hard for me to even fathom, but then again, 20F is practically an ice age to me.
My first job out of college was in Connecticut (I was born in Alabama and raised in Georgia). We used a test facility in central Tennessee. Several of my coworkers told me that if I had a chance to go there, watch out because no one could understand the locals. When I was finally able to finagle a trip there, I was confused. No one talked funny like they did up north. Everyone I met in Tennessee talked normally.
Connecticut has the least amount of accent of ANY northern state! LOL Either you were drunk, high or you should ask for a refund from that 'college' you went to! LOL
We can understand Yankees just fine, they rarely understand us, however.
If you went to middle Tennessee that’s probably why East Tennessee have southern accents but you can easily understand them
@@moblinmajorgeneral are you sure?? I have been to Boston for nearly a week.a few years back. I was wondering If they even spoke english?
@@duanebrankley8984 they do they a bit cunfuzeled but you can make out bits and pieces.
As an Ohio State fan, the, “sad little Buckeye tears” was pretty accurate!
Buckeyes sound off scarlet and gray for life
Bless your heart
Go home to Ohio.
You know, if someone told me before that game we'd only have lost by 1, I would have taken it. Now.... I'm still pretty broken up.
@@monkeykidd420 Hail no
This felt like a church welcome video. Good job Matt
As a former truck driver I can attest to the Louisiana accents. They change literally every 5 miles.
It's a good morning when you finish a clip from It's A Southern Thing and then magically get a video from Matt.
I bet they're kicking themselves for letting him get away lol his content is supreme. He was already my favorite Southern Thing person before he quit.
@Tequila Sunrise I thought he was the brains behind it. Most of their cast the last year or so are terrible.
"Go straight to the ATL airport and go somewhere else" best advice from those that want to tell you that is not how they did it back home. We don't care how you did it up north or out west, you are in the south now.
I mentally append an extremely derisive ",boy." To comments like this made by southerners lmao
You show great wisdom. Long as you do it mentally, you should be fine.
Amen
Amen!
If you don’t want to live like us, go home or move somewhere up north! Thank you for saying what every Southerner is thinking.
Amen to that!
they been coming down here for the past 100 years inbedding yankees in our land, very few actually born here are actually southerners, if your family aint been here since at least the civil war or before y'all aint truly southern. like a majority of florida.
Yes!!!
My favorite recently spotted bumper snicker, “Keep the south beautiful; point a Yankee back north.”
Hallelujah.
Nailed the seasons perfectly! I actually charcoal grilled this past week. Also I went shopping yesterday and I saw a volunteer daffodil in bloom in my yard and here it is only the 17th of February. That and someone's Forsithia was blooming. The good Lord may have said as long as th eEarth endures the seasons will continue but he didn't say they couldn't be messed up some. 🙃
I saw forsythia before the end of January!
We've had robins for a month and a half.
My daffodils been in bloom for 2 weeks.
@@YSLRD here in Maryland as well!
@@fittrad3r687 mine are just starting!
“Crushing the hopes and dreams of the Big 10” 😂😂😂👍
O. H. I. O.
G.E.O.R.G.I.A.
Crushin big 10 hearts year after year 😂🙄
MD here and The Ohio State Buckeyes will put you in your place every time. Nice game though!
Roll Tide Roll!!! Thunder Struck! Elephant Stompin'! We don't PLAY football, WE LIVE IT!!! Aaawww, you get it....we crush any other conference.....yearly!
Well, OU has just joined the Southeast conference.Sorry about that
Well, according to this I'm the IDEAL guide/translator for the newcomers to the south. I was born and raised in northern Maine so I speak the original French dialect of the Cajun. I've lived in Florida for over forty years so I know all about the weather patterns and seasons, and I married a girl from central Tennessee so I can understand the dialect and accent of people who pronounce the name 'Jim' in two syllables and have a working knowledge of the intense rivalries during March Madness and Bowl season. I've got it ALL covered.
depends on what part of Florida......as most of it aint southern, sorry
@@OoogaBoog Once you get south of Gainesville you are heading north 🙂
New Orleanian here. You speak old 'Cadian.
You'll never speak Chalmation. Todd knows what I'm talking about.
However Bronx and Hell's Kitchen folks nail it pretty quick
allons ...
I explain " we're refugees from.NYS" and immediately we're accepted. I love learning about Southern culture and experiencing everything. I live in a sweet little Tennessee town , close to the Alabama. It's so refreshing! The price to pay is hellish hot summers and murdering bugs that extend for about two and a half seasons .. but we've seen enough snow to last a lifetime! I love the South!
I just love you Matt, you ease the stress of this lunatic world. 💕
The most absolute Southern things my WWII era grandfather ever did were 1) teaching me to shoot his father’s .22LR Remington pump action rifle in his unfinished basement by putting hay bales against the foundation wall and turning an old couch over for us to kneel behind. 2) paying me $1 each for every blue jay I killed that tried to eat his cucumbers and tomatoes out of his garden with his Crosman pump air rifle. After I got to $11 one day he wouldn’t pay me anymore. Ahh the South.
My uncle convinced my brother that he was going to have to eat the first blue jay he shot. Put the bird in the freezer and everything, and pretended to cook it and served him a thin slice of chicken.
Shoot all the Bluejays you want,
but it's a sin to kill a mockingbird.
Cheers 🍷
Y'all, I seriously don't think I'd survive anywhere else, but here in the South. Not because I wouldn't be able to survive, because, y'all know a country girl can survive. But where I come from when we talk about 'the war' in my family, there's still some prejudices that lie deep within. I fear rather than teaching a few of them yanks how to bag a few blue jay's, I'd likely take a few hunting for snipe. Which are real, but idk that they even got any up yonder. Yeah, I'll be in Georgia if anyone needs me til Jesus comes.
My great-uncle told us if we could catch a calf we could keep it. My brother wanted to try and uncle said, "Just watch out for the bulls." Brother asked, "Which ones are the bulls?" "The ones that aren't running away," said Uncle. After my brother was out running after the calf I asked my uncle if he could actually catch a calf and he replied, "No, but it's fun to watch him try."
He also told us the green gooseberries are good to eat.
Grandpa was also no nonsense too. When I was 16 or so we took my 5 year old cousin fishing with us to a friend of my grandfather's pond. The man had some cows and a low voltage electrified wire fence that ran along the other side of the road from the pond we were in. My cousin, bless his heart, kept going across the road and I kept going to get him to keep him from getting hurt, grandpa a couple times too. We kept telling him leave that alone because it will hurt. But nooooo he kept going over to it. Finally he went one too may times. "Grandpa, Lee's going after the fence again." Long look, long pause from grandpa then "He'll learn" and makes a cast into the water and sure enough about a minute later I see him grab the fence with both hands and go GAHHHHHHTTTTPPPP as he shook and then came running back crying with little red lines on his palms and fingers. He holds his hands up to grandpa and grandpa looks at him and said "Hurt, didn't it." Lee sat there with us the rest of the time we fished and didn't move anywhere near that fence again.
I was born in Staten Island and raised 2 1/2 hours north of there. Lived in alabama now 17 years and this made me spit out my lunch. Thank you. You saved me some calories while burning some extra with laughing so damn hard.
After 19 years of living in Southern Louisiana, I can understand enough to get by... As long as we don't go into full-on Cajun French. Then I just smile and agree. But seriously, these are the best people I've ever met. I love it here, and the additional 40 lbs I've gained shows it 🤣🤣
Huh, only 40! You’re lucky..
@@johnnyreb3542 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤤🤤🤤🤤
Spot on! But now we need a Southerner's survival guide for when we gotta go up north.
Edit: So I actually moved to New Jersey 3 years ago, for life saving medical care I couldn't get back home in Tx. It's a culture shock, but honestly, it's not too bad. My local store even carries Milo's sweet tea!!!
Actually, my one piece of advice is to always carry hot sauce. Mild back in Texas is spicy/hot up here, no joke.
1- Don't drink iced tea.
easy, just don't go up north
Don’t go up North!! Hire somebody to go in your place👍
Just don’t go to Ohio
Or Pennsylvania
Or any other northern state
Why would you wanna go up North? Unless your a trucker or you travel for work, I wouldn't suggest going up North.
If you do have to make that wicked trip, don't forget to take grits with you.
Because all they is cream of wheat or oatmeal.
LOL. I am from south Louisiana and that is so true. I came home from Texas with friends and they were like, "What did they say."
Loved this one. I was raised in South Georgia, now I live in Texas. It gets hotter here, but never as humid, and I just watch people "melting" and shake my head. Very accurate, right down to the terms of endearment.
Spent the first 50 years of my life living in PA. Moved to NC 9 years ago and all your videos are hilariously true about moving to the South 😂 love your channel!
"Ain't you precious?" has always been a shady favorite of mine.
Hysterical! You need to add, it’s ok when random strangers say hey or good morning. Be nice. We like to talk to people in the south.
But why? LOL The bigger cities are notorious for the not talking to strangers. Go somewhere more rural, and you will find people more relaxed.I have DEFINITELY had good conversations with people in a grocery store and NONE of us were from the south! Miracles CAN happen! LOL
Matt, YOU ARE THE BEST! I don't know how I would make it through a week without a dose of your priceless humor! Thank you so much!
Matt, you are a true gem. Thank you!
My mama was from the South but she ended up here in Ohio and we always knew we had done something really bad when she said bless your heart and I picked that up and said still people think I'm from the South lol but note I'm a Buckeye through-and-through.
Love your content Matt I lived in the South myself for awhile several years and I have to admit I didn't enjoy the pace better than up North here And the sweet tea
O. H. I. O.
Bless your heart...
Go Blue! Also…Go Dodgers!
I can't help but smile watching this. God I love the south.
LOL, that whole "you'll wonder if you will ever be dry again" really hit home. Living in Arkansas, the simple act of drying yourself off after a shower is enough to make you sweat... and be damp all over again. Seriously, I'm pretty sure hell has nothing on an Arkansas summer. 😅
I was born and raised in Alabama, and you are so right about the difference in the way people talk in different parts of the South.
As a Southern Louisianian I agree with Matt's statement with one piece of advice, fake it til you make it. Have a blessed day y'all!
Took me a full day in Lafayette for my ears to get used to the accent. After that? Smooth sailing.
Just sitting in the parking lot of a Dollar General watching Matt....aahhhh, life is good
I never knew how regionalized I was until I moved from Massachusetts to Florida years ago. I know that Florida isn't southern to a lot of people but it was more than enough for us. We left after 3 months. Came back to Massachusetts with no jobs, no place to live in February. Heaved a huge sigh of relief and haven't regretted coming back once.
Out of the frying pan and into the fire.
Truth! Thank you so much Matt for your honest, humorous, real videos of "the south." It's diversity, and humidity, keep up always entertained and on the local church prayer list. Your videos always bring a smile to my heart. As a disable Veteran, I've lived all over the world, but here I am still in the south. It's home, it's familiar, it's where my family is to this day. I would move away in a heartbeat, especially during the high humidity of summer, or an random ice storm, but there's no place quite like the south. And the food! OMG! We got it all! Keep 'em coming!
Wife and i religiously watch these as a couple from Georgia and they're always spot on! Love you Matt
Keep the vids comin' Matt. I'm originally from New Orleans but have lived overseas for many years. I don't even TRY to describe the New Orleans language and social constructs to the people I live and work with.
Wish my southern grandparents were still alive to relearn the language. ❤😂 One expression my grandma from KY would say when something went wrong in the kitchen was sh!t fire.
Was it “sh!t fire!” Or was it “sh!t!! FIRE!!” 😂😉
To which people standing around reply “Save matches” in tones of sympathy. My Mamaw said,” Aye law.” You knew someone was fixin to get it. Catholics have nothing on the guilt of a southern child running through the list of things you did that day that might be about to get you killed.
@@moffjerjerrod1579 yes! More emphasis on fire. Fiirrrrrreee.
Save the matches!!!
Mine too!
Excellent video! Spot on! Especially about the people that move down here and don't want to assimilate to their new surroundings.
DAMN Carpet Baggers!
It's not just to the south. You hear constantly about people moving from the city and get all bent out of shape about the farm they just moved next to.
@@dizzysdoings HA! Now that's insane. Seems like they would check the place out and the surrounding area before they move there.
I used to live in an area where they actually passed "right to farm laws" due to the city people. City people would move in next to 100+ year old farms, then bitch about the farmers working their fields or smelling manure.
One day this winter here in Texas, I check the weather channel site, and it's 80 F. And there's an ad for campbell's soup! Just what I wanted when it's 80 degrees 😂
I’m from Alabama and was engaged to a guy from Southern Louisiana. It took me months to understand what his family was saying! That’s not even including other friends and extended family. And they didn’t even live that far away!! They were awesome, tho, and the partying most ppl I’ve ever met!
"72 seasons" 😂😂😂😂😂😂
this has to be one of your best vids yet, dude!!!!
I can’t help but think that’s a reference to the new Metallica album lol
The last three days in my county in Arkansas. 1) 77F sunny, 2) tornado, 3) 22F windy
I'm originally from NJ, but I lived near New Orleans for college, and I got a chance to work with a bunch of people from Lafourche parish over a couple of years for summer high school band camps. I had taken 6 years of French classes before college, so the parents loved me because they thought it was awesome that the Yankee fella was the only one who understood them with no problems. 😂⚜⚜😂
Love to see you do a series of "Southerner visits foreign lands," like Philadelphia, Chicago, Minneapolis, Salt Lake City, Boston, the Jersey Shore, etc. Kinda a Stranger in a Strange land theme. Skip NYC -- its overdone.
How about do one from OUTSIDE the big cities! To be honest, the big cities are odd compared to the rest of area outside! Big cities are big cities, so they arent THAT strange! Unless you lived in a cave somewhere for too long.
As a Virginian who has lived in South Carolina and just got back from a week of Mardi Gras in New Orleans, I can confirm that I had no idea what anybody was saying.
Do tell..
I’m southern Louisiana born and raised. I can confirm nobody outside of 100 miles of here knows what I’m saying half the time 🤣. I went to Dollywood last year and almost everyone I talked to first looked at me like they were lost then hit me with some variation of where the hell are you from😆
Well you know what they say, America doesn’t start until you get to Rapides Parish. Lol
I'm from Lake Charles and moved to Arkansas after high school, for the 1st 2 years I was here, I had to repeat everything at least 3 times
Kinda cool, ain’t it?😊
I actually do understand the heat of the south despite living in the north, only during the north's summer though and shockingly only when i walk inside my place of work. Factories are a joy.
This is so true! We lived in Dallas for 2 years & I have never felt heat & humidity like that. Can't say I want to again. And it never really cooled down at night. The day the movers came to get us out of there, it was 108, felt like 115 with the humidity. I had plenty of ice cold water for the moving guys & they went through an entire case & then some. Gave the foreman money to take the guys out for beer afterwards. Best BBQ we've ever had, though...and Shiner Bock is life. Luckily we can get Shiner here now. Thanks for always making me laugh, Matt.
I’m actually going to escaping Calizona next year to Mississippi and these videos are great! Make me laugh and love the south even more! Thank you!
I’m from the southwest , which is different then the South and when I’m trying to help my family, who are all west of the Mississippi River, understand Southern culture I send either Matt’s or It’s a Southern Thing videos to them.
Matt, I especially love your observations on the weather here - and I still get mad when the temps Drop during the Day!!! But at least I know now to have every sweater, coat, rain jacket -whatever! With me at all times 👍😂🤷🏻♀️.
Thank you for the video. You always make me smile.
Take care, stay safe, have a nice day.
👵☮️🖖
Nailed it! Was waiting for the "Bless your heart!" thing. I've always said there are two seasons in the south ... summer, and not exactly summer.
Hello from Knoxville TN. This video is fantastic! Last summer, (pretty sure it was the 3rd one) I was in the DMV waiting. Just being neighborly I asked where everyone was from. There were 4 from California, 2 from New Jersey, and 1 from New York. I did give 1 piece of advice to all the refugees from “California’stan”.
-Buy a Bible, a good gun, and learn to love sweet tea.
Southern tip.
Aluminum oxide (found in most spray on deodorants) can be used to shield yourself from poison ivy, oak, and sumac.
It's also a good topical for the chapped skin you'll get from sweating like the Devil's accountant.
As long as you're not allergic to it. I am.
Psa: poison ivy, oak and sumac are transmissible between people via skin to skin contact.
Is it normal for that stuff to burn or is that an allergic reaction? I get the worst burning sensation with that stuff.
@@101jir I'd say allergic reaction. Sounds like what I experience with them. I had to stop using them.
Matt you forgot to mention the ice storms in the winter, and hail the size of oranges. I thought I was prepared for winter until I tried to drive on ice. I lived in the bootheel of MO. I remember the humidity. Weatherman saying the humidity was at 100%. I never understood how that could be and I could still breathe, lol.
I love your vids! I am a proud southerner and a proud American and this is so true!
I'm from the South and approve of this video. Lol. Love this channel.
Summer SUMmer SUMMER!!!!!!😂😂😂😂❤ I am from Florida soooo true. And I have always wished to tell some new residents to go back home😂😂😂 love y’all’s work.
Humidity? Prepare to feel like you're trying to breath through a sponge.......... You can feel drier taking a shower ........... Out in the desert you sweat it evaporates and it helps your sort of feel a little cooler......... Here? It's already humid so when you sweat you just feel sticker and hotter.
But I do love the food, the ability to wear flip-flops in the winter (summer-lite) and calling friends up north in February bragging about my tomato and strawberry plants.
About the only serious drawback here in FL, are northerners who come down here and proceed on trying to turn things around and make it like, well, the north.
No, I do not want to hear 'Up North, this is how it's done - the right way."
"Really, precious? Well, bless your heart, darling"
"We'll say 'Isn't that interesting' because that seems more polite than just telling someone where they can stick it"
I’m from southwestern Louisiana, bless your heart 👁️👁️
Matt proved he was the glue that held IAST together.
I havent really been back there since he left.
Michigan whoopin on y’all must have brought some big ol’ tears….. bless your hearts
Bless you for being real about people who don’t like the way we live but KEEP moving here. We have had a crazy influx of them in the last 5 years. I understand wanting to get out of that too… but if it’s that bad why recreate it here??? We didn’t want it to start with.
Ain’t that the truth. We are so “oppressive” here but that doesn’t seem to stop the massive influx
Amen. Amen. Amen.
Stop letting them move here.
@@navykip we have a lot from California and New York moving here to east Texas. The ones that move because they can’t stand the laws and culture that have taken over those areas are pretty decent people BUT there are a lot that are simply creating what they left behind.
It's not that it's bad and that's why they move. We move for other reasons (kidnapped by a Southerner) and we're excited and then there's culture shock.
I'm in Louisiana and black mold is in all the apartments, the Mexican food is horrible, and the only grocery store for 100 miles is Walmart. If you don't buy watermelons the minute they open, people buy them and sell them out of their truck in the parking lot for $10 each. Also, there's no snakes, and certainly no venemous ones.
Ya'll got Buc-Cee's, Whataburger, I can wear shorts on Thanksgiving, and Bama football. When we say "that's not how it's done where I'm from" that means I'm not paying $400k for a house just because it has an attached garage and rain while you're driving is not a reason to be paralyzed with fear.
Hey, I'm from Southern Louisiana and you ain't never lied!!! Baby, we got our language down here cher.
These rules are subject to change anytime you travel more than 10 miles in Florida.
I do love living in the south born and raised. Except, the endless summers and that darn awful humidity!!!! Love your videos!
I just came back from my first trip to Alabama. Matt’svideos made me want to visit the true south, not Atlanta. I recommend February for hiking and outdoor see sighting. Alabama definitely has 5 different regions and accents. Keep the videos coming Matt!😁
Spring is that one day that warns you that Summer is here and it's time to tie everything down.
Matt Mitchell, you are my favorite ❤😂
These videos are fantastic…….so accurate. Thank you for such great entertainment!!!
I am so impressed how every single one of your videos is hilarious. There are plenty of “southern” channels on UA-cam but yours is the only one with consistently funny content. Those other channels definitely could use some of your writing.😉
Amen from a lifelong Chattanoogan! I love being from the South!
I served a mission for two years in Alabama, Mississippi and Tennessee, I can attest that everything Matt was schooling you on is true!
I miss the south often, If it wasn’t for my love of snowboarding I’d move to Clanton Alabama or Fayetteville Tennessee in a heartbeat.
Love your channel Matt and crew!
I can’t believe you know where clanton is that is my home town still love there in fact
Yep…I lived in Clanton for 5 1/2 months give or take when I was on my mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. We covered all of Chilton county.
I’ve only been there once, 40 years ago..But I do remember the gently rolling hills, it’s a beautiful part of the state..
Born & raised in Portland OR. HORRIBLE rain/clouds Oct thru May but ABSOLUTELY lovely June-Sept. No bugs, nice & dry summer, all the outdoor stuff!!! So, I just moved to TN & while I LOVE the politics & friendliness, the last two summers have had me (and even my DOGS) thinking I MAY have made a mistake. I've never, EVER experienced heat & humidity like this and it's got me wondering how the first settlers to this region, the ones that survived that first summer w/o air conditioning, didn't just. keep going.... This is a serious question I have.
Great video. I live in New Jersey and love your videos!
Yay! I'm that yankee transplant and I ingratiated myself to my new southern neighbors by making them apple butter and a pie. I havent gotten a "bless your heart" or a stare yet!
One thing I did notice as a transplant from Maryland is... at least in South Carolina, you can escape the 110 degree summer heat by standing in the shade. That wasnt possible before! So I love the south!
Ah yes summer is about 70% of the weather down here.
"Go to your nearest dollar general and if there isn't we'll build immediately!" So true! I've visited the south for family members and I swear there's one on every corner it seems like 😂
That was absolutely hilarious. Definitely need more of these.
😆Choked on coffee when you listed "tornado"!!!😆 Brilliant!!!
Matt, you missed the 3 extra Summers during leap year…
I love this video! My hubby and I moved from Southern WI to Northern Kentucky at the end of Jun. When we moved it was past 95 degrees with a heat index of almost 100. That heat was bad last year. We felt sorry for the crew that we hired because they had to take breaks in the air conditioning because it was so hot and humid. They actually had to call another person to come help so they could get done quicker. Thank heavens for Central heat and air conditioning. We never really had central anything in the places where we lived. I think a few apartments that we lived in had central heat but window units for air. This is the first place where we have both. Seriously do the videos on the different regions.
Matt is hysterical!
I worked for a company that had a plant and corporate offices in N WI and several plants in the South. Living in the Midwest, but mostly in the South, I was the translator. Explaining the “bubblier” was the funniest
Fun fact, my mom stopped wearing makeup when we moved to TX because it would just melt off of her face it was that humid, and when we moved to East TN, we were rather surprised at the Tennessee Twang some people had.
Also, the seasons here are as follows: winter, is it still winter?, I think its spring? nope, the weather can't make up its f--ing mind (this is a very long season that can bleed into the next,) Allergies because everything grows here (good luck successfully breathing through your nose during parts of mid march to early june), HOT, FOOTBALL, ooo I can be outside for 5 min without being a hot sweaty mess, fall, and winter. Fall is actually pretty nice here because you can actually tell when it happens. Pretty colors and you can no longer tell who's in Marching band or sports by their half-gallon water jugs that they need for practice so they don't have to worry about passing out because of the heat. (no joke, I almost passed out one time because the heat got to me and I didn't have my half-gallon at the time, I was working with my puny 28-ounce) Hydrate or Die-drate people! And wear sunscreen! my brother came home after practice one day lookin like a lobster
Don't forget we often have multiple seasons in a day, for many days
As a person from southern Louisiana, I ain’t got a clue what I’m saying most of the time either 😂
And she ain’t lying! Lol
LMAO!
I just love ur channel. I think there are 2 season, football season and whatever is left. It's always summer in south Louisiana.
Look up Justin Wilson Gumbo or Cajun Night Before Christmas for Southern Louisiana accents.
I was born in Maryland (I know) raised all over (military),married a man from New Orleans (met him in ND, we are AF). He didn’t have an accent, he was in speech, debate and drama in HS. Then I went to NOLA to meet the family. 😮 it took me a week to understand what they were saying to me.
The go home part is relatable no matter where you are from dont go to a new area and do things the same
But sometimes, you people do DUMB things (where ever you are at, not just the south)! I understand and would agree if someone is trying to change EVERYONE to be like themselves, but seriously, a little progress wont hurt you if you have ridiculous traffic laws or somesuch!
@@inconnu4961 Living in a tourist area it's normally they can't follow the basics and not be rude. I get the more local laws are hard to follow, but stop signs always mean stop. As well as just pretending you know how to drive in certain weather because you experience a lesser version or see the locals driving more comfortably.
I have to say, since moving to the (technical) south a year and a half ago, I really love the terms of endearment perfect strangers use. Darlin' is my favorite. Almost all of them beat the rudeness of the north.
But we arent ALL rude! We may not be callin you 'darlin' if you aint our darlin, but not everyone here is rude.
@@inconnu4961 not everyone, it's true. I knew many people who were sweet as could be (until they got mad xD) including most of my family.
Absolutely right about south Louisiana. We have our own language.
It annoys me when they put subtitles at the bottom of Swamp People! Hell, I understand perfectly what they are saying and I'm from Texas!
sittin' on the back porch in folding chairs with grampa - shootin' at pie-tins hanging off the clothesline. That is one of my best southern memories...that and all-you-can-eat fried catfish at "The Catfish King" somewheres in Atlanta vicinity.
It was 70 degrees yesterday. Now it's snowing.
Lived in Atlanta for a brief period, and absolutely loved it. Fun city lots of beautiful southern belles.