FF10 voice acting in english was just terrible. I like the game, but geez. I didn't have as much of a problem with the japanese version but there were a ton of words I didn't know so I cannot judge as well.
ThePotatoUnicorn lol I’m just like jun i say everything calmly while my mom is really well not calm. I think jun teaches everyone a good lesson always be calm never mad or frustrated
“What’s wrong with you”, when I learn this phrase in school, the textbook says it means “checking if someone is ok, and this is to show your concern about the person”. Well, when I said this to my American friend one day years later, I received a mean face......can’t forget.
"What's wrong with you?" implies that the person is crazy. The question "Why would you do that?" is usually also implied. Hmmm... Think of it as adding "with you" implies that the other person is not like you, you can't understand them and are demanding an explanation. When you ask "what's wrong?" the person is like you and you have a general understanding of the problem, but need specifics to help or sympathize.
Even my fiance who speaks only English messed this up once. It's technically right, but connotation is just where it goes wrong. If you say it with the right emotion, Americans might understand that you don't mean it as an insult but that's pretty difficult.
@@thomasnguyen9947 dude,, no. first of all, its polite to give emotionless apologies in japan, tHEY LITERALLY SAID THAT IN THE VIDEO- second, im pretty sure youre the only one who does that
as an asian guy i can confirm : when we are being cute to our partner, we dramatized the word like "i am sorryyyy :( :(" but when we are really sorry for what we did, we put serious face and say "i am sorry" with strong dedication like we are ready to whatever punishment you will befall us.
More like americans are way to emotional right? I feel like serious calm apologies are more sincere because it shows you were able to rationally think about your actions and truly acknowledged your mistake
@@prudence8808 Haha. Just cultural differences as what is perceived as sincere. 😌 I can see how Americans would seem too emotional and how Japanese may be seen as emotionless, it's all about cultural perception. The best we can do is work to understand the feeling behind the apology so we can communicate better between cultures which is what I think Rachel and Jun do very well! ❤️
@@prudence8808 As an American we are too emotional in comparison lol 😂 but while I can tell Jun is sincere now if I was angry I could misinterpret it as him being passive aggressive. The tone he is using isn’t the tone we use to sincerely apologize, it’s more done when you don’t mean it (like when your mom forces you to apologize when you’re a kid). A sincere tone for English (in America any way) has more inflection and as Rachel requests a bit more emotion. Monotone is considered to be rude, judgmental, or condescending here. It’s the tone teenagers use the most when they want to irritate their parents.
To be fair, as a cashier or other service jobs I've always enforced fairness when someone tries to walk all over other clients like that. It's not extra to refuse to accept rules being broken, otherwise why bother lining up at all and not just mob the counter? These social rules exist for a reason, to avoid drama not make more.
I find it hot or cute? That Jun is cool and Rachel is funny and I also thought she was Asian....at first and then I thought is that red head real?! I was like nah I can see black hair but then Jun mentioned that she’s American AND SHES A REAL RED HEAD!! BOI THAT IS PROBALY THE MOST HOTTEST COMBO EVER! I NEVER IMAGINED THE DAY WOULD COME! A JAPANESE BOI AND ONE HOT REDHEAD their both hot *no homo jun it’s just fair to say that cause your wife isn’t the only hot one.....if you know what I mean* 😏😏😏😏 by that I meant jun is so frigging Ho- -Israel country cube has left the chat-
+migl3 31673 Nah, Rachel is actually an introvert. If you look a bit closer during their early videos you can tell. Plus, Rachel revealed in a previous video that she is an introvert.
@@AniWho268 Yes. I don't know why the nickname isn't there. I thought it was automatic like for yours at the beginning of this comment. I surely made a mistake somewhere.
The real problem is when "non-confrontational people" chastise others for not being a doormat. I'm not going to eat an entrée I didn't order just because you would :)
I didn't think it was insincere, but I would expect more emotion. I find that quite interesting how it can sound different depending on what culture one grew up with.
Yeah! It’s weird how some people take emotion differently! I thought it was pretty sincere! In my opinion, he sounded serious like “I’m sorry” rather than “IM sO SORRYY!!”
I always come back to this video because it really does show a American Japanese language learner the way Japanese people do emote. The way Jun says I’m sorry is so full of respect, and that’s how they show their sincerity. English is such a nuance language and honestly you could consider it to be quite tonal. We kind of express emotions over the top. We heavily rely on body language as well to express our feelings. In Japanese you rely on your words, because each word has a deep and strong meaning and is dependent on situation.
My boyfriend is Japanese and I’m Mexican American, and we encounter so many similar problems lol. We speak 3 languages, I don’t think anyone can understand us sometimes
as a Chinese i used to date a Canadian and an American. they would always say that i am expressionless when i am at the verge of giving up a limb. i gave up wondering why do they need to be so dramatic. somedays i wonder if i just exercise my freedom of speech and let everything out in utter disregard without any due consideration of the others around me would i fit in better. LOL
I am Canadian and my girlfriend is Korean. Idioms and expressions confuse, anger, or upset her, even if I am trying to be sincere. The "what's wrong with you" is the tip of my iceberg.
In Brasil, most specifically in Rio, no One would argue with a Guy who’s cut in line. Not because we’re not trying to make a scene, but because we don’t wanna get stabbed or shot.
I think in the US women tend to be more vocal about things like line cutting because if you're a man you're expected to "back things up". I always just assume if someone cuts they're just looking for a confrontation.
Rachel: “Are you being passive aggressive with me?” Jun: “I’m not sure what that means.” Rachel’s Mind: *commencing count down sequence* Jun: *i m s o r r y*
I think it's pretty hilarious when you look at the differences. Americans can feel uneasy when a lack of emotion is involved but the Japanese seem like they see that as well mannered.
She just seems very excentric and extroverted and he is shy and quiet. Even if they were the same culture they probably wouldn't understand each other haha
Very true. I’m American and I’m very much like Jun with the customer service or cutting in line thing. I get so embarrassed when people I’m with confront people over what I consider small. I’ve never ever sent food back or called someone out for cutting in line.
This is what men actually mean when they say: "I'm sorry." We're not sorry. We don't even know why we're sorry. We just don't want to be killed or neutered. That's bad. Please don't do that.
Passive-aggressive behavior is described as having hostility against someone but rather than confronting the person, you avoid openly expressing your negative feelings. And as a result, you keep doing subtle things that might annoy the other party greatly. For example: avoiding a person, giving sarcastic comments, pouting, backhanded compliments, insulting a person while smiling, refusal to do something without a solid reason, refusal to acknowledge any problems, etc.
It reminds me of some languages that have multiple words for "why". If I recall correctly, both Russian and Japanese do this. "Why are you crying?" gets dicey if you use the wrong method, as one implies information about the situation while the other implies intent. So, "Why are you crying?" as in 'what happened to make you cry?' versus, 'for what purpose are you crying?', the latter being somewhat... accusational. When you ask "What's wrong 'with you'?" it sounds accusational, depending on the context, intonation, affect, etc. At it's core, "What's wrong?" can only reference the situational wrongness, while 'with you' can mean all kinds of things, mostly negative because it puts the attention to 'you' as the subject of the question, rather than (or in tandem with) the problem, and then it just gets all ugly from there. If 'with' had separate words for 'in your space' and 'in you personally', it'd probably be less a thing. (One of the benefits of complex case systems.)
@@SongOfChaos1 in Russian we have two words that are constantly messed up by the learners: "pochemu" which means "why", and "zachem" which means "for what purpose?" And we also have "dorogoy" which means "dear" and "expensive" at the same time😁. That's why we can say "dear car" instead of "expensive car".
Dan Kayur It's all about choosing the right type of apology. Even if it's toneless in delivery, the fact that he's giving a very long and involved apology makes it very polite. Delivering it in an effective context is where you get sincerity from; in front of a crowd at the incident doesn't show sincerity, but privately with no one else watching is much more sincere. If we judged apologies by delivery, it would mean that we'd have no leniency against kids or people who are learning the customs we grew up with. It'd be too inflexible, though some people do it anyways because they're more judgmental.
My wife is Japanese, and we always communicate in Japanese because that’s how we started our relationship. But it’s frustrating for me because I feel like I’m at a disadvantage in arguments. Sometimes I have really good points I want to make, but I can’t adequately explain them. But on the plus side, it forces me to think before speaking instead of blurting out emotional retorts, so our arguments rarely get out of control.
This is so funny because I'm not a native English speaker so like Jun, I thought that's the correct way to say it (I even thought it's more polite/formal). Believe me, back then the English courses I took, didn't teach the subtle differences of those types of phrases. I learned that saying that would only make your partner even angrier LOL even though I really wanted to know what happened to him, if something bad happened :D
@@tracys169 what's wrong with you is okay for any politeness. the biggest problem would be the tone, and since many people are using the phrase "what's wrong with you" to address someone of being annoying or stupid. now read it loud when it's capitalized... "what's wrong with YOU?" "WHAT'S wrong with you?" "what's WRONG with you?" "what's wrong WITH you?" if you know which one is the polite one, then you're good to go
I feel like the quiet unemotional verbal apology is sincere, but the flat out unblinking stare right into your eyes is aggressive, so if someone apologized to me like that, I'd be wondering what the heck was going on. EDIT: I just went back and watched it again, and on second viewing, I think the stare is more of a "deer caught in the headlights" look, so it sort of carries the emotion of the American "I'm SOOOO sorry!!" without actually using the words. 😂
Jun: I don't know what that word means... Rachel: *death stare* Jun: *monotone* I'm sorry. This part made me laugh so much because he brought back the (seemingly not) genuine I'm sorry xD
OMGGGGGGGGG, 6:05 had me rolling!!! Rachel: "Are you being passive-agressive with me?" *glare* Jun: "...I don't know what that word means..." Rachel: *intense glaring* Jun: "gomen nasai"
@@Nami-bu2qf this might surprise you but um wearing a leopard print shirt doesn't make you gay.. or means you're gay.. honestly most people don't wear leopard prints.. it's just women and not men in general,but if a man wears one it doesn't mean he is gay
I like how they’re arguing quietly about talking to the line cutter, and their friend is just standing there like: ‘This is fine, everything is fine’ like a rpg npc
OMGGGGG I always want to call out people who cut in line !!!!!!!!! My fiancé (Japanese) always tells me not to say anything lol.... Although one time, he did and ... I HAVE NEVER BEEN SO PROUD 😭😭😭😭😭😭
I'm from the west and i hate people who cut in line in china, this happened at the world expo. gawd made me sick to the stomach (cuz its my motherland so to speak)
Seriously? I went “EHHHHHH!” In the loudest voice ever and I make sure the entire store heard me. Mainly because I am tiny and look like a child. So everyone now know this huge dude just bullied and cut in front of a kid. Ultimate embarrassment.
I feel like the apology thing is less about emoting and more about the social value of an apology. In America, a genuine apology is about conveying real emotional regret for pain/harm/inconvenience caused by your actions. My impression of Japan is that a genuine apology isn’t about feeling bad so much as acknowledging a breach of social order and showing submission to the system. You don’t have to be “sorry,” you just have to be willing to humble yourself a bit to re-establish the pecking order.
I think it more has to do that in English, you can say ‘sorry’ sarcastically or genuinely just from the tone of your voice. So you have to say it in a specific way to convey that it’s genuine. And in Japanese, saying sorry isn’t really said in a sarcastic way so it’s always genuine.
animebishieluver Nay. In america, people are more comfortable in opening up about one's "emotions." Asians tend to be less expressive but their words of apology are more sincere.
Funny, as a Japanese I was thinking exactly opposite. I thought that in America people need to be over-dramatic while making apology since it's a more of a performance rather then showing actual feelings. Since Japanese tend to have more subtle expression and read between the line communicating style. The fact this comment is upvoted shows how Japanese are always viewed as those stereotypical "heartless, emotionless people who would just follow social orders " or whatever the western media alway conveys. I personally think it's one of the worst dehumanization out there.
4:53 Ignis is a real name of latin origin meaning "fiery". Same with the names of noctis w/c is latin for "night" and luna w/c is latin for "moon"... 😁 Sorry. I like name meanings a lot. 😆
6:10 clear emotion. If been frozen due to a unpleasant experience an/or situation, only to hope an pray that apologizing will help. Yet, expecting the worse. That is the expression he has. Like a thousand different scenarios are running through his head at that split moment.
So sweet and ever cute. The way Rachel going at it in English. And Jun, explaining himself so calmly in Japanese. Just so precious. I didn't see any passive aggressive part in Jun, Rachel! 😊
I'm sure you two can agree that Tidus and Yuna's famous "laughing" scene in Final Fantasy 10 is equally cringe-worthy in both English and Japanese.
Oh god, that laughing scene. Japanese Tidus sounds like a seagull being sat on.
quixotic sonnet A SEAGULL HAHA.
That is the PERFECT analogy, but now I'll never be able to un-think that image! hahaha
+quixotic sonnet I just watched it and now I'm crying at your comparison oh god
ua-cam.com/video/BaDocsZkWK0/v-deo.html
FF10 voice acting in english was just terrible. I like the game, but geez. I didn't have as much of a problem with the japanese version but there were a ton of words I didn't know so I cannot judge as well.
Happy-Jun: •-•
Sad-Jun: •-•
Angry-Jun: •-•
Neutral-Jun: •-•
Sorry-jun: •-•
When WWIII happens Jun: •-•
@@kallistaanne eeeeeeeeeeee
Frisk : - _-
He has a bigger eyes when he’s scared
no one :
jun : •-•
"can you use more....emotion?"
"I'm SoRrY."
Lmao
moe
moe
@@user-et4uc1iu8w moe
ThePotatoUnicorn lol I’m just like jun i say everything calmly while my mom is really well not calm.
I think jun teaches everyone a good lesson always be calm never mad or frustrated
this is so cute she’s like
“are you passively being aggressive to me”
“idk what that means”
*intense stare*
“i’m sorry”
Haha nice call back
Tha was hilarious 😂
That was A+ skit writing right there.
“What’s wrong with you”, when I learn this phrase in school, the textbook says it means “checking if someone is ok, and this is to show your concern about the person”. Well, when I said this to my American friend one day years later, I received a mean face......can’t forget.
Haha. Aww that is cute but sad 😭😜
"What's wrong with you?" implies that the person is crazy. The question "Why would you do that?" is usually also implied. Hmmm... Think of it as adding "with you" implies that the other person is not like you, you can't understand them and are demanding an explanation. When you ask "what's wrong?" the person is like you and you have a general understanding of the problem, but need specifics to help or sympathize.
@@adde9506 That was very well explained , thanks!
You can say it to british people, we know what you mean 😊✌🏼
Even my fiance who speaks only English messed this up once. It's technically right, but connotation is just where it goes wrong.
If you say it with the right emotion, Americans might understand that you don't mean it as an insult but that's pretty difficult.
Rachel: ARE YOU BEING PASSIVE AGGRESSIVE WITH ME?!?!?!
Jun: o_o
Jun: *HELP ME*
Jun: gomenasai™
Jun: *poker face*
I get it though, when my wife speaks in her native dialect I can't understand her when she gets mad at my
Jun: put your brain in 🍚
I don't read Jun's apologies as emotionless, I read them as full of terror
@@thomasnguyen9947 dude,, no. first of all, its polite to give emotionless apologies in japan, tHEY LITERALLY SAID THAT IN THE VIDEO- second, im pretty sure youre the only one who does that
hahahhaa!! that's the expression
I read his actions he does with his emotions more than his words
it has the same energy as
*I'm sorry you felt that*
Cause what's there to be sorry about 😂😂
what jun says: *gomenasai :|*
what he really means: *don’t kill me*
Fax 😂😂🤞🏻🍵
taerium gomen nasai is I’m sorry in Japanese
taerium or put on English subtitles ^^
L {real life detective}
nah i know, i’m currently living in japan so i kinda know a bit of nihonggo :))
Totally.😅(by japanese)
as an asian guy i can confirm :
when we are being cute to our partner, we dramatized the word like "i am sorryyyy :( :("
but when we are really sorry for what we did, we put serious face and say "i am sorry" with strong dedication like we are ready to whatever punishment you will befall us.
More like americans are way to emotional right? I feel like serious calm apologies are more sincere because it shows you were able to rationally think about your actions and truly acknowledged your mistake
@@prudence8808 Haha. Just cultural differences as what is perceived as sincere. 😌 I can see how Americans would seem too emotional and how Japanese may be seen as emotionless, it's all about cultural perception. The best we can do is work to understand the feeling behind the apology so we can communicate better between cultures which is what I think Rachel and Jun do very well! ❤️
@@prudence8808 As an American we are too emotional in comparison lol 😂 but while I can tell Jun is sincere now if I was angry I could misinterpret it as him being passive aggressive. The tone he is using isn’t the tone we use to sincerely apologize, it’s more done when you don’t mean it (like when your mom forces you to apologize when you’re a kid). A sincere tone for English (in America any way) has more inflection and as Rachel requests a bit more emotion. Monotone is considered to be rude, judgmental, or condescending here. It’s the tone teenagers use the most when they want to irritate their parents.
I’m not to emotional, fight me
a lot of people say I have no emotion and just have it when im really sad/happy over something
Smart man. "I'm sorry " is always the correct response.
I love how chill Jun is
That's a sign of weakness
You can also say, “Forgive me.” If you want to be extra.
TheCastle357 lmao kids tryna act "manly" but behind screen they're weak
@@valonzhubi4321 I agree
basically americans being extra and japanese being chill for 8 minutes straight
To be fair, as a cashier or other service jobs I've always enforced fairness when someone tries to walk all over other clients like that. It's not extra to refuse to accept rules being broken, otherwise why bother lining up at all and not just mob the counter? These social rules exist for a reason, to avoid drama not make more.
Americans are generally extra,that's normal for them but not for a Japanese or maybe some other parts of the world too
I find it hot or cute? That Jun is cool and Rachel is funny and I also thought she was Asian....at first and then I thought is that red head real?! I was like nah I can see black hair but then Jun mentioned that she’s American AND SHES A REAL RED HEAD!! BOI THAT IS PROBALY THE MOST HOTTEST COMBO EVER! I NEVER IMAGINED THE DAY WOULD COME! A JAPANESE BOI AND ONE HOT REDHEAD their both hot *no homo jun it’s just fair to say that cause your wife isn’t the only hot one.....if you know what I mean* 😏😏😏😏 by that I meant jun is so frigging Ho- -Israel country cube has left the chat-
As a Swede in America, I don’t think any description covers the difference better than “extra”
Israel Country Cube boi chill
are you being passive aggressive with me?!? >:V
jun: 👁👄👁
👁👄👁
And gomennasai
👁👄👁 ごめなさい。
🇯🇵🇱🇷
LovinqLucky lmfao 👁👄👁
Oh my gosh, they're so cute
I’m dying from the cuteness 😭
I was about to write the saaaame words 😂
Haha ageed
WOMEN
Women moment
"Are you being passive aggressive with me?"
"I don't know what that word means."
*Intense stare*
"Gomenasai."
I just lost it at this part. So funny!
Tiffany Grant gonenasai means **please don’t kill me**
😂😂 Yus, I lost it at this point.
ごめなさい
I don't know what that means either. Someone could explain to me? I'm a brazilian.
@@asuna932 if you have subtitles on you can see it says I'm sorry lol
She is just an extrovert who found its introvert
That's a a shoujo romance trope
+migl3 31673 Nah, Rachel is actually an introvert. If you look a bit closer during their early videos you can tell. Plus, Rachel revealed in a previous video that she is an introvert.
@@Endorphinn_ Are you replying to the original comment above?
@@AniWho268 Yes. I don't know why the nickname isn't there. I thought it was automatic like for yours at the beginning of this comment. I surely made a mistake somewhere.
@@Endorphinn_ Oh ok cool. Just making sure.
“Are you being passive-aggressive with me??”
“I don’t know what that word means.”
Somehow I found this very amusing.
no only you ^^
Same
i replayed it
I do too. Hehe
That I'm sorry at the last. Lmao...
*"Every cultural difference"*
Rachel: You do this for what though
Jun: Why not
Rachel: But why
Jun: Why not
He sounded like Ice Bear when he apologized.
neomu areumda areumda what if jun is secretly ice bear 😳 HAHAH
@@yunhoho broo 😳😳😳
OMG XD
YESSS!!
Yesss
Jun: Gomenasai
Translation: please don't kill me
Epic translation 😂
🤣
No problem
I thought it was I’m sorry. I guess captions suck.
Mythical Miko It was a joke lol.
the struggle for non-confrontational people is real
The real problem is when "non-confrontational people" chastise others for not being a doormat. I'm not going to eat an entrée I didn't order just because you would :)
schmoyoho what the hell is schmoyoho doing here?
John Doe true--i don't think either should chastise the other type, they're both livin their lives
schmoyoho who are you replying to?
yes!
Rachel: rants in English
Jun: switches to Japanese and does the same thing 😂
Who finds it satisfying when he talks in Japanese?
meeeeee
It’s very calming to me,
Firass Kiki yesss
Mee
meeee
Actually laughed out loud at the cat food secret spice scene. The use of "what's wrong with you" was so clever and cute.
Omg same..
Same. Can't believe I found UA-camrs who are actually funny.
Being an asian, i also agree that jun’s apologise sounds sincere 🤣🤣🤣🤣
abcd1234 Sameeee
Same lol
I didn't think it was insincere, but I would expect more emotion. I find that quite interesting how it can sound different depending on what culture one grew up with.
I’m black and I don’t show emotion lol
Yeah! It’s weird how some people take emotion differently! I thought it was pretty sincere! In my opinion, he sounded serious like “I’m sorry” rather than “IM sO SORRYY!!”
I always come back to this video because it really does show a American Japanese language learner the way Japanese people do emote. The way Jun says I’m sorry is so full of respect, and that’s how they show their sincerity. English is such a nuance language and honestly you could consider it to be quite tonal. We kind of express emotions over the top. We heavily rely on body language as well to express our feelings. In Japanese you rely on your words, because each word has a deep and strong meaning and is dependent on situation.
My boyfriend is Japanese and I’m Mexican American, and we encounter so many similar problems lol. We speak 3 languages, I don’t think anyone can understand us sometimes
Suena triste y divertido ;-;
Hope everyone
If that's your real name it's a perfect example of your American and Mexican
Thats just soooo cool haha
Bueno el hecho de que te comuniques casi perfectamente con un Japones ya es un chingo de avance sabes :^
“Are you being passive aggressive with me?!”
“... Gomen nasai.”
LunarAngel
That means "don't kill me"
Bryanna Garcia i think she did it on purpose
DarkSCOT
I can see ;-;
"I don't know what that word means."
My mom:CABRON PORQUE NO LAVASTES LOS TRASTES!!
me: SI NADA MAMA PORQUE ESTAN GRITANDO!!!
mom:CABRON NO SOY GRITANDO!!
My Mexican Parents♡
“Are you being passive-aggressive with me?”
*I dUnNo wHaT tHaT wOrD mEanS*
(with VERY EMOTIONAL voice)
(-Rachel's look: "Jun! I'll kick your ass!!")
I DUno WHat THat MEanS
Me to :p
Banterisk ee
“You are being passive aggressive with me?”
“I don’t know what that word means”
LMFAOOOOOOOOOOO
"..."
">:(..."
"gomen nasai ._."
Rachel: Hey have you seen my-
Jun: **downing Rachel's food**
Rachel: - snacks...
Jun: **windows shutdown sound**
Workman concept!
Gomenasai °¬°
Read that as "Drowning Rachel's food"
Jun.exe has stopped
Me(Korean)and my wife ( American) . We do have same issues!!! Haha I love your video! Thank you!
as a Chinese i used to date a Canadian and an American. they would always say that i am expressionless when i am at the verge of giving up a limb.
i gave up wondering why do they need to be so dramatic.
somedays i wonder if i just exercise my freedom of speech and let everything out in utter disregard without any due consideration of the others around me would i fit in better. LOL
@@shadowmod3 .... lol! I love your comment.
@@Five_tailed_fox Because show must go on.
You have a beautiful family! God bless
I am Canadian and my girlfriend is Korean. Idioms and expressions confuse, anger, or upset her, even if I am trying to be sincere. The "what's wrong with you" is the tip of my iceberg.
And THIS is why I'm single. Cuz I can't talk to people even in my own language
Hello, Same, Byeeee,
Or you're afraid that you Mom may rob you in your sleep?
Yo sameeeee i cant speak fluent tagalog without thinking if its wrong or right ghdhdjvyjdjdj
Seen 109 likes and got irritated so enjoy 110 likes. 😂✌
YES SAME!
In Brasil, most specifically in Rio, no One would argue with a Guy who’s cut in line. Not because we’re not trying to make a scene, but because we don’t wanna get stabbed or shot.
I think in the US women tend to be more vocal about things like line cutting because if you're a man you're expected to "back things up". I always just assume if someone cuts they're just looking for a confrontation.
Não só no Rio, parça. Barato tá loco em todo lugar.
...oh god..
OMG
Uhhhhhh 😳
They're a really good looking couple
They are definitely some beautiful humans
Right? I'm jealous of both of them 😳
Yes, indeed.
Yeah, while I'm here being single.
i can hear the bisexuals coming hehe
Jun’s voice is so calming. Rachel’s voice is just awesome and makes me really happy because of the tone of her voice.
Jun is mellow. Rachel is bright and cheerful. I think its a good representation and marriage between two very different cultures/countries.
Wrong video, then.
This is American/Japanese, not Korean xD
less facial expression and tone = less yelling
*or reversed*
kamikze i know that feeling.
kamikze armyyy
My parents tho
kamikze relate
that pfp tho 😂
Rachel: “Are you being passive aggressive with me?”
Jun: “I’m not sure what that means.”
Rachel’s Mind: *commencing count down sequence*
Jun: *i m s o r r y*
The way he said “I’m sorry, I’ll get better.” in the moment...Sounded pretty sincere to me.
Yeah! it sounded so cute and thoughtful of him
I admire how lovely and calm Jun is. I feel I should take a leaf out of his book. Let things go if they are not a big deal. Much less stressful.
Katie Hayes omg fr
Is your boyfriend on your picture an Indian?
If I was as calm as Jun I wouldn't be the same person 😂 I'm the opposite of calm I'm passionate and loud
@@Teddy-fz2jb bruh you can obviously see the dude in the profile pic is a white man😑
Jeez dude,the joke didn't get any attention untill u guys commented,it's a joke
I think it's pretty hilarious when you look at the differences. Americans can feel uneasy when a lack of emotion is involved but the Japanese seem like they see that as well mannered.
What i really want to see. A Japanese and Italian couple. Imagine that argument.😄
Or a japanese man and a mexican woman...yikes 💀💀💀
@@annettebonteri3234 😂
@@annettebonteri3234 Oof, I'm like a mix of Mexican and White and I'm over here wanting a Japanese soulmate. Let's see how that goes in the future lol
Cheopsticks Trash you can’t pick the race of a soulmate
She just seems very excentric and extroverted and he is shy and quiet. Even if they were the same culture they probably wouldn't understand each other haha
Opposites attract
@@supereggtartersauce6464 yep
yup i was just thinking these are alot of thing my introverted bf does and were bother americans
both*
Very true. I’m American and I’m very much like Jun with the customer service or cutting in line thing. I get so embarrassed when people I’m with confront people over what I consider small. I’ve never ever sent food back or called someone out for cutting in line.
6:04 best part
Rachel:ARE YOU BEING PASSIVE-AGGRESIVE WITH ME?!
Jun:I dont know what that word means *o_o*
Rachel: >:(
Jun: :| *im sorry*
I like your jollibee profile hehehe
Thx
Ey! Filipino boi
I am filipino too :)
And he ended up apologizing hahaha best married guy face ever hahahaha
I love jun, he is so funny
Elosayk 0 *im sorry*
He’s already taken.🤣
Gomendasai...
I'm sorry.
Elosayk 0 i
I honestly read Jun's "Gomenasai" as "Please don't hurt me."
Same
Cherrie Getison TRUE
There was a sad puppy-like look there, with hints of, "I'm cute right?" and "Don't stomp me". It finishes with a big, "Those eyes hurt my soul"
This is what men actually mean when they say: "I'm sorry."
We're not sorry. We don't even know why we're sorry.
We just don't want to be killed or neutered.
That's bad. Please don't do that.
Cherrie Getison lmaoooooo
Jun’s soft spoken and almost deadpan chaos is hilarious
“So maybe it’s the cat food i use as a secret spice”
“ARE YOU BEING PASSIVE AGGRESSIVE TO ME?”
“.... I don’t know what that means...”
“...” **angry glare**
“Gomenasai.”
I’m laughing so hard-
Meihua MZ same
AHAHA SAME 😂😂
best part so far 😂 they are funny
Me too😂😂😂
I laughed much harder than in was supposed to🤣🤣🤣🤣
"I'm sorry..." *Jun's poker face*
Princeless! XD
what does princeless mean?
It means he has a princess instead.
In this usage, yes. More generally, it just means so good you could never put a price on it.
WHAT'S WRONG WITH YOU?!
(I especially liked Jun's scary potato chip surprised face at the start)
Abroad in Japan Hey Chris!
you wanted to say crisp
noloco
Never had 2 words mean the difference between smack in the face and a hug.
Heya Chris!
jun: dont worry about it just let him cut in line
rachel: why?
jun: (rmbrs the yakuza)
OMG I LOVED the part where Jun just starts speaking in japanese fast to Rachel gets it XD
“Are you being passive-aggressive with me?”
“I don’t know what that word means.
...
GOMENASAI."
Really I like that sound ahhaha
"Are you being passive-aggressive with me?"
"...I don't know what that means."
*Death stare*
*Proceeds to apologize in Japanese.*
I'm dead XD
Passive-aggressive behavior is described as having hostility against someone but rather than confronting the person, you avoid openly expressing your negative feelings. And as a result, you keep doing subtle things that might annoy the other party greatly.
For example: avoiding a person, giving sarcastic comments, pouting, backhanded compliments, insulting a person while smiling, refusal to do something without a solid reason, refusal to acknowledge any problems, etc.
"What´s wrong with you?" damn languages can be cruel
I know right...and unforgiving too. 😅
It reminds me of some languages that have multiple words for "why". If I recall correctly, both Russian and Japanese do this.
"Why are you crying?" gets dicey if you use the wrong method, as one implies information about the situation while the other implies intent. So, "Why are you crying?" as in 'what happened to make you cry?' versus, 'for what purpose are you crying?', the latter being somewhat... accusational.
When you ask "What's wrong 'with you'?" it sounds accusational, depending on the context, intonation, affect, etc. At it's core, "What's wrong?" can only reference the situational wrongness, while 'with you' can mean all kinds of things, mostly negative because it puts the attention to 'you' as the subject of the question, rather than (or in tandem with) the problem, and then it just gets all ugly from there. If 'with' had separate words for 'in your space' and 'in you personally', it'd probably be less a thing. (One of the benefits of complex case systems.)
@@SongOfChaos1 in Russian we have two words that are constantly messed up by the learners: "pochemu" which means "why", and "zachem" which means "for what purpose?" And we also have "dorogoy" which means "dear" and "expensive" at the same time😁. That's why we can say "dear car" instead of "expensive car".
His sorry in Japanese seemed like he was ready to sacrifice his life for your forgiveness!!
NickieB lol for real tho
I don't get it. It's practically toneless yet so ridiculously polite and sincere.
NickieB This comment made me crack the fuck up LOL
what? Really?? It sounded sooooo deadpan and just... toneless XDXD Wow
Dan Kayur It's all about choosing the right type of apology. Even if it's toneless in delivery, the fact that he's giving a very long and involved apology makes it very polite. Delivering it in an effective context is where you get sincerity from; in front of a crowd at the incident doesn't show sincerity, but privately with no one else watching is much more sincere.
If we judged apologies by delivery, it would mean that we'd have no leniency against kids or people who are learning the customs we grew up with. It'd be too inflexible, though some people do it anyways because they're more judgmental.
Pls enjoy our dumb skits video
We had a lot of fun fighting for you
Rachel & Jun Thank You!
I enjoy it ssoooooo muuuchhhh
Rachel & Jun this made my day!
xD this is absolutely fantastic
AAAAAAaaaaaa yes thank you for fighting for us! XD
Love this! 10/10 for acting skills! 👍🏻
haha thank you!! :D
Taylor R テイラー Taylor!!!! :D
Taylor R テイラー /💕
Taytay!!😘😘
Taylor R テイラー I see you everywhere 😂😂😂
My wife is Japanese, and we always communicate in Japanese because that’s how we started our relationship. But it’s frustrating for me because I feel like I’m at a disadvantage in arguments. Sometimes I have really good points I want to make, but I can’t adequately explain them. But on the plus side, it forces me to think before speaking instead of blurting out emotional retorts, so our arguments rarely get out of control.
Jun: *speaks japanese*
Rachel: arE YOU BEING PASSIVE AGGRESSIVE WITH ME??!1!?
As a Brazilian dating a Korean for almost 7 years, I can confirm "I don't know what that word means" is the sentence we say the most to each other.
hwalism You’re not Brazilian
ToxicCircuit well looking by some channels she subscribed...seems like she is o.O
Bagabones Felis how do u know??? I look full on white but im 100 percent Mexican
chelsey horta lies
ToxicCircuit pinche mamón mis padres son de michoacan guey si aprecio estos youtubers pero acusando a una persona nunca sabes 😡
That's a great "what's wrong" and "what is wrong with you" comparison.
'm American. I took it to mean ok honey tell me more about how you are feeling. Elaborate further so that maybe I can help you.
This is so funny because I'm not a native English speaker so like Jun, I thought that's the correct way to say it (I even thought it's more polite/formal). Believe me, back then the English courses I took, didn't teach the subtle differences of those types of phrases. I learned that saying that would only make your partner even angrier LOL even though I really wanted to know what happened to him, if something bad happened :D
@@tracys169 what's wrong with you is okay for any politeness. the biggest problem would be the tone, and since many people are using the phrase "what's wrong with you" to address someone of being annoying or stupid.
now read it loud when it's capitalized...
"what's wrong with YOU?"
"WHAT'S wrong with you?"
"what's WRONG with you?"
"what's wrong WITH you?"
if you know which one is the polite one, then you're good to go
"He just cut in line"
"Uh huh, yeah?" *Studies bottle*
Eddie Roy *studying intensifies*
they are both so ridiculously good-looking i just can't
ARE YOU SERIOUS? THE GUY'S FACE LOOKS LIKE HE RAN INTO A WALL
@@mariosimpostor731 i don't know if you're being racist or just plain rude.
MARIO'S IMPOSTOR block you, why are you even here? Are you toxic or just wanting attention?
@@mariosimpostor731
Fuck off.
Cant What!!!, Nakukuputo nu yang nakakagugo na yan umayos ke nga.
Jun : *eats snack*
Rachel : *comes in*
*Stares intensely*
i m s o r r y
As a half japanese person his sorry in the beginning sounds very sincere to me😂
🤣😂😂OMG how!!!!?
1:08 that's a sincere "I'm sorry", as is 1:30
I’m Indian and thought that seemed genuine as well. I can see his sincerity through the blank face haha 😂
I feel like the quiet unemotional verbal apology is sincere, but the flat out unblinking stare right into your eyes is aggressive, so if someone apologized to me like that, I'd be wondering what the heck was going on.
EDIT: I just went back and watched it again, and on second viewing, I think the stare is more of a "deer caught in the headlights" look, so it sort of carries the emotion of the American "I'm SOOOO sorry!!" without actually using the words. 😂
Who cares about the fact that he took her snacks
WE SHOULD CARE ABOUT THE FACT THAT HE OPENED THEM UPSIDE DOWN
YYeeeaassssss 😂😂
I always do that
@@Mellow_boii I always do that
@@ikyikychumchum9621
I do to😂
I do that lol! I always feel that the flavors sink to the bottom of the bag 🙈
Jun: I don't know what that word means...
Rachel: *death stare*
Jun: *monotone* I'm sorry.
This part made me laugh so much because he brought back the (seemingly not) genuine I'm sorry xD
Laura my favorite part too lmao
At least he recognizes the Death Stare.
I fell out laughing at that as well! (^O^)
Laura yes this cracked me up too!
I laughed so hard I accidentally pushed over the folded laundry pile OTL
OMGGGGGGGGG, 6:05 had me rolling!!!
Rachel: "Are you being passive-agressive with me?" *glare*
Jun: "...I don't know what that word means..."
Rachel: *intense glaring*
Jun: "gomen nasai"
I know XD I couldn't stop laughing at that point
Niki Nak *laughing*
Niki Nak i was deadddd
I knew it had to come xD
To be honest tho, what is passive aggressive in Japanese? Or in any other language? Translation is hard :(
Rachel: Americans don’t wear leopard print shirts !!!
Me wearing a leopard print shirt: 🤨🧐😦
American *men lmao well not straight anyway which is the majority of men
@@Nami-bu2qf this might surprise you but um wearing a leopard print shirt doesn't make you gay.. or means you're gay.. honestly most people don't wear leopard prints.. it's just women and not men in general,but if a man wears one it doesn't mean he is gay
You have to be a super badass, universe-saving tier FF hero to wear that. And emo hair.
@@magk2524 yea it just means he really likes men.
@@downey2294 because obviously leopard=gay
Jun: 👁👄👁
Rachel: ...
Jun: I am sorry 👁👄👁
Rachel: ...👁➖👁
Jun: 👁👄👁 I am so sorry
Rachel*
LMAOOO😂😭💀
@@Ząbzupazębowa r/whooooooosh
@@Ząbzupazębowa r/whooooooosh
@@generaldefenseyt6517 you dont know how to use a r/whoooosh do you?
"American hair *cannot* do that, that is Japanese hair" LMAO
TheOneMastodon I said the same thing XD
European hair can't do that lol
Native American hair cannot do that
Dominican hair can't do that
black people hair can not do that
You two are great.
Fossil Draws probably a mix of both
@@lilliintravichit5368 How do you find out if Lady Gaga is dead? Po Po Po Poke her face! LOLOLOLOLOL
I like how they’re arguing quietly about talking to the line cutter, and their friend is just standing there like: ‘This is fine, everything is fine’ like a rpg npc
I find the
Rachel does a mad face
Jun: gomenesai
I find it so funny
im anime too. lets go outside and play football maybe?
"I'm sorry" is actually spelled as komenasai. But yes I agree
It‘s spelled gomenasai. ごめんなさい. Don‘t confuse こ and ご. It happened (and still happens) to me all the time too~
@@JG-xb2fl ah, thank you.
Rachel: Jun, i ate all your rice
Jun:
*OMAE WA MOU SHINDERU*
Jesus Christ NANI?!
Itz JamilaPlayz i know your watching yaoi, Jamila.
Jesus Christ ??? ._.
@@ultimatedumbass3779 what's wrong with that? ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
お前はもう死んでいる。
*_OMAEWA MOU SHINDEIRU_*
"They suppose to wear masks. He coughed in my face". Wow still relevant and scary.
"Look at his hair,look.at his emo hair...that's japanese hair" lmao
Especially Sasuke
No thats anime hair
He has the same hairstyle that 80% of anime characters have. (I thought we were talking about Jun)
Rachel:* “Oh my gosh why do ppl not cover their mouths when they cough”* well uh... that aged well....I’ll just leave it at that....
Ikr? Corona vibes
Yeah! She mentioned the masks, and I was like "wait a min, when was this video??". Nope, not 2020.... yeesh
I searched for this comment :D
Whoa!!!
@@danielleking262 people already wore masks in Asia
Have you tried changing jun’s batteries or turning him off and on ?
I wanna say maybe put him in rice....but I don't know if I can say that here.
😂
@@ev7985 OH NO YOU DIDN'T 😂😂😂
she definitely turns him on 😏
E V *O M G GIRLLL*
@@depression6964 OOF SHOTS FIRED BANG BANG RELOAD
Juns chill level is godly
-Are you being passive aggressive with me??
+I don't know what that word means.
-😐😐😐
+Gomennasai
Circé the best part😂
I laughed so hard at that part 😂😂😂
Circé so funny 😂😂
OMGGGGG I always want to call out people who cut in line !!!!!!!!! My fiancé (Japanese) always tells me not to say anything lol....
Although one time, he did and ... I HAVE NEVER BEEN SO PROUD 😭😭😭😭😭😭
😂😂😂😂😂
それもおもしろいだ😂
osharegilol
I'm from the west and i hate people who cut in line in china, this happened at the world expo. gawd made me sick to the stomach (cuz its my motherland so to speak)
Seriously? I went “EHHHHHH!” In the loudest voice ever and I make sure the entire store heard me. Mainly because I am tiny and look like a child. So everyone now know this huge dude just bullied and cut in front of a kid. Ultimate embarrassment.
Rachel: “I can’t tell if your being serious”
Jun: *blank staring intensifies*
Edit: BRUH WHY DOES THIS HAVE SO MANY LIKES- UH- ありがと?!
*ありがとう you forgot the "u" in the end
You forgot le う
"Are you being passive-aggressive with me?"
"I don't know what that word means."
Aaaand *that's* where I lost it.
THEN THE EMOTIONLESS “I’m sorry” AFTER ALSUSU
I feel like the apology thing is less about emoting and more about the social value of an apology. In America, a genuine apology is about conveying real emotional regret for pain/harm/inconvenience caused by your actions. My impression of Japan is that a genuine apology isn’t about feeling bad so much as acknowledging a breach of social order and showing submission to the system. You don’t have to be “sorry,” you just have to be willing to humble yourself a bit to re-establish the pecking order.
animebishieluver I think you might be right.
Xeph Xen It's not just lie. It's more to be considerate.
I think it more has to do that in English, you can say ‘sorry’ sarcastically or genuinely just from the tone of your voice. So you have to say it in a specific way to convey that it’s genuine. And in Japanese, saying sorry isn’t really said in a sarcastic way so it’s always genuine.
animebishieluver Nay. In america, people are more comfortable in opening up about one's "emotions." Asians tend to be less expressive but their words of apology are more sincere.
Funny, as a Japanese I was thinking exactly opposite. I thought that in America people need to be over-dramatic while making apology since it's a more of a performance rather then showing actual feelings. Since Japanese tend to have more subtle expression and read between the line communicating style. The fact this comment is upvoted shows how Japanese are always viewed as those stereotypical "heartless, emotionless people who would just follow social orders " or whatever the western media alway conveys. I personally think it's one of the worst dehumanization out there.
I can see a meme of something bad happening and a zoomed in clip of Jun's face saying "I'm sorry" 😂
DJMxmstr12 this needs to be a meme
I've never wanted something to be a meme more than this
I will probably end up doing that, and send it to one...Or all of my friends..
Master Chief!
Lol.. I think his way of apology in japanese is very nice.. and sounds sincere..
That’s how I apologize 😂
Rachel: Say something
Jun: *thinks
Rachel: Say something
Jun: *thinks
We can all agree, their relationship is PRECIOUS
YESSSS
You guys are sooo cute!! 😍😍
Four Queue 1.1k liked! 👍♥️
こめんちやいにめんくちい
totally agree with you
They areee 😆😆
Four Queue_ I have this type of comments
He's chill about everything xD
Jun: "I'm sorry."
Rachel: (X) Doubt
BOTH OF YOU ARE THE CUTEST MARRIED COUPLE I'VE everrr met..
You met them?!
@@vladgina no, they haven't. They mean that they've seen
MrKitty ' I know, just teasing.
Jun's expression while saying "gomenasai" looks like he's terrified to me😂. The opposite of emotionless: very scared.
At least scared is an emotion. ;^)
Scared cat-
Me as a native japanese speaker encourage Jun’s apology.
I felt it
So asian. Such wow.
@@bomcstoots1 What's with the snarky comment?
@@stroberies Yes I know I felt it was rude however.
I am Chinese, and in America, if somebody refuses something offered to them, they generally actually don't want it. Which is interesting
I'm not even Asian and I still felt that lol
4:53
Ignis is a real name of latin origin meaning "fiery". Same with the names of noctis w/c is latin for "night" and luna w/c is latin for "moon"... 😁
Sorry. I like name meanings a lot. 😆
Ok but lets take a moment to appreciate how many language's they put in their closed captions
“I don’t know what that word means” 😂😂😂
6:12 "are you being passive aggressive with me?" "....I don't know what that word means" 😂
I don't know what that means neither, anyone explain "passive aggressive" to me plz ?
нυrrιcane
500th like
gomen nasai...
6:10 clear emotion.
If been frozen due to a unpleasant experience an/or situation, only to hope an pray that apologizing will help.
Yet, expecting the worse.
That is the expression he has.
Like a thousand different scenarios are running through his head at that split moment.
I love this. Especially when Jun speaks Japanese. :)
So sweet and ever cute. The way Rachel going at it in English. And Jun, explaining himself so calmly in Japanese. Just so precious. I didn't see any passive aggressive part in Jun, Rachel! 😊