"It's like a city inside a city." Yeah, that would never happen in England. Especially not a city with a confusingly-similar name to the much larger city that surrounds it, which is the bloody capital city of the country.
In Russia, the largest city in the Moscow Oblast is not Moscow, because the Oblast doesn't even include Moscow proper, as Moscow is its own thing. So that's fun.
the city of London is cool it predates England by quite alot the entire region was named after it was a Roman fort that the entire region came to be named after Rome fell but the fort stayed and I don't mean just the fort I mean the government they never fell they is a line of succession from the Roman mayor's of the city the oldest recorded of the city is a treaty recognizing the special rights they have had since "time and momoreum"
The London that surrounds the City of London is the region/county of Greater London, it's not a city. The city is London, the other city is Westminster, the other places are boroughs and towns of the county of Greater London. Confusing yes but it's not a literal other city in a city. Similar situation in Manchester actually with Greater Manchester, Salford and Manchester
As an American, I’m impressed that a British guy knows so much about American cities! Sure, it wasn’t 100% accurate (i.e. Long Beach is cheaper than LA, not pricier), but he seems to know more about American cities than most Americans. Not to mention, most of us couldn’t talk about a foreign country for half this long without having to stop to use Google. Nice work!
The only time I drove through there I almost had a serious crash on the highway. Someone swerved in front of the overloaded, largest-sized UHaul I was driving
Its called Tampa Am and Tampa Pro. It is not only real but probably the biggest, relevant and longest lasting contest in skateboarding. I think it has been going on for I wanna say like 40 years at least. I could be wrong about the time frame but its been a thing for as long as I've been skating and thats over 20 years.
"I walked all the way around Boston at 4 am with a giant extra large slurpy in one hand and some beef jerky in the other and then went to ihop". -Ibxtoycat That, my friend, is one of the most American things I have ever heard and I love it
@@yungt7037 STFU and sit TF Down. Talm bout praise.. Houston needs to fix them potholes and public transit. Houston is the sin Capital Of Texas...nothing but Clubs,Sex,And shootings and drugs
I live in Minneapolis and an interesting thing about downtown is that we have the skyway that connect buildings, but we also have tunnels that span all of downtown that connect the buildings too.
@@missminecorn7446 Not exactly. A condo is specifically a unit that is owned by the occupant, typically purchased using a mortgage just like a house; condos are always "for sale". An apartment is specifically a unit that is for rent (or "to let", I believe you'd say in the UK). The landlord owns the apartment in order to rent it out to strangers for income. If you own a condo, then move out and decide to put it up for rent, it would become an apartment.
Apartments are the general term. I own an apartment, but I call it an apartment, and its not a condo. A condo is a specific type of way you can own an apartment.
@@yaacovdavidowitz4502 In the US, if you say 'apartment', it means you don't own it. If you own it, it's called a condo. There is no concept of 'owning an apartment', unless you mean you own the apartment building. At least in the US.
As an Italian; I absolutely adore Texas. In Europe, and even other American cities I’ve been to (LA, Chicago, and New York) people are very hurried and not very personable. But I’ve kept going back to Texas because the people are so friendly, and I never could’ve imagined the geographical distance, and difference between Houston, Austin, El Paso, and Dallas, which amazed me.
Distance is a very common misconception when it comes to America vs. people abroad. Traveling within a large state like California, Texas, or Florida can be like traversing up to 5 entire countries in Europe. It's always best to think of American states the way you would EU member states, if you want an idea of distance. Also, the seaboards are largely covered in megalopolises, where you might travel hundreds of miles without ever leaving urban areas, so even though you feel like you're just taking the freeway across the city to your destination, you're doing it for 6-12 hours. Compare the deserts or the central plains, where you can drive 6 hours with little more than gas stations and convenience stores interrupting the drive.
Detroit was where they made cars. Detroit, Cleveland, Chicago, Pittsburgh, and Milwaukee were all major industrial centers due to their location being at the then-center of the US's population, relative proximity to sources of raw and processed materials, and being on the Great Lakes and/or large navigable rivers. It's all about logistics.
2nd that. I know some people who bought a Condo and said they enjoy the condo feel, but in my mind, why would I buy an apartment... I rather buy a house.
your correct. Thu you own the condo usually still pay a condo ass0ciation fee. People buy condos to own the property. The condo fee generally covers any cost to the up keep of the outside including lawn service, if it has lawn.
tskjesusfreak: People buy a condo because they want to own something and have equity and be able to do all the modifications and changes and upgrades they want and still not have the upkeep of the yard or all the maintenance and expenses of air-conditioning a full house especially if they want to come and go and they are single. But condos can be huge. Even rich people live in apartments in New York. I’ve owned both a house and apartment and there’s pros and cons of each. The gated resort condo community I’m in now though has three pools and hot tubs that are open 24 seven and heated all winter that I don’t have to maintain. Plus the HOA fee covers unlimited water garbage cable TV landscaping pools everything else.
Мэтью Захоу , not bad for someone who's learned it because of an interest. After all, both cities were put in their correct state--Wisconsin. Hey, it's a start. What's really bad is Americans asking someone from a European country if theirs (let's say Germany) is an island. Duh! Then, there are school kids in Minnesota who don't know the country to the north is Canada; and kids in Texas not knowing that Mexico is the country to the south, when they're both bordering on that country. What's worse is that, sometimes even adults are guilty.
As someone from the Phoenix area, yeah, Mesa is literally just a large subarb Also Tucson lol it's pronounced too-son but it's fine, mispronounce away. The real rivalry is Phoenix and Tucson, not Mesa
Christian Anderson downtown mesa is starting to go somewhere. I mean covid screwed it up but they've been trying. The lds church (or you know one of the companies it owns) is creating a mall (but Fiesta mall is 3 miles down and is abandoned?) or something and a lot of apartments which tbh look great. And then ASU is going to open up a little campus in downtown mesa too. So there's hope! Haha. I'm just hoping my home value increases given that I'm semi near lol
33:58 Detroit was the home of the car as Henry Ford lived there and made the car affordable with the new idea of the production line of cheap Model T's, as well as the home of the founders of GM and Doge, making it the spot for all later car companies to put there headquarters. Hens why it's called the Motor City.
Yeah the just go Like "Detroit is a terrible city to live him" and gives little thought about how the world's first successful Automobile came from here and Henry Ford lived there.
For me it was hilarious hearing him talk about how it is in the middle of the "high speed rail between Northern and Southern California." As if we had any real public transit in CA, the lack of a lightrail is a sore issue for may.
As mad as people get about it. I find it funny how people talk crap about Texas and republicans for that matter about public transport and infrastructure. Yet Texas is in 8th for the best infrastructure, most major cities in Texas have at least a light rail(or plan on adding one pretty quick), and is the state that seems the closest to getting high-speed rail first with Florida right behind us…🤷🏼♂️😂👍🏼
Fresno is also famous for not being Bakersfield. :-) P.S. I live in Fresno. One of the things that makes Fresno a great place to live is what is nearby, rather than what is in the city: to wit, Yosemite, King Canyon, Sequoia, and Pinnacles National Parks as well as that portion of the Sierra Nevada that is between Yosemite and Kings Canyon. We can also easily day trip/weekend trip to the Monterey Bay area and the San Luis Obispo/Pismo Beach area.
Garret Barber it’s part of LA whether you like it or not. It’s just a place for people who don’t want to be part of LA to claim they’re special. Same goes for the other cities you mentioned.
Itz Pro technically yes it’s separate, but let’s be honest it’s all part of LA. It’s like me saying that central London isn’t a part of London. It makes no sense. But I guess that’s America in a nutshell huh
For a second, I read that wrong, and thought it said that all NC State, Duke, And UNC were all in Raleigh, and as someone who lives just outside Raleigh, that bothered me so much, until I read it correctly
@@effexon If you think thats overkill think about Boston area and colleges, Harvard, MIT, Boston University, Boston College, Northeastern University and thats just the major ones, That just scratches the surface with Lesley, Emmanuel, Simmons, Suffolk, Umass Boston, Wheelock, Brandies, Tufts, and more
The reason VA beach has such a big population is because it covers a large land area which is all largely suburban with a little urban sprawl at places like Town Center. Land wise VA Beach is one of the largest cities in the nation.
I felt that one too! I love Chihuahuita and El Segundo Barrio and have called them home; but they aren't a good representation of our city. They are in the poorest area code by far. I wish he had at least stumbled by the Plaza or Old Fort Bliss where you can get the flavor and history of El Paso while being as super zoomed in to the border as he was.
Rylen Cason Other things are valid, nothing inherently wrong with Mexicans. Some individuals aren't the best, but its same for all other races including white. Don't generalize, it makes you look ignorant. It reflects poorly on all Republicans
I've been to El Paso several times to visit my father who lived there a few years back. Every time I got there, there was trash blowing in from Mexico (the wind was always constant). Just trash everywhere, saw people littering everywhere. Houses all run-down. I haven't seen every part of the city but every spot I saw was just poor, run-down and badly kept. I also genuinely felt unsafe there.
hey now... this isn't the early 90s, so don't be silly. It's all about heroin/fentanyl & meth in 2020. Crack (& also cocaine ) is a lot harder to find these days, and way weaker in quality than it used to be.
41:55 I really would recommend anyone visiting Colorado to take this train. It is called the California Zephyr and it's the most gorgeous ride you will ever take. I'd recommend stopping and staying Glenwood and enjoy the massive hot springs pool !
Come to Milwaukee, (M'wah-kee) post covid, especially in the summer. We are very proud of the different ethnicities we have here, and there is a festival every weekend for a different culture. Also it's not the capitol of Wisconsin, it's actually like a smaller, more navigable version of Chicago. We don't have as many traffic jams, unless you go by the festival park for Summerfest, or something.
Me, an American from Oklahoma City, Oklahoma’s knowledge of the same cities: New Orleans: Great City! Tons of history and culture. Still somewhat of a tourist trap. Tampa: No clue. Big city in Florida. Arlington: Been close to. Know it for AT&T American Football stadium. Tulsa: TULSA! Land of old money from oil booms long ago. They have a great art museum financed by the oil wealth. Minneapolis: Disappointing, but it’s not your fault. I went there to see a hyped-up shopping mall, which was much less than advertised. Very cold. Oakland: I know of their NFL team but nothing else. Virginia Beach: Big intelligence community there. Omaha: Known for steaks. Raleigh: Fast-growing. Miami: Known for beaches. Colorado Springs: Drove through there two years ago and don’t remember it much. Kansas City: Known for barbecue, as a result of it’s cattle driving history. Atlanta: Please annex your suburbs! Sacramento: California capitol. Know two friends from there on Discord. Mesa: No clue. Fresno: Heard of if. Tuscon: 2nd biggest city in Arizona. Pronounce it TOO-SAWN. Albuquerque: LOVE IT! Go there. Just go. Milwaukee: Known for cheese and beer. People from Wisconsin can be called cheeseheads as a pejorative. Baltimore: Only know it for crime and shrinking population. Louisville: Never been there, but my ancestors lived there for a few generations before moving further West. Las Vegas: My knowledge of this place doesn’t extend past the CGP Grey video. Oklahoma City: Home. Known for 1995 terrorist bombing and not much else. Memphis: Known for being the home of Elvis Presley, therefore music. Home of the Blues music genre. Portland: I want to live there so much! Nashville: Home of tons of Country music genre stars. Detroit: Automotive manufacturing in the past. Shrinking population. El Paso: On the border and it had a massacre last Summer. Boston: Snobby universities on the outskirts. Heavy Irish history. Washington DC: Capitol. Built on a swamp. Denver: been there. Great airport. Seattle: The more popular Portland. Indianapolis: I know nothing apart from the Formula 1 tournament. Charlotte: I know that it’s a big city. San Francisco: REALLY? Is it only Fifteenth? Horrible gentrification. Columbus: Capitol of Ohio. Jacksonville: Basically all of North Florida apart from Tallahassee. Austin: I know a lot of people that move there and appear to love it there. It has a scenic river through the city. San Jose: I’ve barely ever heard of this place outside of the 60’s song. How is it this big? Dallas: No. Get out. Horrible traffic. I only go down there for their IKEA and one time to attend an NHL game. San Diego: America’s Pacific Naval hub. On the border with Mexico, with Tijuana on the other side. San Antonio: Only know it for the Alamo memorial. Philadelphia: The real center of the US’ early history. Likely would’ve become the capitol if not for D.C.’s creation. Phoenix: Fast growing city in the middle of the desert. Wouldn’t exist without air conditioning. Houston: Flooded horribly three years ago after a hurricane. Chicago: Bad reputation, but I actually really like it. Tons of museums to see. Los Angeles: Absolutely MASSIVE! NEW YORK, NEW YORK: There’s something just magical about it. It’s almost legendary, at least on this side of the Atlantic, for being the starting place. Nearly all immigrants from Europe came into this country from an island just outside the city. Just listen to the Frank Sinatra song. Hundreds of years of history and the most Dutch influence of any large city.
Your mistake with Minneapolis was seeing MoA. It's a thing to do but is just a kitschy tourist trap with more niche stores than your typical mall. Also sounds like you made the mistake of visiting outside of May thru September. Most people from points further south aren't used to just how cold it can get and how comparatively early it gets to "cold" temperatures for other parts of the country.
mrcreepercraft48 it would be 51st actually assuming no state is removed for New Orleans to take its place which it probably wouldn’t be. It has less population than Wyoming which is #50
Amazing video once again mate! Three extra facts to supply: Tucson is pronounced Too-sonn Nashville is famous as the Hollywood of Country & Western Music You might know San Diego Zoo from Anchorman!
As a person from Albuquerque I can confirm that A) Breaking Bad is essentially public school here B) Gary Johnson is from here and C) You only have to get a 60% on the driver's ed test to pass, thus the traffic incidents
@@sandman5587 In fairness, he clicked on the downtown area of El Paso, which legitimately does look kind of run down in parts. Also there's not really a ton of noteworthy things to say about our city, other than Chico's I guess.
For Atlanta’s airport, I had a plane ride out of there (we were connecting from one flight to another in Atlanta) about two weeks ago. The gate we got in from the last plane was “close” to the gate we had to get to. We walked there for about 20 minutes. Then, after getting on the plane, the plane had to take a while to get to the runway, then waited in a line for about 25 minutes. The airport is huge.
Atlanta, Georgia also has the 2nd most sprawling metropolitan area in the US (after Hickory, NC), and is also the most forested major city in terms of percent of tree cover in the US.
@HP I really enjoy when the King and Queen buildings light up for Christmas. Also some nutjob went in to one of those buildings and started shooting (this happened in the 90s if I'm not mistaken)
17:20 yes i was at a women's college for a summer camp through duke tip at a Atlanta school and the whole week they were preparing to film some scenes in a movie with the Rock, that's why we were rushed out of the camp when it was over.
Itz Pro well, there’s a lot of reasons. Shitty neighborhoods, generally bad people, crime (which I know is basically a given in any American city but still noteworthy) the only important thing here is government. Then there’s homeless people galore, and it’s also a pretty small city. It does look nice in pictures of buildings like the museum and the capital building, or maybe the egg, but that’s about it. It’s just your average sparsely populated American city.
As someone from Virginia, I think Virginia Beach is heavily populated because people go there to retire because it is a beach and cheap to live there. Also there's a lot of Navy/Air Force bases there, so people move there to work in the military.
I'm from Boston and my first impression of Dublin when I visited is how much it felt like Boston, so I appreciated that you also saw the Irish connection.
8:11 that's funny because Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Finland all have huge Somali communities (and in Helsinki Somalis are the third largest minority) and Minnesota has many Nordic people and lots of Nordic influence
The reason why Virginia beach has a large population despite the city proper being relatively small is that the former town of Virginia Beach Resort and county of Princess Anne merged in the 1950s to form the independent city of Virginia Beach. The city is actually a collection of mostly suburban communities in addition to the boardwalk area.
Condos are the same as apartments, except you own a condo just as you own a home. It’s your property with a mortgage etc.. Apartments are leased with regular payments to the property owner.
If there’s one thing someone should know about Norfolk, Virginia, it’s that it’s our version of a city like Bremerhaven. The American Navy has two main hubs; one for each ocean. Norfolk for the Atlantic, and San Diego for the Pacific.
New Orleans: French influences city in the middle of the swamp with good food and music Tampa: Generally Florida’s forgotten big city, pretty nice from what I’ve heard Arlington: Glorified suburb, known for the home of the Dallas cowboys American football team Tulsa: big oil production, second biggest city in Oklahoma Minneapolis: Minnesota’s largest city, and is the twin city to the state capital, St. Paul Oakland: One of the largest ports on the west coast, a city that had a bad reputation but is getting expensive Virginia Beach: Spread out suburban like city, more like a group of neighborhoods than anything Long Beach: also has a big port, basically an extension of LA Omaha: Really nice zoo, biggest Nebraskan city, good steaks, rich guy Raleigh: capital of North Carolina and a big tech hub Miami: Big city on the beach known for retirement and a place people go for vacation Colorado Springs: big city near the mountains wrong US Air Force academy and US Olympic facility Kansas City: Known for its steaks and winning the Super Bowl this year Atlanta: major transport hub and a center of African American culture Sacramento: capital of California, big on agriculture, home to the Kings basketball team Mesa: This is basically a cancer cell that got really out of hand and is infecting Phoenix Fresno: Agricultural center and is basically the central point of California Tucson: Big city in the desert Albuquerque: Tucson with mountains and culture Milwaukee: cheese, beer, and a charming accent Baltimore: lots of crime and urban decay, very historical city that has a major port Louisville: Kentucky’s largest city and cultural center, known for college baseball and basketball Las Vegas: Tacky shithole in the desert with lots of homelessness Oklahoma City: Generic name, decently nice city Memphis: good music (Elvis lived here) and high crime unfortunately Portland: very liberal and hip. Lots of nature and is generally a nice city Nashville: Barbecue and lots of country/folk music Detroit: urban and economic decay for decades, looked down upon as a third world place, is on the rise El Paso: Large city in the desert on the border Boston: America’s historical center with lots of Irish culture and top tier universities. Washington: U.s capital trying to be Paris Denver: most important city in Colorado, at the foot of the mountains Seattle: A larger version of Portland with more rain and more Canadians Indianapolis: Racecars, outside of that, it is very generic Charlotte: North Carolina’s largest city San Francisco: very liberal and dense, know for earthquakes, mild weather, and great scenery Columbus: Possibly the safest city on this list, very nice, good zoo, massive university Fort Worth: twin city to the much more famous Dallas Jacksonville: Speeadout, swampy city with beaches and a big river Austin: one of the fastest growing cities in US, very clean and beautiful, good food and music San Jose: Tech capital of the world and the most expensive city in the United States, largest city in Northern California Dallas: A big city on the prairie known for being the epitome of a Texan city San Diego: great beaches, great weather, great food, basically LA, but better in almost every way San Antonio: Basically a really big city known for being a huge military hub Philadelphia: America’s other historical center, very important in our history Phoenix: Hot, sprawling, city in the desert known for being just that Houston: Biggest city in Texas, similar to Phoenix, except it floods, still hot as hell Chicago: City perceived to be unsafe by the media, but has great food and great attractions Los Angeles: Hollywood, gangs, beaches, traffic, really good food, amazing weather New York: Great attractions, awesome food, packed with culture and history, America’s most iconic city
I just skimmed but saw a couple of things that were oddly off. San Antonio is called the Alamo city. You mention military, and the guy in the video mentions Hispanics. Lol what's going on here. Alamo and Riverwalk are typically what people know it for. Detroit is the motor city known for Ford, and famous for going from successful to a piece of trash city. Chicago isn't perceived to be unsafe by the medic, it is unsafe to American standards and the media tries to ignore it. Also famous for gangs since Al Capone all the way to 2021. Vegas is known for casinos, gambling, sin city. Seattle is known for coffee, drugs, and psychos.
@@thecensoredmuscle563 I'm from Seattle and that's wildly incorrect mate Although the homeless problem sucks but that happens in most cities that's what wealth inequality is for ya
I just want to point out that mount trashmore is exactly what it sounds like. It is a mountain of trash (an old landfill) that was covered with grass to make a park.
Hey man, great video, just got wanted to clarify one thing for you. The San Francisco-Oakland bridge is commonly known as the Bay Bridge to local Californians.
Greetings from Louisville, and the Kentucky Derby run here is a very big event. So big in fact that the Oaks (the race of female horses ran the day before) is a local city holiday that we all get out of school for. Some derby traditions are Derby Parties where people usually draw a horse from a hat and if that horse wins they win money. Derby pie is usually made or bought from a store, and people (women mostly) wear elaborate Derby hats. And Louisville has its own airport but the Cincinnati Airport is technically in Northern Kentucky and is only about 40 minutes away, so it’s also popular if you can’t get a flight out of Louisville
Jacksonville has such a large population because its city limits make it the largest city in the contiguous United States...by a lot. It's land area is gigantic. In fact, it's land area is about the same size as many other metropolitan areas in America.
Condo and apartment are both individual units in a bigger single building, but you rent an apartment and own a condo. The quality of a condo unit is usually better than an apartment unit. A management company that owns an apartment building fixes stuff in your apartment, provides appliances, etc. But for condos, members in the building pay an "association fee" each month to cover maintenance costs for the building as a whole.
A British isn't any special, whoever feels they belong in britain is british, don't listen to the rasists who insist there is a british ethnicity, britian belongs to the world 😇
LMAO fax but most ppl who attend the indy500 every year aren’t even from indianapolis, it’s mostly international observers. racing is big i guess mostly among older people tho
Great video! I’m actually contemplating moving to Tuck-son. You know a great deal about my country. Very impressive. Keep up the good work. I’m interested in traveling to Bulgaria and your channel was recommended with the Bulgaria joining the Euro in 2024 video.
An apartment is a rented portion of an apartment building. A condo is something that you own, which can come in many physical forms. Usually there are association fees that cover things like common area maintenance, building insurance, water/sewage bills…
I live outside of Baltimore and I'd advise you to stay away. The only cool place is the Inner Harbor but outside of that it looks like a Purge film. It's ranked one of the dirtiest cities in the US with the highest murder rate in the US not including the fact that we just had our third mayor in a row removed because of corruption. The only notable person to live here is Edgar Allan Poe, possibly the craziest person of all time. He's the only one crazy enough to live here. You may think it's history redeems it. Wrong. Its only notable event was the writing of the Star Spangled Banner and even in the song Francis Scott Key is saying how much of a shit hole the city looks like. Fun facts about our city: we had a mayor literally drown in shit and also we had a mayor who got impeached for corruption run for mayor again the next year. Baltimore was home to Spirow Agnew who ironically would have been the first president from Maryland had he not been corrupt along with his boss Richard Nixon and every other politician in Baltimore. Also Nancy Pelosi was born here so if your a republican than yeah that sucks. STAY AWAY AND STAY SAFE!
You know Baltimore was the 6th largest city in the US at one point in time with 949,000 people(1950) and was one of the fastest growing cities in the nation in the early 20th century, I don't get the need of everyone wanting to hate this city, it had it's golden age. And well after the war of 1812 Baltimore was the 2nd largest US city. So Francis was not talking about the city being bad, he was taking about the British being bad ffs
Aaron Sadlo how are you proud of Omar? I’d literally kill myself if she represented my district. All modern democrats are bad and she’s a particularly bad one. It’s bad enough that i live in Commiefornia but rather even this than her represent me.
@@Khloya69 she puts morals over party and has been vocal with issues in our country today. Generalizing a whole party is not a good outlook to have on certain politicans. While the two party system does cause many problems and rifts in this it doesn't always make that case. While I disagree with many Republicans I can't say that they are all bad. I don't look for blue and red.
Aaron Sadlo you mean she puts foreign entities over America? Bitch married her brother and is vocally anti semitic and complained that israel banned her when she hates them. Please educate yourself.
Washingtonian here. Baltimore is actually worth visiting. Yes, there are problem areas that the city doesn't seem to have any interest in improving, but there's also a lot of interesting places to go. Baltimore focuses largely on its east side, and there's quite a number of things to do. I don't get there much, but I do like the city.
1 New York 1:05:24
2 Los Angeles 1:03:55
3 Chicago 1:02:02
4 Houston 59:23
5 Phoenix 58:25
6 Philadelphia 56:49
7 San Antonio 56:00
8 San Diego 55:30
9 Dallas 55:08
10 San Jose 54:10
11 Austin 53:16
12 Jacksonville 52:03
13 Fort Worth 51:18
14 Columbus 50:46
15 San Francisco 46:26
16 Charlotte 44:45
17 Indianapolis 43:58
18 Seattle 42:22
19 Denver 40:42
20 Washington DC 39:10
21 Boston 37:00
22 El Paso 35:01
23 Detroit 33:38
24 Nashville 32:26
25 Portland 30:33
26 Memphis 30:09
27 Oklahoma City 29:23
28 Las Vegas 26:24
29 Louisville 25:36
30 Baltimore 24:46
31 Milwaukee 24:09
32 Albuquerque 21:17
33 Tucson 20:37
34 Fresno 20:10
35 Mesa 19:34
36 Sacramento 18:33
37 Atlanta 16:18
38 Kansas City 15:50
39 Colorado Springs 15:16
40 Miami 14:10
41 Raleigh 13:28
42 Omaha 12:37
43 Long Beach 10:38
44 Virginia Beach 9:34
45 Oakland 8:25
46 Minneapolis 5:56
47 Tulsa 4:52
48 Arlington 4:13
49 Tampa 3:24
50 New Orleans 2:02
Thank you!
@David Pidugu you’re welcome
you are a good man thank you
Pixel Man 我爱你啦~
darn it, i was going to do this. Good job nonetheless
Toycat should do a video like this but about the British counties so we can see how British he really is
Or maybe a livestream? Would be cool, everyone could throw in their own comments in real time
as a brit, we have no clue about most of our counties. only the important ones
Liam Benn to be fair I only know about my local ones
I'm in fife explain that
Liam Benn speak for yourself
"It's like a city inside a city." Yeah, that would never happen in England. Especially not a city with a confusingly-similar name to the much larger city that surrounds it, which is the bloody capital city of the country.
What about the city of London enveloped by the city of Greater London?
@@derrfes Yeah, that's definitely not what I was referring to at all. No way. Couldn't be.
In Russia, the largest city in the Moscow Oblast is not Moscow, because the Oblast doesn't even include Moscow proper, as Moscow is its own thing.
So that's fun.
the city of London is cool it predates England by quite alot the entire region was named after it was a Roman fort that the entire region came to be named after Rome fell but the fort stayed and I don't mean just the fort I mean the government they never fell they is a line of succession from the Roman mayor's of the city
the oldest recorded of the city is a treaty recognizing the special rights they have had since "time and momoreum"
The London that surrounds the City of London is the region/county of Greater London, it's not a city. The city is London, the other city is Westminster, the other places are boroughs and towns of the county of Greater London. Confusing yes but it's not a literal other city in a city. Similar situation in Manchester actually with Greater Manchester, Salford and Manchester
Mount Trashmore is legitimately called that as a kind of joke name after Mount Rushmore. It's a former landfill that was converted into a park
that's pretty cool actually
lol
I've gone there basically my whole childhood and I've never knew that wtf
Minstoa is drinking a soda
And it is actually called “mount” first because it is the closest thing to a mountain or hill in that area. Then they made the Rushmore joke.
"It's named after king Louis I think"
Do you have the slightest idea how little that narrows it down?
If anything it makes it harder 🤣
Ya know king Louis of France that one king
lol yeah, it's one of the 18
@@WrenchBreaker the fourteen
Thunderworks
Bruh. We get it
Paul McCartney: "Jojo was a man from Tooson, Arizona...."
Brits: Tuckson.
You do know Paul is a... ah, nevermind.
Paul is British...
@@adamsrankings8860 Umm, that's the point?
@@webbess1 u have Paul and Brits as two separate entities implying that he isn't one of them
@@adamsrankings8860 to be fair, Paul had been living in US for about 5 years at the time, so he had time to figure out that it’s not Tuckson
As an American, I’m impressed that a British guy knows so much about American cities! Sure, it wasn’t 100% accurate (i.e. Long Beach is cheaper than LA, not pricier), but he seems to know more about American cities than most Americans. Not to mention, most of us couldn’t talk about a foreign country for half this long without having to stop to use Google. Nice work!
Everyone here is American lmao
Please very passionate but I believe he does the three surgeries before his videos
Ya a few discrepancies....yet overall I was impressed.
@@DKMetcaIf I am not
@@DKMetcaIf im not
The fact you saw your first car crash happen in Albuquerque sums up everything you need to know about NM tbh
Yep people there don't know how to drive 😂
@@moisesm9602 That’s because it’s the New Mexico.
Bugs Bunny always takes a wrong turn there. How can he not mention that?
Not unless there was chile involved
The only time I drove through there I almost had a serious crash on the highway. Someone swerved in front of the overloaded, largest-sized UHaul I was driving
Its called Tampa Am and Tampa Pro. It is not only real but probably the biggest, relevant and longest lasting contest in skateboarding. I think it has been going on for I wanna say like 40 years at least. I could be wrong about the time frame but its been a thing for as long as I've been skating and thats over 20 years.
I didn't expect to see you here lol
Same
Came down here to make this comment and it's not just already been said by a skater its already been said by dale decker
Wait wait wait what no way I would of never excepted you on here I didn’t think any other skaters watched this
What’s poppin dale
*Every American cringing when he says “Tuck-son”
Even though I'm not American I cringed.
Every American are you sure? Also it just makes no sense to pronounce the name like Two-son
@@kriss23v21 I laughed, but fully understood why he pronounced it that way.
I would probably pronounce it Too-sahn
What about San Jose
Toycat: says Tuckson
Americans: so you have chosen death
too-saun
San Josey
It makes no sense pronouncing it like tooson though.
Its with a deep o instead of ah, like in the word point
Or Raleigh
9:11 oh my god he found it, he found the legendary ship.
Indeed. I just spotted that and had to rewind. Wow
Same company, different ship, probably
@@grandpm9270 YOU DONT KNOW THAT
"I walked all the way around Boston at 4 am with a giant extra large slurpy in one hand and some beef jerky in the other and then went to ihop". -Ibxtoycat
That, my friend, is one of the most American things I have ever heard and I love it
100th like
*Houstonians hearing a British person barely talking about dallas*
"Ahh victory"
Yup
Victory indeed
@@bEST.Dignity Lmao Houston wants to be important 😂
Houston is lit city. They deserve praise. Saludos from Northern Virginia. 703 to 713 281
@@yungt7037 STFU and sit TF Down.
Talm bout praise..
Houston needs to fix them potholes and public transit.
Houston is the sin Capital Of Texas...nothing but Clubs,Sex,And shootings and drugs
"Milwaukee is the capitol of wisconsin" r.i.p madison, you will be missed
yup
I've been to Madison but not Milwaukee.
@@Dreamprism You're not missing much tbh
Wisconsin, oh come on Wisconsin, pls come on!
@@peachteagirl yeah, as a resident its not much other than UW madison
Tucson: "TUCK-son" LOL ("TOO-sahn")
Or as they sometimes say Tuck sen Azz
That and the San Josie cracked me up
In english it's pronounced "TOO-son".
Many latinos and spanish speakers here in the city call it, "TOOK-sOHn".
Every time I heard “tuckson” I lost half my brain cells
or sometimes "two-sun"
My man said “San josey” 😂😂😂😂😂
A lot of older people I know call it "sanazay"
lmao
jack thinking about it as a local when I say San Jose it often comes out closer to sanozay with the "o" nearly silent.
@@TalussAthner That's actually how I usually say it too.
Yeah it’s very funny
I live in Minneapolis and an interesting thing about downtown is that we have the skyway that connect buildings, but we also have tunnels that span all of downtown that connect the buildings too.
A condo is owned by the people that live there while an apartment is rented. Otherwise, they're exactly the same physically
So, for the landlord, it's a condo and an apartment for the tenant?
@@missminecorn7446 Not exactly. A condo is specifically a unit that is owned by the occupant, typically purchased using a mortgage just like a house; condos are always "for sale". An apartment is specifically a unit that is for rent (or "to let", I believe you'd say in the UK). The landlord owns the apartment in order to rent it out to strangers for income. If you own a condo, then move out and decide to put it up for rent, it would become an apartment.
@@99Stutz Thx for the clarification. My two brain cells couldn't quite grasp the first comment:)
A condo is basically still an apartment because you have to pay fees to enjoy amenities in the building.
Why
11:46: Condos are owned while apartments are rented. The units pretty much are the same
yep^ just a naming convention to specify between a multi-family housing unit which one is owned (condo) vs one is rented (apartment).
Apartments are the general term. I own an apartment, but I call it an apartment, and its not a condo. A condo is a specific type of way you can own an apartment.
@@yaacovdavidowitz4502 In the US, if you say 'apartment', it means you don't own it. If you own it, it's called a condo. There is no concept of 'owning an apartment', unless you mean you own the apartment building. At least in the US.
@@AndyZach this is not uniform throughout the entirety of the United States
@@douglasjackson295 Cool. I'm speaking of my experience in the Midwest, NY city, and LA. Where is there a concept of owning an apartment?
As an Italian; I absolutely adore Texas. In Europe, and even other American cities I’ve been to (LA, Chicago, and New York) people are very hurried and not very personable. But I’ve kept going back to Texas because the people are so friendly, and I never could’ve imagined the geographical distance, and difference between Houston, Austin, El Paso, and Dallas, which amazed me.
glad you had a good time. love from Texas
Distance is a very common misconception when it comes to America vs. people abroad. Traveling within a large state like California, Texas, or Florida can be like traversing up to 5 entire countries in Europe. It's always best to think of American states the way you would EU member states, if you want an idea of distance.
Also, the seaboards are largely covered in megalopolises, where you might travel hundreds of miles without ever leaving urban areas, so even though you feel like you're just taking the freeway across the city to your destination, you're doing it for 6-12 hours. Compare the deserts or the central plains, where you can drive 6 hours with little more than gas stations and convenience stores interrupting the drive.
Milwaukee I know it's the capital of Wisconsin
Madison am I a joke to you
That common misconception that the largest city is the capital. Oh well better luck next time. BTW I love Madison (from norther IL)
Waluigi Warrior omg someone pointed this out
Milwaukee is basically chicago but smaller
Aleksei Brusilov Id beg to differ.
The rest of Wisconsin: Yes
USA: has worlds largest navy
UK: *cries* that’s my son
Upholding the legacy
definitely a Brit's view, more like that person that you try to control but you can't because you aren't strong enough to.
Hey, how can I get boldface font when I type?
@@kaziu312 Put asterisks on either side of the text you want in bold.
Derik De Baun astricks
Detroit was where they made cars. Detroit, Cleveland, Chicago, Pittsburgh, and Milwaukee were all major industrial centers due to their location being at the then-center of the US's population, relative proximity to sources of raw and processed materials, and being on the Great Lakes and/or large navigable rivers.
It's all about logistics.
You rent an "apartment" but purchase a "condo", generally
What if you lease-purchase?
I thought only fancy beachside apartments were called condoes. Like New York has apartments, Miami has condoes.
@@sohopedeco Miami has favelas
Condos are also usually bigger and I've never seen one over 3 stories
Or time share your apartment.
11:46 a condo is owned by the person an apartment is rented. (from my understanding)
2nd that. I know some people who bought a Condo and said they enjoy the condo feel, but in my mind, why would I buy an apartment... I rather buy a house.
your correct. Thu you own the condo usually still pay a condo ass0ciation fee. People buy condos to own the property. The condo fee generally covers any cost to the up keep of the outside including lawn service, if it has lawn.
the timeshare is the pyramid scheme he was talking about
Condos are owned by groups of people
tskjesusfreak: People buy a condo because they want to own something and have equity and be able to do all the modifications and changes and upgrades they want and still not have the upkeep of the yard or all the maintenance and expenses of air-conditioning a full house especially if they want to come and go and they are single. But condos can be huge. Even rich people live in apartments in New York. I’ve owned both a house and apartment and there’s pros and cons of each. The gated resort condo community I’m in now though has three pools and hot tubs that are open 24 seven and heated all winter that I don’t have to maintain. Plus the HOA fee covers unlimited water garbage cable TV landscaping pools everything else.
i knew we were in for a bumpy ride when i heard him say with confidence that he *knew* the states all had equal political power
Dont Texas, California, New York, and Florida have the most power?
@@Rekusasu827 in the house of representatives yep. In the Senate they hold 8% of the power
😂😂
Toycat: Says Milwaukee is the capital of Wisconsin
Me: Knowing it is Madison
Me living in Wisconsin: ;-;
Me being from Madison
Tierney Quinn Ikr. I like Madison. It is the nicest city I go to often.
I am offended that you would try and make a funny meme out of Wisconsin, and you failed miserably. Why would you think this is funny?
Мэтью Захоу
, not bad for someone who's learned it because of an interest. After all, both cities were put in their correct state--Wisconsin. Hey, it's a start. What's really bad is
Americans asking someone from a European country if theirs (let's say Germany) is an island. Duh! Then, there are school kids in Minnesota who don't know the country to the north is Canada; and kids in Texas not knowing that Mexico is the country to the south, when they're both bordering on that country. What's worse is that, sometimes even adults are guilty.
90% of comments: “He pronounced Tucson wrong
9% of comments: “He didn’t like my hometown!”
2% of comments: “I never learned math.”
Maths*
Erk Magosh it doesn’t have to be maths
@@potatoesforsale Math*
it is definitly maths not math
1% milwaukee isn't the capital of Wisconsin. What websites are you researching on lil homie hahaha
British: let's learn what the biggest cities in the USA are!
Americans: let's see if he got something wrong.
Tucson is pronounced "Tu-son" - silent C.
Yep saying it tuckson ins tg ed of tuson
Of*
Thank you!
Yeah... it hurts me when someone pronounces like tuk-son.
@@fatherindia4810 when I herd him say that I had to Google it because spelling is single handedly lowering my English grade
The capital of Wisconsin is Madison, this bothered me sm😭😭
Me too i hated that
Me being a Wisconsinite with OCD, I HATED THAT
I dont even live there and I'm mad >:(
Same
Based American
This was really fun to watch. I've travelled to all of these cities in the US and I love your impressions from the outside. It's really neat.
As someone from the Phoenix area, yeah, Mesa is literally just a large subarb
Also Tucson lol it's pronounced too-son but it's fine, mispronounce away. The real rivalry is Phoenix and Tucson, not Mesa
Christian Anderson downtown mesa is starting to go somewhere. I mean covid screwed it up but they've been trying. The lds church (or you know one of the companies it owns) is creating a mall (but Fiesta mall is 3 miles down and is abandoned?) or something and a lot of apartments which tbh look great. And then ASU is going to open up a little campus in downtown mesa too. So there's hope! Haha. I'm just hoping my home value increases given that I'm semi near lol
It's just full of trailer parks lol I used to live there but moved to Phoenix
joke really went over everyone’s head
Go Wildcats
@@TheTNTerminator just no. Fear the fork
33:58 Detroit was the home of the car as Henry Ford lived there and made the car affordable with the new idea of the production line of cheap Model T's, as well as the home of the founders of GM and Doge, making it the spot for all later car companies to put there headquarters. Hens why it's called the Motor City.
Yeah the just go Like "Detroit is a terrible city to live him" and gives little thought about how the world's first successful Automobile came from here and Henry Ford lived there.
Did the hens drop any other facts on you?
For me it was hilarious hearing him talk about how it is in the middle of the "high speed rail between Northern and Southern California." As if we had any real public transit in CA, the lack of a lightrail is a sore issue for may.
As mad as people get about it. I find it funny how people talk crap about Texas and republicans for that matter about public transport and infrastructure. Yet Texas is in 8th for the best infrastructure, most major cities in Texas have at least a light rail(or plan on adding one pretty quick), and is the state that seems the closest to getting high-speed rail first with Florida right behind us…🤷🏼♂️😂👍🏼
Fresno is also famous for not being Bakersfield. :-)
P.S. I live in Fresno. One of the things that makes Fresno a great place to live is what is nearby, rather than what is in the city: to wit, Yosemite, King Canyon, Sequoia, and Pinnacles National Parks as well as that portion of the Sierra Nevada that is between Yosemite and Kings Canyon. We can also easily day trip/weekend trip to the Monterey Bay area and the San Luis Obispo/Pismo Beach area.
I refuse to believe that cities like long beach are cities. you live in LA, stop lying to yourself
Liam Benn it’s a city in the greater Los Angeles area, that’s like saying Santa Monica or Burbank isn’t a city
Long Beach has its own city center so I count it as a seperate city
Garret Barber it’s part of LA whether you like it or not. It’s just a place for people who don’t want to be part of LA to claim they’re special. Same goes for the other cities you mentioned.
Itz Pro technically yes it’s separate, but let’s be honest it’s all part of LA. It’s like me saying that central London isn’t a part of London. It makes no sense. But I guess that’s America in a nutshell huh
@@liambenn1214 Long Beach used to be a separate city but yep, Suburban sprawl at its best in America
Okay so... Raleigh is a tech hub because it’s located in research triangle park, where there are 3 major universities. NC State, Duke and UNC.
isnt that a bit... overkill?
Also it’s not raw-lay, it’s raw-lee
For a second, I read that wrong, and thought it said that all NC State, Duke, And UNC were all in Raleigh, and as someone who lives just outside Raleigh, that bothered me so much, until I read it correctly
@@adamintheoutdoors2119 brits accents make it sound like Raw-lay
@@effexon If you think thats overkill think about Boston area and colleges, Harvard, MIT, Boston University, Boston College, Northeastern University and thats just the major ones, That just scratches the surface with Lesley, Emmanuel, Simmons, Suffolk, Umass Boston, Wheelock, Brandies, Tufts, and more
The reason VA beach has such a big population is because it covers a large land area which is all largely suburban with a little urban sprawl at places like Town Center. Land wise VA Beach is one of the largest cities in the nation.
Toycat: *picks the worst part of El Paso to represent the city*
Also Toycat: Maybe El Paso isn’t that great
Me, a native El Pasoan: 🤦🏻♂️
Hey fello Texan 👋😊
Every part of El Paso is the worst part of El Paso
I felt that one too! I love Chihuahuita and El Segundo Barrio and have called them home; but they aren't a good representation of our city. They are in the poorest area code by far. I wish he had at least stumbled by the Plaza or Old Fort Bliss where you can get the flavor and history of El Paso while being as super zoomed in to the border as he was.
Rylen Cason Other things are valid, nothing inherently wrong with Mexicans. Some individuals aren't the best, but its same for all other races including white. Don't generalize, it makes you look ignorant. It reflects poorly on all Republicans
I've been to El Paso several times to visit my father who lived there a few years back. Every time I got there, there was trash blowing in from Mexico (the wind was always constant). Just trash everywhere, saw people littering everywhere. Houses all run-down. I haven't seen every part of the city but every spot I saw was just poor, run-down and badly kept. I also genuinely felt unsafe there.
New Orleans: Jazz and crack
Tampa: Beaches and crack
Arlington: Guns and crack
So on and so forth
Nashville: hot chicken and crack.
Memphis: crack and crack
Atlanta: gays and crack
Alabama: my hot sister and um crack meth heroin
Alabama is my favorite city in Chicago!
hey now... this isn't the early 90s, so don't be silly. It's all about heroin/fentanyl & meth in 2020. Crack (& also cocaine ) is a lot harder to find these days, and way weaker in quality than it used to be.
@@curburfosho thank you for your wisdom elder
Crack is wack.
41:55 I really would recommend anyone visiting Colorado to take this train. It is called the California Zephyr and it's the most gorgeous ride you will ever take. I'd recommend stopping and staying Glenwood and enjoy the massive hot springs pool !
Next Video: Britsh person explains every ex-British empire country
Damn, how long you got
2:02 New Orleans is such a beautiful state.
I am from New Orleans and is like a state outside of politics
Tell me whats up with houma then that place is whack
New Orleans is a city not a state
Brodyn Wilson well to be honest it’s a pretty shit joke
Brodyn Wilson just like you
Come to Milwaukee, (M'wah-kee) post covid, especially in the summer. We are very proud of the different ethnicities we have here, and there is a festival every weekend for a different culture.
Also it's not the capitol of Wisconsin, it's actually like a smaller, more navigable version of Chicago. We don't have as many traffic jams, unless you go by the festival park for Summerfest, or something.
Thank you for saying this. As a Milwaukee native I know that Milwaukee is the best city. Not many people realize that.
summerfest is so fun, plus tickets are dirt cheap and also super easy to get for free
You rent an apartment, but a condo is an apartment that you own
Say flat, he'll like that
@@nathanb780 I was having a fight with my British friend. She criticized my apartment, so I knocked her flat.
As an American, I'd say, they're the same living space/type of building.
But if you own it, it's a condo. If you rent it, it's an apartment.
I'll be honest, I just skipped to the part about Minneapolis, and I was pleased to hear all good things. Thank you, come back anytime!
Me, an American from Oklahoma City, Oklahoma’s knowledge of the same cities:
New Orleans: Great City! Tons of history and culture. Still somewhat of a tourist trap.
Tampa: No clue. Big city in Florida.
Arlington: Been close to. Know it for AT&T American Football stadium.
Tulsa: TULSA! Land of old money from oil booms long ago. They have a great art museum financed by the oil wealth.
Minneapolis: Disappointing, but it’s not your fault. I went there to see a hyped-up shopping mall, which was much less than advertised. Very cold.
Oakland: I know of their NFL team but nothing else.
Virginia Beach: Big intelligence community there.
Omaha: Known for steaks.
Raleigh: Fast-growing.
Miami: Known for beaches.
Colorado Springs: Drove through there two years ago and don’t remember it much.
Kansas City: Known for barbecue, as a result of it’s cattle driving history.
Atlanta: Please annex your suburbs!
Sacramento: California capitol. Know two friends from there on Discord.
Mesa: No clue.
Fresno: Heard of if.
Tuscon: 2nd biggest city in Arizona. Pronounce it TOO-SAWN.
Albuquerque: LOVE IT! Go there. Just go.
Milwaukee: Known for cheese and beer. People from Wisconsin can be called cheeseheads as a pejorative.
Baltimore: Only know it for crime and shrinking population.
Louisville: Never been there, but my ancestors lived there for a few generations before moving further West.
Las Vegas: My knowledge of this place doesn’t extend past the CGP Grey video.
Oklahoma City: Home. Known for 1995 terrorist bombing and not much else.
Memphis: Known for being the home of Elvis Presley, therefore music. Home of the Blues music genre.
Portland: I want to live there so much!
Nashville: Home of tons of Country music genre stars.
Detroit: Automotive manufacturing in the past. Shrinking population.
El Paso: On the border and it had a massacre last Summer.
Boston: Snobby universities on the outskirts. Heavy Irish history.
Washington DC: Capitol. Built on a swamp.
Denver: been there. Great airport.
Seattle: The more popular Portland.
Indianapolis: I know nothing apart from the Formula 1 tournament.
Charlotte: I know that it’s a big city.
San Francisco: REALLY? Is it only Fifteenth? Horrible gentrification.
Columbus: Capitol of Ohio.
Jacksonville: Basically all of North Florida apart from Tallahassee.
Austin: I know a lot of people that move there and appear to love it there. It has a scenic river through the city.
San Jose: I’ve barely ever heard of this place outside of the 60’s song. How is it this big?
Dallas: No. Get out. Horrible traffic. I only go down there for their IKEA and one time to attend an NHL game.
San Diego: America’s Pacific Naval hub. On the border with Mexico, with Tijuana on the other side.
San Antonio: Only know it for the Alamo memorial.
Philadelphia: The real center of the US’ early history. Likely would’ve become the capitol if not for D.C.’s creation.
Phoenix: Fast growing city in the middle of the desert. Wouldn’t exist without air conditioning.
Houston: Flooded horribly three years ago after a hurricane.
Chicago: Bad reputation, but I actually really like it. Tons of museums to see.
Los Angeles: Absolutely MASSIVE!
NEW YORK, NEW YORK: There’s something just magical about it. It’s almost legendary, at least on this side of the Atlantic, for being the starting place. Nearly all immigrants from Europe came into this country from an island just outside the city. Just listen to the Frank Sinatra song. Hundreds of years of history and the most Dutch influence of any large city.
Formula 1 last run at Indianapolis in 2007 you probably mean IndyCar
true I went to chicago for an entire week and the only thing bad about it is the south side which is outsde of the city
The Ikea isn't even in Dallas lmao
Hey, we have TWO great museums financed by oil wealth! Tulsa has Philbrook and Gilcrease.
Your mistake with Minneapolis was seeing MoA. It's a thing to do but is just a kitschy tourist trap with more niche stores than your typical mall.
Also sounds like you made the mistake of visiting outside of May thru September. Most people from points further south aren't used to just how cold it can get and how comparatively early it gets to "cold" temperatures for other parts of the country.
‘New orleans is 50th biggest state’ last i checked it’s a city
ChloeWade well if it was a state it would be 50th
mrcreepercraft48 it would be 51st actually assuming no state is removed for New Orleans to take its place which it probably wouldn’t be. It has less population than Wyoming which is #50
Ahhhhhh reminds me of the time my father accidentally said Paris when she had to name a country on the spot
Boopity Boop Boop ‘father’ ‘she’ what?
@@Khloya69 its a weird adoptive online family thing. She has identified herself as a female but identifies as our (my 8000+ siblings) father.
9:14 that is the Evergreen boat stuck in the Suez Canal lol
Amazing video once again mate!
Three extra facts to supply:
Tucson is pronounced Too-sonn
Nashville is famous as the Hollywood of Country & Western Music
You might know San Diego Zoo from Anchorman!
As a person from Albuquerque I can confirm that A) Breaking Bad is essentially public school here B) Gary Johnson is from here and C) You only have to get a 60% on the driver's ed test to pass, thus the traffic incidents
Also bugs bunny should have taken a left there if I am correct.
Also, not the state Capitol.
Toycat: *moves his cursor over my hometown*
Me: senpai has noticed me-
Tucson is pronounced Two-son. The chimichanga was invented there.
Seth K Johnson, rather than 2 of the yellow thing in the sky, or 2 male children (son/sun), it's sahn.
Are you saying the chimichanga is an American invention?
*National pride increase*
@@DeandreSteven it's a Mexican-American invention
When you're excited to hear ibx2cat talk about your city and he talks about it for less than 30 seconds.
Bro dropped into my city, called it run down, and fucked off
@@sandman5587 lol, which one
@@wizzotizzo el paso
@@sandman5587 damn, my condolences
@@sandman5587 In fairness, he clicked on the downtown area of El Paso, which legitimately does look kind of run down in parts. Also there's not really a ton of noteworthy things to say about our city, other than Chico's I guess.
For Atlanta’s airport, I had a plane ride out of there (we were connecting from one flight to another in Atlanta) about two weeks ago. The gate we got in from the last plane was “close” to the gate we had to get to. We walked there for about 20 minutes. Then, after getting on the plane, the plane had to take a while to get to the runway, then waited in a line for about 25 minutes. The airport is huge.
I like how you “insulted” Mesa but you actually perfectly described it
lol true, as a Sun Devil grad I also love his pronunciation of Tucson.
Atlanta, Georgia also has the 2nd most sprawling metropolitan area in the US (after Hickory, NC), and is also the most forested major city in terms of percent of tree cover in the US.
As someone who lives in North Carolina, why Hickory?
I’m pretty sure Sacramento has more trees per capita than any city in the US and one of the most in the world (pretty sure it’s higher than Paris)
Elijah Evans its not most per capita but most per area
@@Mozzarella3839 idk I didnt write the report
@HP I really enjoy when the King and Queen buildings light up for Christmas. Also some nutjob went in to one of those buildings and started shooting (this happened in the 90s if I'm not mistaken)
We need an updated video with the top 100 cities! This is my favorite toycat video or house hunting in Seattle
Toycat: Let’s make sure the video isn’t more than an hour.
Me: (Looks at length of video) “Mission Failed We’ll get em’ next time.
congratulations, you annoyed me for 15 seconds with san jose
17:20 yes i was at a women's college for a summer camp through duke tip at a Atlanta school and the whole week they were preparing to film some scenes in a movie with the Rock, that's why we were rushed out of the camp when it was over.
Ah yes, the magnificent “Lase Veegas”
Also “ San Joe - zee”
don’t forget “neuwe yourke”
Tukson
Yes, British people tend to mangle pronunciations of Spanish words - and their spelling, too, which is how the word color is spelled colour.
San Josie, California
Edit: I live in the actual capital of New York, it honestly sucks here.
Aye my cousin from Upstate :D
Dont you guys have a light rail up in Albany?
Bardock yes, there is one here. What town is your cousin from? I might have heard of it
Albany looks cool though, why does it suck
Itz Pro well, there’s a lot of reasons. Shitty neighborhoods, generally bad people, crime (which I know is basically a given in any American city but still noteworthy) the only important thing here is government. Then there’s homeless people galore, and it’s also a pretty small city. It does look nice in pictures of buildings like the museum and the capital building, or maybe the egg, but that’s about it. It’s just your average sparsely populated American city.
Phoenix also has a really popular light rail (tram) as well :) Used to take it every day.
The Bronx is known for 2 things: The Yankees, and getting shot
Ian Cypes As someone not from the Bronx, i would add the zoo
Y a n k e e w i f n o b r i m
Depends on the area from someone who's from there
Ian Cypes or the zoo
Toycat should just move to the us. He already knows more about it than most Americans
Ben Silverberg that’s not true. I already knew all of these. If you didn’t then you are just an ignorant idiot.
umop apIsdn You should meet most Americans lol. Just because you know something doesn’t mean everyone does
EvanAviator I live in the us and most people know all of these things and more. Quit being so judgmental and bigoted.
As someone from Virginia, I think Virginia Beach is heavily populated because people go there to retire because it is a beach and cheap to live there. Also there's a lot of Navy/Air Force bases there, so people move there to work in the military.
I think his confusion was more how they fit than why they live there. I think it's city limits are a lot bigger than you woul expect.
I'm from Boston and my first impression of Dublin when I visited is how much it felt like Boston, so I appreciated that you also saw the Irish connection.
8:11 that's funny because Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Finland all have huge Somali communities (and in Helsinki Somalis are the third largest minority) and Minnesota has many Nordic people and lots of Nordic influence
Apparently the Nordics are attractive to the Somalians
Condos are usually owned after fully paying off the mortgage or you can buy it out out right. Apartments are usually for rent.
The reason why Virginia beach has a large population despite the city proper being relatively small is that the former town of Virginia Beach Resort and county of Princess Anne merged in the 1950s to form the independent city of Virginia Beach. The city is actually a collection of mostly suburban communities in addition to the boardwalk area.
"I have a friend from Columbus, Ohio - He says, 'it is okay'"
Accurate
Condos are the same as apartments, except you own a condo just as you own a home. It’s your property with a mortgage etc.. Apartments are leased with regular payments to the property owner.
If there’s one thing someone should know about Norfolk, Virginia, it’s that it’s our version of a city like Bremerhaven. The American Navy has two main hubs; one for each ocean. Norfolk for the Atlantic, and San Diego for the Pacific.
Me: waiting for him to talk about Memphis
Toycat: says a few words about whiskey and alcohol.
And JD isn’t even from Memphis it’s from Lynchburg
I’m shock he didn’t bring up Elvis or the home of BBQ or the place where MLK got shot
11:53 A condo is an apartment but bought instead of rented. It's like buying vs renting a house but it's two different names for some reason.
New Orleans: French influences city in the middle of the swamp with good food and music
Tampa: Generally Florida’s forgotten big city, pretty nice from what I’ve heard
Arlington: Glorified suburb, known for the home of the Dallas cowboys American football team
Tulsa: big oil production, second biggest city in Oklahoma
Minneapolis: Minnesota’s largest city, and is the twin city to the state capital, St. Paul
Oakland: One of the largest ports on the west coast, a city that had a bad reputation but is getting expensive
Virginia Beach: Spread out suburban like city, more like a group of neighborhoods than anything
Long Beach: also has a big port, basically an extension of LA
Omaha: Really nice zoo, biggest Nebraskan city, good steaks, rich guy
Raleigh: capital of North Carolina and a big tech hub
Miami: Big city on the beach known for retirement and a place people go for vacation
Colorado Springs: big city near the mountains wrong US Air Force academy and US Olympic facility
Kansas City: Known for its steaks and winning the Super Bowl this year
Atlanta: major transport hub and a center of African American culture
Sacramento: capital of California, big on agriculture, home to the Kings basketball team
Mesa: This is basically a cancer cell that got really out of hand and is infecting Phoenix
Fresno: Agricultural center and is basically the central point of California
Tucson: Big city in the desert
Albuquerque: Tucson with mountains and culture
Milwaukee: cheese, beer, and a charming accent
Baltimore: lots of crime and urban decay, very historical city that has a major port
Louisville: Kentucky’s largest city and cultural center, known for college baseball and basketball
Las Vegas: Tacky shithole in the desert with lots of homelessness
Oklahoma City: Generic name, decently nice city
Memphis: good music (Elvis lived here) and high crime unfortunately
Portland: very liberal and hip. Lots of nature and is generally a nice city
Nashville: Barbecue and lots of country/folk music
Detroit: urban and economic decay for decades, looked down upon as a third world place, is on the rise
El Paso: Large city in the desert on the border
Boston: America’s historical center with lots of Irish culture and top tier universities.
Washington: U.s capital trying to be Paris
Denver: most important city in Colorado, at the foot of the mountains
Seattle: A larger version of Portland with more rain and more Canadians
Indianapolis: Racecars, outside of that, it is very generic
Charlotte: North Carolina’s largest city
San Francisco: very liberal and dense, know for earthquakes, mild weather, and great scenery
Columbus: Possibly the safest city on this list, very nice, good zoo, massive university
Fort Worth: twin city to the much more famous Dallas
Jacksonville: Speeadout, swampy city with beaches and a big river
Austin: one of the fastest growing cities in US, very clean and beautiful, good food and music
San Jose: Tech capital of the world and the most expensive city in the United States, largest city in Northern California
Dallas: A big city on the prairie known for being the epitome of a Texan city
San Diego: great beaches, great weather, great food, basically LA, but better in almost every way
San Antonio: Basically a really big city known for being a huge military hub
Philadelphia: America’s other historical center, very important in our history
Phoenix: Hot, sprawling, city in the desert
known for being just that
Houston: Biggest city in Texas, similar to Phoenix, except it floods, still hot as hell
Chicago: City perceived to be unsafe by the media, but has great food and great attractions
Los Angeles: Hollywood, gangs, beaches, traffic, really good food, amazing weather
New York: Great attractions, awesome food, packed with culture and history, America’s most iconic city
Your desciption of Mesa sucks ass. Trust me Mesa is better than Phoenix. Lol😂
I just skimmed but saw a couple of things that were oddly off.
San Antonio is called the Alamo city. You mention military, and the guy in the video mentions Hispanics. Lol what's going on here. Alamo and Riverwalk are typically what people know it for.
Detroit is the motor city known for Ford, and famous for going from successful to a piece of trash city.
Chicago isn't perceived to be unsafe by the medic, it is unsafe to American standards and the media tries to ignore it. Also famous for gangs since Al Capone all the way to 2021.
Vegas is known for casinos, gambling, sin city.
Seattle is known for coffee, drugs, and psychos.
@@thecensoredmuscle563 I'm from Seattle and that's wildly incorrect mate
Although the homeless problem sucks but that happens in most cities that's what wealth inequality is for ya
jeeze, you should come see Milwaukee sometime. we do indeed have a very charming accent.
I'll have you know Indianapolis is an absolutely fantastic city and much better than "generic"
I just want to point out that mount trashmore is exactly what it sounds like. It is a mountain of trash (an old landfill) that was covered with grass to make a park.
Hey man, great video, just got wanted to clarify one thing for you. The San Francisco-Oakland bridge is commonly known as the Bay Bridge to local Californians.
“New Orleans is the 50th biggest state”
-Toycat
felt insulted when toycat didn’t know anything about my city
Are you from Columbus?
You dont know top 50 british cities
@@lennycam1775 I'm American and I know London, Manchester, Birmingham, Newcastle, Edinbrugh and Belfast off the top of my head
@@deeznutz32108 wooowewwwwwwwwwww
@@lennycam1775 And I can locate them on a map
Greetings from Louisville, and the Kentucky Derby run here is a very big event. So big in fact that the Oaks (the race of female horses ran the day before) is a local city holiday that we all get out of school for. Some derby traditions are Derby Parties where people usually draw a horse from a hat and if that horse wins they win money. Derby pie is usually made or bought from a store, and people (women mostly) wear elaborate Derby hats. And Louisville has its own airport but the Cincinnati Airport is technically in Northern Kentucky and is only about 40 minutes away, so it’s also popular if you can’t get a flight out of Louisville
Microsoft was founded in Albuquerque. My old art teacher went there too, from Canada.
Drew Seedot yeah that’s just about the best thing about in Albuquerque other than Breaking Bad
Only learned that one from a pokemon go stop a few years back actually
Jacksonville has such a large population because its city limits make it the largest city in the contiguous United States...by a lot. It's land area is gigantic. In fact, it's land area is about the same size as many other metropolitan areas in America.
Condo and apartment are both individual units in a bigger single building, but you rent an apartment and own a condo. The quality of a condo unit is usually better than an apartment unit. A management company that owns an apartment building fixes stuff in your apartment, provides appliances, etc. But for condos, members in the building pay an "association fee" each month to cover maintenance costs for the building as a whole.
37:50
British person explains American history
What’s a british
A British isn't any special, whoever feels they belong in britain is british, don't listen to the rasists who insist there is a british ethnicity, britian belongs to the world 😇
@@lucasowenstacey8593 Britain belongs to the British, which includes other ethnicity born in Britain
@@lucasowenstacey8593 what
@@lucasowenstacey8593 only idots identify as british.
@@lucasowenstacey8593 lol preech bro this contry dont belong to the 'british' any more let the witebois cry about it lmao 💪🏿🤣
Rewatching this gem again and I never even realized that in the thumbnail El Paso is placed in the north pan handle of Texas
Nobody:
Literally Nobody:
People Describing Indy: Nyoooom car go fast zooom
Zericef too be fair the cars in the Indy 500 do go over 200 mph
haha car go brrrr
LMAO fax but most ppl who attend the indy500 every year aren’t even from indianapolis, it’s mostly international observers. racing is big i guess mostly among older people tho
Seattle is also the largest aircraft producing city
Great video! I’m actually contemplating moving to Tuck-son. You know a great deal about my country. Very impressive. Keep up the good work. I’m interested in traveling to Bulgaria and your channel was recommended with the Bulgaria joining the Euro in 2024 video.
Ibxtoycat: "I know 2 people from Alburquerque."
Jeff Bezos: Am I a joke to you?
Heinserberg also 😎
So you know, Memphis is generally known for Elvis, Martin Luther King Jr., and all the shipping with Fed Ex.
Surprised that he didn't think of the Alamo for San Antonio.
MLK makes me think of Atlanta, not Memphis
An apartment is a rented portion of an apartment building. A condo is something that you own, which can come in many physical forms. Usually there are association fees that cover things like common area maintenance, building insurance, water/sewage bills…
I live outside of Baltimore and I'd advise you to stay away. The only cool place is the Inner Harbor but outside of that it looks like a Purge film. It's ranked one of the dirtiest cities in the US with the highest murder rate in the US not including the fact that we just had our third mayor in a row removed because of corruption. The only notable person to live here is Edgar Allan Poe, possibly the craziest person of all time. He's the only one crazy enough to live here. You may think it's history redeems it. Wrong. Its only notable event was the writing of the Star Spangled Banner and even in the song Francis Scott Key is saying how much of a shit hole the city looks like. Fun facts about our city: we had a mayor literally drown in shit and also we had a mayor who got impeached for corruption run for mayor again the next year. Baltimore was home to Spirow Agnew who ironically would have been the first president from Maryland had he not been corrupt along with his boss Richard Nixon and every other politician in Baltimore. Also Nancy Pelosi was born here so if your a republican than yeah that sucks. STAY AWAY AND STAY SAFE!
You know Baltimore was the 6th largest city in the US at one point in time with 949,000 people(1950) and was one of the fastest growing cities in the nation in the early 20th century, I don't get the need of everyone wanting to hate this city, it had it's golden age. And well after the war of 1812 Baltimore was the 2nd largest US city. So Francis was not talking about the city being bad, he was taking about the British being bad ffs
It’s really not that bad, beautiful airport, beautiful downtown, has some very nice and safe neighborhoods like Canton...
As a Minnesotan, I'll let you know that people from Somalia are Somali, not Somalian. It's a common misconception here.
Aaron Sadlo I’m sure that far left idiot omar doesn’t let u forget it lol
@@Khloya69 I knew about it before she was elected, and frankly I wish I lived in her district. I'm proud she represents my state.
Aaron Sadlo how are you proud of Omar? I’d literally kill myself if she represented my district. All modern democrats are bad and she’s a particularly bad one. It’s bad enough that i live in Commiefornia but rather even this than her represent me.
@@Khloya69 she puts morals over party and has been vocal with issues in our country today. Generalizing a whole party is not a good outlook to have on certain politicans. While the two party system does cause many problems and rifts in this it doesn't always make that case. While I disagree with many Republicans I can't say that they are all bad. I don't look for blue and red.
Aaron Sadlo you mean she puts foreign entities over America? Bitch married her brother and is vocally anti semitic and complained that israel banned her when she hates them. Please educate yourself.
Washingtonian here. Baltimore is actually worth visiting. Yes, there are problem areas that the city doesn't seem to have any interest in improving, but there's also a lot of interesting places to go. Baltimore focuses largely on its east side, and there's quite a number of things to do. I don't get there much, but I do like the city.
Anyone notice on the thumbnail that El Paso is listed as Amarillo?
"For your convenience, we've taken the liberty of relocating El Paso to the prairie." 😏 And he's got Seattle right around Pasco/Yakima area.
@@timothycook2917 I honestly wish El Paso was in the prairie lol