Dude when you asked those 2 guys about the direction to Malabar hill, in hindi they said ‘I’m sending him to a longer route because it’s beautiful from there’ as he assumed you as a tourist. That’s why you got different directions.
Hassan Rasheed Pakistanis have the same culture/nature as Indians, it’s just that religion divided us. Before the British came we were all living peacefully and happily.
@@bharatAV peacefully and happily? Bro sorry to burst your bubble but peacefully, happily and even united for that matter wouldn't be appropriate words to describe conditions of india pre british raj. Rather you should be thankfull to british for uniting the remaining india otherwise there had been many countries originating from it not just Pakistan. Kind of like eu. Here's a cool video on this topic ua-cam.com/video/UQdMxXcfMRc/v-deo.html Indians like to believe religion dived india but the fact of the matter is there has never been a united india... just deal with it
@M.A Alam that’s just bs. The British never wanted to unite India as one. Their own policy was “divide and rule”. It was thanks to Sardar Patel that India is what it is today, otherwise it would be looking like what Europe is today.
When a policeman asked you not to shoot, the reason for that is during the attacks in 2008, the areas which were attacked were first videographed and studied before. That is why the police nowadays are taking more care. Happy to see a vigilant police officer! Hope you enjoyed your stay here in India!!
Amazing video. Born and raised in Germany I lived in Bandra West as an expat in my mid / end twenties from 2008 to 2010 and still consider Mumbai as one of my hometowns. So many life-changing experiences. So diverse feelings and impressions every single day.
I love it when you talked about controlling your emotion, and I also love the way you addressed the situation by not calling it dirty or poor directly but used a more respective words. Nice video
I was in Mumbai several years ago. It was very interesting. I just stayed in the old part and walked everyday. There was so much to see and people were very friendly. India in general is an amazing place to visit. Yes, there are a lot of problems, but still you’ll experience and see things that are incredible.
Mate, got it in one, I took my family to India and lived for 2 years, we lived in the suburbs not in an expat compound, we traveled throughout the country and met some of the most engaging beautiful people imaginable, the difference between the haves and the have nots is huge, and always in your face, I fell in love with people first and the country side and villages are just so welcoming, I rode an Enfield from Pune to Goa with my youngest son on the back of the bike, took 4 weeks stayed in villages and had to force myself to go home
@@issbelvillastella5063 that's pure nonsense. India's TFR is now at near replacement level (probably already below replacement level). And even the poor here, care about their kids a looot.
@@issbelvillastella5063 well you are partially right but not everyone do that, only a few and kids get stolen every where not only in India, almost more than half of Syrian refugee kids are missing from camps but this is World and it isn't equal for everyone
I lived in Mumbai for 1 year... The vibe of the city is different which I never felt in any other cities.. i don't know how to explain.. As you said one feel "more alive" in Mumbai.. Very diverse city indeed ❤️
Mumbai is a nightmare for students. Most of the college buildings are dilapidated and I don't think the government will ever do anything to rebuild them....atleast in this century. Most of the colleges don't provide hostels and even if they do, they resemble the houses u get to see in Dharavi (world's largest slum).......and renting out an apartment is again too costly. If your accommodation is far away from your college than u need to go by the local train, which again is a nightmare. There are scammers all around trying to fool young and naive students telling you that they will provide you a PG in low price. Mumbai is good for tourists who get to see the city only superficially for one week or so. For the vast majority of middle class people who live here, this city just drains out your energy and turns you into a depressed and aged person. Delhi, Bangalore, Poona, Hyderabad, Chennai are much much better cities. Ahmedabad is by far the best.
I want share you guys something ..I have same ? Regarding back ground music and some times I found same background music in foreigners video so I deep digging and I found out that it's very hard to find out copyright free music ..e.g if they put famous song or something in background so UA-cam will banned that channel ..so when they search for copyright free music they find this kind of music . interesting in it.!?
Mumbai looks like a nightmare for introvert people, with all the random strangers staring and approaching you in the streets, including extremely pushy street vendors
Sadly the economic disparity means that the rich wall themselves in making their world inaccessible to the rest. This is why you’ll notice that the expensive hotels are way more expensive than the West. The high price is to keep the massive number of non-rich people out. The slums near the rich towers house people who provide services to the rich. Nice video. Keep up the good work.
Otherwise if you don't wall yourself if you have wealt you will see a thousand beggars standing day and night on your door they might even rob your blhouse protect yourself from all that chaos rather than facing those ScSt acts the poor usually impose on the rich
@@covenawhite4855 they can't when you have 60% of the population as labourers that it's hard to pay a person a better pay when he is only pulling bricks and cleaning after trash , 60% of the better paying jobs are reserved for the depressed classes who can score low marks but still get a government job
billionaire living in disgusting environments. could spend small amount and clean the shit in his neighbourhood. even a dog uses his tail to clean place when it sits
@@khuddadadchoudhrey5850 his appt is super clean and luxurious in fact the most expensive piece of real estate in the world. His appt and the complex it is in is super clean u saw the dirt and filth is more than a few blocks away. Also is it his job to clean up that filth or the govts? I agree with u on the fact he could do more for charity and helping poor Indian and his fellow countrymen some of who live in terrible conditions just a few blocks away but is it his duty or responsibility though? I believe the govt should take up that responsibilty
@@mousa1294 the guy was inside the building and spoke nothing.He just saw camera and positively nodded the head. But yeah cops wont let the people if someone comes from few specific countries due to some obvious reason.
Mumbai is like the epitome of diversity. You go on a road, on your left side, there will be lavish buildings of 20 floors, and to your right side, there will be small houses. To your left, there will be fancy restaurants. To your right, there will be roadside food stalls. You can live with the highest cost of living and at the same time you can live for the lowest cost of living.
Most Indian cities are like that because Indian authorities do not kick out people for being poor. You can live in a railway platform, put up a store in the roadside without any permit. Build a hut in some unused government land and no one will bother you unless necessary.
18:29 the priceless smile one that man's face. The western world is full of people who don't have time for anyone but themselves.... that man who likely didn't have a proper house to live in was so excited about shaking hands with a foreigner.... India is awesome.
No, we are actually interested in meeting white people, it's like a cultural flex, talk to them, take selfies, if you're black or Asian, you won't receive this kind of behavior. Also these people have enough empty time to stare at foreign people, in the West people are busy.
If people say "don't know the route" then you might think like being Indian they don't know? Waste fellow". So they want to act like "smart". So they will say some random route instead of saying "I don't know". That's why you will get different answers from different people in india. You need to ask many people and if majority of people say same answer then route is valid. 😀
@@sumanthhebri yeah russell peters said the same joke about arabs. He's like they don't know how to say "i don't know". First thing that came to mind when he said everyone in India gives different directions.
India is an amazing place I’ve only visited south India Goa region but still amazing such an experience! People are beautiful and the culture is incredible.
I am turning 65 next month and I can’t tell you how many people I told, “Work as a server in a restaurant when you are young and the people skills you learn will serve you well the rest of your life.” I firmly believe that!
I so agree I worked as a server in many resturants in my teens and early twenties. It was very eye opening to human behavior I am 65 now also and it definitely gave me people skills that lasted me my whole lifetime!!!
When I was in India (for business) I was told to stay near to Powai Lake Hotels and it was so luxurious I was shocked by the contrast with the surroundings, hotel was all gold and marble and I have never experience such as ostentation not even in the most developed countries, I really understand the feeling of your experience, at some point you just adapt to the different realities people live in India
Yes this is typical india. The private establishments like these hotels and private homes are palaces. The second you step outside their grounds you will see exactly the opposite. This by the way has been there for centuries, the haves of India are in a totally different planet than have nots, despite being neighbours
That why some of these places are so expensive and still look like that, its like private rich space, and block out all the poor stuff. going in and out is difference of world.
4:00 I think the one guy is saying to the other something like "no I want him to see it from the top, better view" and then the other guy is like yeahhhh yeahhhh
It's not rocket science actually. Nodding (up and down) means "yes", shaking (sideways, straight) means "no", tilting (sideways a couple of times) means "ok".
Wow, completely different in India, people's friendly, polite child, especially the beach is very comfortable, very beautiful, and completely different impression, is worth traveling city of mumbai, and thanks for sharing! 1
@@moundain4220 south is also richer brother but plz tell southern part of india as it hurts being an indian when someone calls soith india north india as my whole ancestors gave their life for india
I absolutely love this gentleman's attitude. He is ready to try anything new. He is a foreigner and he is walking down the streets of mumbai. kudos to him.
My journey to India was also incredible , I liked the way culture varied from South to North , even languages and skin tones . At last I got that India has many cultures and everyone there is different , some r friendly some r very rude , some always bother others some are totally ignorant .
@Everything Of Indian Cinema. yeah but only a few form a nation, like the United states, likewise Union of India or India. Remember European Union, African Union and OPEC r still not unified Nations
@Everything Of Indian Cinema. I said that India as a nation has all of the things the guy mentioned. Many major cultures, major religions, some of which even originated here.
Yep.. It's called white privilege, I guess Mumbai still hasn't learnt its lessons when a white guy like him called David Headley recce the important locations in Mumbai and gave, it to his Pakistani handler who trained the 26/11 Attackers of Mumbai. Good job Mumbai.
@@hollycow8171 But u should think one thing that south india is ahead in education but north indian are very very rich and supercar u see in Mumbai are mostly of north indians
Your wonderful videos fill in a lot of gaps for me - I was born in Agra 1947 but left immediately for the UK. I've never visited India, so - keep em coming....
@@wiseguy8705It's actually changing more and more in recent years. You need to note that the slums is right next to the rich areas. It's not separated You can look up the newer modern cities in India as well as how Mumbai has changed in the last few years.
Fascinating to see that much has changed in India, but nothing has changed! Those big new motorways and bridges were not there when I visited, but the upmarket apartments, cheek by jowel with the street poverty and the curious citizenry enquiring where you have come from and answering questions with that enigmatic headnod... You are so right everyone should visit India at least once and if they do get out in those streets which are unlike almost anywhere else.
@@saminyasir1847 no it is not, it may happen in Delhi or Agra but in Mumbai those type of things rarely happens. Mumbai is one of the safest city in south Asia.
@@BeHumanWithOutBorders hahaha. Just few hands of India are more than your whole country. Trust me. Making few million population rich is not a big deal. But when you deal with billions. Number of rich people here in India are far more than most of the developed country. But few people like you with box mindset will think that there is no money in India. I actually feel sad for people like you. I hope you earn money and travel to India someday
@@Vijay.1234-h3j Husky Boy your country comes at 86th level according to transparent International, and 84 millions Indian live under “ extreme poverty” . I wish you knew before telling fairytale, you shouldn’t be proud this situation. India is a developing nation. It can go up if people like you would work rather than just boasting about theirselves . And I don’t have to come and dream about living in India. I live where your Indians dream to come and spend millions for getting visa and sometimes loose their lives while trying to access here through traffickers. My ex government divided India into Pakistan and India. I just support and stand with good cause.
@@bellxp8877I'm talking about the countries in South Asia, south east asia and east asia not the middle east or the western most part of asia like turkey, and yea i am telling this only because I've met people from there. You can exclude Singapore too
Truth be told China has improved its poverty percentage and their infrastructure and road systems are way better than India. Just admit the truth guys.
I am now experiencing this type in street culture shock in San Francisco that I used to get on childhood trips to India. Street people in India are so entrepreneurial and trying to change their life. Can’t say the same for the decline in SF. I’m so glad you learned a lot!! It’s a great mind shift, right?
it cannot be colonial government its occupation government. Please can India finally get it "right". You were "invaded" "occupied" "enslaved" land & resources stolen on an industrial scale maybe the largest in human history !!! Then came the ethnic manipulation & cleansing, wiping out language and anything else to turn you into servants in perpetuity. Germán Nazi had really good teacher ( that’s what they say…seriously !!) Nazi attempted to do the same in 4 years in Europe. Nazi were not "colonial" in France or Greece...although they did try that trick. Are Greeks & French smarter than Indians’ ? They do not call it “colonial” of the German Authority power ! Please do not refer to the murderers and thieves as "imperial" " colonial" it’s simple not true. Those who peddle this have little ethics and even less morals, Like the Queen of the UK, you know the UK, it’s the same as the EU but the Anglos cannot control the EU like they control the UK so they spat the dummy and left, they are control freaks of the first order, psychopathic culture, take a look at India, it’s what they leave behind as locusts everywhere they go…but do not got their home it’s a different story. That German woman who is the current Queen of the UK, yep the one that refuses to hand over the gemstone her ancestors stole….now there is a role model for a nation of thieves…never give stolen goods back and pretend you are “above” all the crimes of the past… ! Suppose the modern day Anglos are scared you many ask back the stuff they stole !
@@cypriotsinsydneyaustralia557 Stop. Quarter of the world was colonised by briton. Wealth lies in culture, education and inventions, governmental systems...physical wealth isn't permanent. We indians including you should understand it now and stop cribbing. And bad things happened with everyone, literally everyone. Remember Nanking? China got back up right? As simple as that. We weren't strong enough back then hence why bad things happened to us...
I live right in the center of SF and it has gone through increased changes since the beginning of Covid for sure. The contrast between rich and poor have always been noticeable here but much more visible in recent times. Also, it is similar to what he experienced in the first neighborhood that he went to - street encampments right on the same streets with million dollar condos. The contrast and desperation is palpable here now. More people homeless than ever before and living in tent cities and doorways.
@@cypriotsinsydneyaustralia557 I like your demeanor towards us, thanks a lot for that...but please don't give indians confirmation to let them keep on cribbing about bygones. Regardless thanks for such an Outlook if you are non indian.
Thank you for showing the rich side of India, unlike some media outlets **cough** BBC, CNBC **cough** Also, its rare to see nice cars on Indian roads bcuz the traffic is crazy, so understandably they won't risk scratching up their cars (insurance there is a pain in the butt). More than likely they'll have something like a Suzuki or a Toyota to go into town and leave their nice cars aside for special occasions.
@Fasih Mosharraf It is $8000 kiddo. I'm talking about GDP/capita (PPP) and not GDP/capita (nominal). Please read - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(PPP)_per_capita
@@reardelt Japan is developed country. india's population is 1.3B+ & Japan's population 120M+. don't compare per capita income. Yes most of Indians are poor but India is world's 6th wealthiest country.
@@rb-kv2kf you are a kid. Japan BECAME a rich country. Japan was poor in the 1860s. By 1900, it became a developed power during the meiji period. Also, China has a larger population than India but still its gdp per capita ppp is double of India
Dude you were so smooth when that guy asked what this is.. It's you and me together bro! 😂😂😂 Also epic coconut scene... Wow! I'm glad you don't edit that stuff out! Hope you're well.
The concept is simple. India has too many people. Majority of them are not even middle class. Successive govt policies specifically prioritise urban development over welfare of rural industries due to which all the money is in the citiies. So poor people from villages migrate in humongous numbers to the cities. Given this background, consider that rich people are busy working 9-7 and need domestic help. Poor people who come from villages are happy to do anything to earn decent wages, so they get into services like domestic help, security, food and medicine delivery, catering, fast food, selling vegetables, basic necessities, trades like plumbing, electricians, appliance mechanics, etc. And all of these serve the rich / upper middle class. So you have the "servant" class living near the "master" class. In other words, the slums near the skyscrapers. In short, it is because well off Indians do not do menial labour at home and outsource it to the rural poor who migrate for a living because all govts have ensured that a supply of rural labour is never ending.
Thank you, your video made me nostalgic, I was born raised in Mumbai. They say you can never take Mumbai out of you. love your take and philosophical view on contrast you saw there
4:43 "You have to adapt to India or you hate your life here. But if i'm going to pick one place in the world, i say India; is place where you just feel more alive as a human being than anywhere else" I completely agree with you !
it is ugly, a big mansion in a nice locality would look so much better than this, but this is what happens when you choose to live in a city with scarce land.
They seem really nice. It's shocking to see such drastic differences in quality of life. It's also so crazy to see so much private security. The vibe was really good there. It looks absolutely fantastic.
"Half of the population lives in slum" but they still own flat screen TV, fridge, and very often Air Conditioner. They live in slums because land is at massive premium in a densely populated city. Our plumber in Pune who runs a big plumbing business in high-rise luxury apartment blocks, his wife owns 2 eateries for IT-Profis, used to live in a Mumbai "slum" just 2 years ago, doing nearly the same in Mumbai.
I do live in a slum but a 1bhk slum. I have a.c, refrigerator, car, bike. Not only me but 80%people in slums. The young children here are all going to good private school and one day they will buy a good house for their family.
I had a similar reaction when I went to Mumbai and someone told me that I was living in the poshest neigborhood in the city. I am from Chandigarh in Indiam a city that is much more cleaner than Mumbai and the wealthy vs non wealthy areas are very easy to distinguish. I was staying near Jaslok Hospital, and the buildings looked incredibly shabby from the outside but the moment you stepped in, it was luxury reeking from every inch. Ceiling to floor teak, expensive china and silverware. I guess folks in Mumbai dont really care about public spaces as much. You'll see the difference in Delhi as well. The rich parts of Delhi, ie Lutyens delhi/South Delhi are clearly so much more better than the worse parts of the city.
The population density (which translates in to heavy building density) and the heavy monsoon ensure that the exteriors fade away in a few years. Too many people on the streets takes a toll on the beauty of the streets. You will have a similar reaction if you lived in a smaller city in North America and visited NYC, SF or Chicago.
Yes so I am a foreigner living in Mumbai. There is indeed not much to see here in terms of architecture, yet there is so much money in this city. And I realised that the cost of my living here is just as much as it was in Switzerland, if not more in fact. From the outside, most of the buildings look ugly, but once you enter, the interiors can be really lavish. People take very good care of their property, indoor. Whatever belongs to them. That's how it goes and that's how it ends. And the thing is that the prices of real estate here are so high compared as to what people earn that owning your own 2 bedroom apartment is already a huge luxury in itself. People do have good cars but they rarely take them out of the garage, by fear of having them scratched by wreckless drivers. People put a lot of money here in their children's education by sending them to colleges abroad (mostly to the US). Now no matter how dirty and shabby the city might look, you end up getting terribly attached to it over the years (weird I know hahaha...) The various areas of the city are like small separate towns or villages with their own style, their own charm. And yes, there is not much to do activity wise with children here, but since people are so friendly, children end up having loads of friends to play with every day. So the leisure is spent mostly in socialising within the housing society premises or at the nearby park. We are also lucky to have a lot of greenery in Mumbai dependingvon where we live and the proximity of the ocean makes it much less polluted than Delhi for example.
LMAO abt the different set of directions! That happens in a lot of non European countries. I think ppl are just trying to be helpful. They end up sending you on a mission tho!
The thing about India is that to reach from Point A to point B there are different roads and different people prefer different routes. No one would want to confuse you
i had the opportunity to visit india for work many years ago. it was one of the most amazing experiences ever. your videos really represent what life was like on the ground. gonna watch all of your content as this video was amazing
You were strolling in the neighbourhood of prominent indian industrialists, polititians and bollywood actors. Bandra-Juhu is where actors like Shahrukh Khan & Amitabh Bachchan reside.
Yep.. It's called white privilege, I guess Mumbai still hasn't learnt its lessons when a white guy like him called David Headley recce the important locations in Mumbai and gave, it to his Pakistani handler who trained the 26/11 Attackers of Mumbai. Good job Mumbai.
@ryan yeah, the audacity to go around a billionaire's most protected house. Hmmm. I wonder if any brown guy could do that in the neighborhood of Bill gates. 😐
Dude what an awesome video. Loved the narration too - very insightful thoughts on India and I feel the same way. Takes me a couple of days to get used to the noise, crowds, incessant honking, poverty but I realize they’re good people and I always miss India after leaving. Agree with directions like no one knows where anything is. Definitely feel very alive in India. Can tell by all your videos you had a very wholesome upbringing that has enabled you to enjoy and admire various settings and cultures. Look forward to watching your other videos. Thanks and keep em coming. 💯
One thing that was very striking to me is how many trees are all over the place. It is very refreshing and nice in a way. They haven't tried to necessarily get rid of nature and overpower it, they just let it happen. It adds a lot of character.
Thank you, thank you for this. I also feel the energy of India when watching documentaries about it. I haven't even been there but through watching your video I actually felt I was there. Again, loved it I just explored India from my couch!!
@@oksowhat Security issues are created by politicians, people of Pakistan love you and many in India love them as well. every problem has a solution so does Pak-India relations, I hope we would enjoy cordial relations with one another one day.
@@mehtab.a.sindhi07 it was just a joke, moreover indian people dont love pakistani people, rather most of us have no feeling for you guys, also people here hate the ideology of pakistan.
@@oksowhat It's not necessary to love each other's ideology to have good relations. Most of the times, it's interests that define the nature of relations and unfortunately two countries have largely divergent interests. Still, I'm hopeful we would resolve our issues one day. I believe in you guys.
If you want to see cars and bling you have to explore northern part of India like Delhi and Punjab because people in western and southern part are more shy and loves simplicity even though they filthy rich
@@youngthugger8736 Your comments are disguisting. You won't even have little bit respect to others. Surely after reading the comments I can say that one will not find good souls more often in developed countries. You guys are egoistic and arrogant. And you will not understand the culture of others countries because you yourself doesn't have any culture.
I like old areas you can relate to it. For aesthetic purposes I think they need to redirect funds like putting up tiles on pavements, using machine to clean roads every morning. Homeless could be relocated to makeshift homes. A lot can be improved with little investment.
@@alternateaccount4868 457k people visits mumbai every week and not everyone comes with money. Nobody who is living in Mumbai is forced to stay as a homeless because there are thousands of jobs waiting !!! Ofcourse, locals in the city are relaxed and expect soft-spoken employees. Yes more funding for pavements will be good in old part of city too.
This is very nice walk through the city. This is exactly what I would do in any city, apart from visiting historical places/monuments -- walk through its neighborhoods to get a real feel of it!
This is the 0.001 % of Mumbai. Life for the remaining 99.999% is a 2 hour one way commute in bone crushing crowded trains without AC in 99% humidity. Crushed roads during the rains, water logged rails and roads which make commutes twice as long. Working 30 years of your life to own a 200 sq foot apartment somewhere far away from these lavish suburbs. Everyone who moves to the West view it with rose colored glasses till they have to move back and work in the city.
I never went out of my country but with you I'm discovering the world thank you...india is one of the countries that I really wanted to visit for its amazing culture especially Rajistan i've heard a lot about it...anyway nice videos can't wait to see some another amazing ones
I agree! Spent a fair amount of time in Bombay over the years. Man! That coconut! So close! You live to tell another tale. Anyway, cool vids! Cheers from Scotland
I remember how this video was recommended to me by YT when it was released in 2020, and today I found this man's channel again and binge watched a complete series on Mormons despite having a life changing Excel exam tomorrow 😂 Peter is a phenomenal vlogger! (25/8/24 9:55pm)
Welcome to India 🇮🇳 to my beautiful city Greater Bombay from the USA 🇺🇸. Thanks so much for your love for India and for my great city. Shalom! Blessings from India 🇮🇳. Take care
@@FakeR19920828 that's fine I normally say that. Nothing wrong with it. So what if he's a different nationality. Shalom means hello or peace. I speak Hebrew so it's not new to me.
Hi Peter .I'm South African Indian....yes...I agree...India is alive...there is just so much of everything...India is different..with every visit....awesome video
Cheers and a huge thumbs up, Peter! I just found your amazzzzzing videos about the different cultures around the world. Gotta confess, I am totally hooked, bro! 👌 👏 👏 👏 Cheers from Canada 😉 😆
I agree! I was a spoiled brat until I went to India. It was through a school trip I took. 2 weeks there and my eyes were opened to a lot of stuff I never would have learned. Traveling is hands down the best education I feel like.
What a great and incredibly FASCINATING life you lead Peter, I am so ENVIOUS ! You do a fantastic job and people warm to you incredibly quick ,what a fantastic thing to do,travel the world and tell EVERYONE about it …. Very interesting well done !
Dude when you asked those 2 guys about the direction to Malabar hill, in hindi they said ‘I’m sending him to a longer route because it’s beautiful from there’ as he assumed you as a tourist. That’s why you got different directions.
seems like mumbai people are like lahoris they too never give the right directions lol
Hassan Rasheed Pakistanis have the same culture/nature as Indians, it’s just that religion divided us. Before the British came we were all living peacefully and happily.
@@bharatAV peacefully and happily? Bro sorry to burst your bubble but peacefully, happily and even united for that matter wouldn't be appropriate words to describe conditions of india pre british raj. Rather you should be thankfull to british for uniting the remaining india otherwise there had been many countries originating from it not just Pakistan. Kind of like eu. Here's a cool video on this topic ua-cam.com/video/UQdMxXcfMRc/v-deo.html
Indians like to believe religion dived india but the fact of the matter is there has never been a united india... just deal with it
@M.A Alam that’s just bs. The British never wanted to unite India as one. Their own policy was “divide and rule”. It was thanks to Sardar Patel that India is what it is today, otherwise it would be looking like what Europe is today.
@ also of bihar, manipur, nagaland, sikh movemnet, underclass, muslims, and probably 100+ seperatist movements in india... pretty impressive right?
When a policeman asked you not to shoot, the reason for that is during the attacks in 2008, the areas which were attacked were first videographed and studied before. That is why the police nowadays are taking more care. Happy to see a vigilant police officer! Hope you enjoyed your stay here in India!!
And david headley was bald too😂😂
If so then that is an illogical rule as you can study the roads and city through goodle maps anyways..
@@jaysaviod9581 it was in 2008
Looking for a kickback most likely
@@neelusharma1596 I am referring to the rule of law, which makes no sense to have in 2020..
cop: you can’t shoot video
peter: i am from USA
cop: ok welcm 😂😂😂
🤣🤣
Typical Indian... they worship whites.
Would have been funny if he said he was from Google Street View.
Wideo*
right😂😅usa and india have mutual relations
Amazing video. Born and raised in Germany I lived in Bandra West as an expat in my mid / end twenties from 2008 to 2010 and still consider Mumbai as one of my hometowns. So many life-changing experiences. So diverse feelings and impressions every single day.
expat😂 white people is funny they don't call themselves IMMIGRANT, that's only for 3rd world countries
Jonny Sins 😂
I’m dying 😂
Loda not match
Lol
More men than ladies over there
Lol I’m one of those women who knows who Johnny Sins is hahaha 😂
I love it when you talked about controlling your emotion, and I also love the way you addressed the situation by not calling it dirty or poor directly but used a more respective words. Nice video
I love this guy, he is friendly and has a caring nature
If I thought nyc looked dirty. I don’t think I’ll ever go to India
Foreigners mindset in India -
No Google maps
No Uber cabs
No metros / subways
@@BlakeTedKord Don't use that stupid translator.
@@BlakeTedKord You are too funny...🤣🙏
@@BlakeTedKord we don't know why, I guess they think that these things are not available here.
@@thetrickster9885 You are saying all this to yourself and your country by mentioning " we " , LoL 😂
@@arpitchauhan4686 Dude this is exaggerated sarcasm that I am using here to depict the foreigner mindset
I was in Mumbai several years ago. It was very interesting. I just stayed in the old part and walked everyday. There was so much to see and people were very friendly. India in general is an amazing place to visit. Yes, there are a lot of problems, but still you’ll experience and see things that are incredible.
Correct..
me too.. loved Mumbai !!! loved Hindus !!
@@johnbob993 it sounds like you need to get out more often and see the world.
@@edwardharley9 didn't love Muslims?
Did you find any toilet?
Mate, got it in one, I took my family to India and lived for 2 years, we lived in the suburbs not in an expat compound, we traveled throughout the country and met some of the most engaging beautiful people imaginable, the difference between the haves and the have nots is huge, and always in your face, I fell in love with people first and the country side and villages are just so welcoming, I rode an Enfield from Pune to Goa with my youngest son on the back of the bike, took 4 weeks stayed in villages and had to force myself to go home
That's beautiful
@@issbelvillastella5063 I am sorry no! That’s such a generalisation!
@@issbelvillastella5063 that's pure nonsense. India's TFR is now at near replacement level (probably already below replacement level). And even the poor here, care about their kids a looot.
@@mrgyani hahahah! care?yes!they care to sell them to whom ever offers one more rupi for the kid!
@@issbelvillastella5063 well you are partially right but not everyone do that, only a few and kids get stolen every where not only in India, almost more than half of Syrian refugee kids are missing from camps but this is World and it isn't equal for everyone
I lived in Mumbai for 1 year... The vibe of the city is different which I never felt in any other cities.. i don't know how to explain.. As you said one feel "more alive" in Mumbai.. Very diverse city indeed ❤️
Where are you from actually then??
It is like being in London or New york
Mumbai is a nightmare for students. Most of the college buildings are dilapidated and I don't think the government will ever do anything to rebuild them....atleast in this century. Most of the colleges don't provide hostels and even if they do, they resemble the houses u get to see in Dharavi (world's largest slum).......and renting out an apartment is again too costly. If your accommodation is far away from your college than u need to go by the local train, which again is a nightmare. There are scammers all around trying to fool young and naive students telling you that they will provide you a PG in low price. Mumbai is good for tourists who get to see the city only superficially for one week or so. For the vast majority of middle class people who live here, this city just drains out your energy and turns you into a depressed and aged person.
Delhi, Bangalore, Poona, Hyderabad, Chennai are much much better cities. Ahmedabad is by far the best.
Diverse? Sad...
14:33 only foreigners can find this kind of background music. Songs we never heard of
Yeah bro
I want share you guys something ..I have same ? Regarding back ground music and some times I found same background music in foreigners video so I deep digging and I found out that it's very hard to find out copyright free music ..e.g if they put famous song or something in background so UA-cam will banned that channel ..so when they search for copyright free music they find this kind of music . interesting in it.!?
Pata nahi kahan se late hai aise music ?
@@smitrathod1661 Thaks Smit for explaining this. Yeah, finding good copyright free music is a nightmare. I wish I could use the music I like.
The world of you tube
Mumbai looks like a nightmare for introvert people, with all the random strangers staring and approaching you in the streets, including extremely pushy street vendors
Mumbai probably cures you of that.
Bruh I just don’t go out and where I live there are no people like this
well in that environment u dont become as introverted, introverted means something different over there probably
@@shiva_689 sounds like a you problem
Where do u live?
Sadly the economic disparity means that the rich wall themselves in making their world inaccessible to the rest. This is why you’ll notice that the expensive hotels are way more expensive than the West. The high price is to keep the massive number of non-rich people out.
The slums near the rich towers house people who provide services to the rich.
Nice video. Keep up the good work.
Otherwise if you don't wall yourself if you have wealt you will see a thousand beggars standing day and night on your door they might even rob your blhouse protect yourself from all that chaos rather than facing those ScSt acts the poor usually impose on the rich
@@havanax8096 But why not create better paying jobs so the poor India don't have to be beggars
@@covenawhite4855 they can't when you have 60% of the population as labourers that it's hard to pay a person a better pay when he is only pulling bricks and cleaning after trash , 60% of the better paying jobs are reserved for the depressed classes who can score low marks but still get a government job
@@havanax8096 Your smile is like dew on the leaf... keep smiling and shining.. from where are you originally??
@@havanax8096 would you like to move abroad in future??
you went deep into the roots of india. you navigated with ease. Displaying how deep one of the mumbain culture is. hats off man.
The security guy from Mukesh Ambanis place was actually meaning "yes, its okay to film" by his headshake. :)
billionaire living in disgusting environments. could spend small amount and clean the shit in his neighbourhood. even a dog uses his tail to clean place when it sits
He allowed him when he said I’m from USA, 😒
@@khuddadadchoudhrey5850 his appt is super clean and luxurious in fact the most expensive piece of real estate in the world. His appt and the complex it is in is super clean u saw the dirt and filth is more than a few blocks away. Also is it his job to clean up that filth or the govts? I agree with u on the fact he could do more for charity and helping poor Indian and his fellow countrymen some of who live in terrible conditions just a few blocks away but is it his duty or responsibility though? I believe the govt should take up that responsibilty
@@mousa1294 American privilege mate
@@mousa1294 the guy was inside the building and spoke nothing.He just saw camera and positively nodded the head. But yeah cops wont let the people if someone comes from few specific countries due to some obvious reason.
The year I spent in India taught me how to be patient!! It wasn’t easy but I enjoyed every day of it.
16:02 I'm not Johnny sinns
DSN CREATIONS 😂😂😂😂
I thought he looked like J Sinns too! LOL I’ve been watching too mu...
Tu deepak e n
Watch his new vlogs in Pakistan..same happened 🤣
Everyone in india knows who Jonny Sins is😂😂😂
Mumbai is like the epitome of diversity. You go on a road, on your left side, there will be lavish buildings of 20 floors, and to your right side, there will be small houses. To your left, there will be fancy restaurants. To your right, there will be roadside food stalls.
You can live with the highest cost of living and at the same time you can live for the lowest cost of living.
you mean inequality not diversity
Most Indian cities are like that because Indian authorities do not kick out people for being poor. You can live in a railway platform, put up a store in the roadside without any permit. Build a hut in some unused government land and no one will bother you unless necessary.
@@ctyctnn1907 it’s not inequality.
@@killvish5111 agreed
China also
It’s Mexico City for me. That one place that makes me feel so alive!! Mexico City is stunning! Would love to see Mumbai one day! Great video!
Its seems mexico city but real mumbai is like chicago
@@study-uy4sz it was afghanistan back then with the bom B$
@@rizzlerkingfromrizzington 🤣🤣dawood
@Audi Bleu lmao even the suburbs of Mumbai look like slums
@new me eat a cow nd u will get yours! 💀
18:29 the priceless smile one that man's face. The western world is full of people who don't have time for anyone but themselves.... that man who likely didn't have a proper house to live in was so excited about shaking hands with a foreigner.... India is awesome.
No, we are actually interested in meeting white people, it's like a cultural flex, talk to them, take selfies, if you're black or Asian, you won't receive this kind of behavior. Also these people have enough empty time to stare at foreign people, in the West people are busy.
*_"You will never get the same set of directions in India", 🤗🤭🤣🤣❤️🙏_*
Fact!
@@PeterSantenello *_yeah I'm one of your loyal fan from Somalia 🇸🇴, living in Pakistan 🇵🇰, hope one day you'll visit somalia_*
If people say "don't know the route" then you might think like being Indian they don't know? Waste fellow". So they want to act like "smart". So they will say some random route instead of saying "I don't know". That's why you will get different answers from different people in india. You need to ask many people and if majority of people say same answer then route is valid. 😀
@@PeterSantenello I believe we inherited this trait from our fore parents because in Guyana,this shit also happens!😂😂😂
Visit Guyana Peter🇬🇾🇬🇾🇬🇾
@@sumanthhebri yeah russell peters said the same joke about arabs. He's like they don't know how to say "i don't know". First thing that came to mind when he said everyone in India gives different directions.
India is an amazing place I’ve only visited south India Goa region but still amazing such an experience! People are beautiful and the culture is incredible.
The accuracy of your experience is summed up so nicely. I agree everyone needs to visit India at some point
That one boy literally called him "yee taklya" 😂😂
😂😂😂😂
😀😀
Illiterate chutiye hai saale woh ladke log chapri kahike kaise behave karna hai unko aata hi nahi
That's the chapri language
😂😂😂
I am turning 65 next month and I can’t tell you how many people I told, “Work as a server in a restaurant when you are young and the people skills you learn will serve you well the rest of your life.” I firmly believe that!
I so agree I worked as a server in many resturants in my teens and early twenties. It was very eye opening to human behavior I am 65 now also and it definitely gave me people skills that lasted me my whole lifetime!!!
Out of context people
In India people think it is a shameful job as a Server in a restaurant.
Lovely
no need to belief in it when its a living experience
When I was in India (for business) I was told to stay near to Powai Lake Hotels and it was so luxurious I was shocked by the contrast with the surroundings, hotel was all gold and marble and I have never experience such as ostentation not even in the most developed countries, I really understand the feeling of your experience, at some point you just adapt to the different realities people live in India
Yes this is typical india. The private establishments like these hotels and private homes are palaces. The second you step outside their grounds you will see exactly the opposite. This by the way has been there for centuries, the haves of India are in a totally different planet than have nots, despite being neighbours
That why some of these places are so expensive and still look like that, its like private rich space, and block out all the poor stuff. going in and out is difference of world.
Sorry but I don’t like countries like that because I feel bad for all the people that have less… Just because I was born in a different Country…
@@youngthugger8736I'm assuming you drive a Ferrari then
@@thecreator9913 No but the average salary in my country is 7‘530 USD…
4:00 I think the one guy is saying to the other something like "no I want him to see it from the top, better view" and then the other guy is like yeahhhh yeahhhh
yep, that's correct!
fixed ?
12:38 "Guy was shaking his head 'no'". Shaking of the head can mean just about anything in India hahaha
hey... make you own video guy...if you want to laugh...!!
just kiddng dale... i know you are the boss
It's not rocket science actually. Nodding (up and down) means "yes", shaking (sideways, straight) means "no", tilting (sideways a couple of times) means "ok".
You are better vlogger than this man he is crap , you deserve more subs than him.
Scottish man with strong legs!
Bruhh, Seems you're very familiar with indians🤔
Wow, completely different in India, people's friendly, polite child, especially the beach is very comfortable, very beautiful, and completely different impression, is worth traveling city of mumbai, and thanks for sharing! 1
Have you heard about south India ? Its much cleaner and the same thing like beaches and people we arent as rich as the Northies of Course .
@@moundain4220 no you are brother
@@moundain4220 South India has higher gdp per capita than north india
@@moundain4220 but I would prefer Odisha beaches above South and even Goa. So, anyways. Just my opinion.
@@moundain4220 south is also richer brother but plz tell southern part of india as it hurts being an indian when someone calls soith india north india as my whole ancestors gave their life for india
I absolutely love this gentleman's attitude. He is ready to try anything new. He is a foreigner and he is walking down the streets of mumbai. kudos to him.
2008 mumbai terrorist attacks happened just like this
So wtf are you talking about
Report or stop if you found anyone like this with cameras
My journey to India was also incredible , I liked the way culture varied from South to North , even languages and skin tones . At last I
got that India has many cultures and everyone there is different , some r friendly some r very rude , some always bother others some are totally ignorant .
I agree as an indian
@Everything Of Indian Cinema. yeah but only a few form a nation, like the United states, likewise Union of India or India. Remember European Union, African Union and OPEC r still not unified Nations
@Everything Of Indian Cinema. I said that India as a nation has all of the things the guy mentioned. Many major cultures, major religions, some of which even originated here.
@Everything Of Indian Cinema. yeah nvm, ig I am not able to convey or either I am shitposting, I dont know man, sorry for wasting ur time
But much better than anywhere else in the world
Street dude: Where you from?
Answer: USA
Street dude: Asia?
most north indian poor people are illiterate unlike south indians from kerala or tamil nadu especially.
He heard USSR I guess 🤣🤣
Yep.. It's called white privilege, I guess Mumbai still hasn't learnt its lessons when a white guy like him called David Headley recce the important locations in Mumbai and gave, it to his Pakistani handler who trained the 26/11 Attackers of Mumbai. Good job Mumbai.
@@hollycow8171 we are northeastern we hate Muslims
@@hollycow8171
But u should think one thing that south india is ahead in education but north indian are very very rich and supercar u see in Mumbai are mostly of north indians
Your wonderful videos fill in a lot of gaps for me - I was born in Agra 1947 but left immediately for the UK. I've never visited India, so - keep em coming....
Thanks Roger!
Even the rich areas look AWFUL
I thought it was just me that thought this
@@wiseguy8705It's actually changing more and more in recent years. You need to note that the slums is right next to the rich areas. It's not separated
You can look up the newer modern cities in India as well as how Mumbai has changed in the last few years.
Lying out of your ass lol
Fascinating to see that much has changed in India, but nothing has changed! Those big new motorways and bridges were not there when I visited, but the upmarket apartments, cheek by jowel with the street poverty and the curious citizenry enquiring where you have come from and answering questions with that enigmatic headnod... You are so right everyone should visit India at least once and if they do get out in those streets which are unlike almost anywhere else.
Poverty is a relative term, Doherty
You would visit again?
It's safe compared to Paris London or any city in US where there are chances of gun crime. But foreigners won't see this..
@@SunShine_747 ehhmmm....big chance of getting your bags snatched.
@@saminyasir1847 no it is not, it may happen in Delhi or Agra but in Mumbai those type of things rarely happens. Mumbai is one of the safest city in south Asia.
You're right, the wealth of Mumbai lies behind those inaccessible walls...
Scammers
nice come backs for indians
True, in only few hands and rest rest of the population lives under the line of poverty. Specially in villages. This is pretty bad.
@@BeHumanWithOutBorders hahaha. Just few hands of India are more than your whole country. Trust me. Making few million population rich is not a big deal. But when you deal with billions. Number of rich people here in India are far more than most of the developed country. But few people like you with box mindset will think that there is no money in India. I actually feel sad for people like you. I hope you earn money and travel to India someday
@@Vijay.1234-h3j Husky Boy your country comes at 86th level according to transparent International, and 84 millions Indian live under “ extreme poverty” . I wish you knew before telling fairytale, you shouldn’t be proud this situation. India is a developing nation. It can go up if people like you would work rather than just boasting about theirselves .
And I don’t have to come and dream about living in India. I live where your Indians dream to come and spend millions for getting visa and sometimes loose their lives while trying to access here through traffickers. My ex government divided India into Pakistan and India. I just support and stand with good cause.
India and Philippines have things in common... the slum areas and poverty. Hope and pray both countries will overcome poverty the soonest time.
Almost all of the asia is like that.
@@yuudesu Don't be daft, travel more and lives in all the Asian countries, then you can give your verdict
@@bellxp8877I'm talking about the countries in South Asia, south east asia and east asia not the middle east or the western most part of asia like turkey, and yea i am telling this only because I've met people from there.
You can exclude Singapore too
Truth be told China has improved its poverty percentage and their infrastructure and road systems are way better than India. Just admit the truth guys.
Biggest problem in mumbai is slums
World's second most expensive house @12:40 and then within 50 meters or less there's a small stall selling chips right beside it- that's Mumbai
I am now experiencing this type in street culture shock in San Francisco that I used to get on childhood trips to India. Street people in India are so entrepreneurial and trying to change their life. Can’t say the same for the decline in SF. I’m so glad you learned a lot!! It’s a great mind shift, right?
it cannot be colonial government its occupation government.
Please can India finally get it "right".
You were "invaded" "occupied" "enslaved" land & resources stolen on an industrial scale maybe the largest in human history !!!
Then came the ethnic manipulation & cleansing, wiping out language and anything else to turn you into servants in perpetuity.
Germán Nazi had really good teacher ( that’s what they say…seriously !!)
Nazi attempted to do the same in 4 years in Europe.
Nazi were not "colonial" in France or Greece...although they did try that trick.
Are Greeks & French smarter than Indians’ ? They do not call it “colonial” of the German Authority power !
Please do not refer to the murderers and thieves as "imperial" " colonial" it’s simple not true.
Those who peddle this have little ethics and even less morals, Like the Queen of the UK, you know the UK, it’s the same as the EU but the Anglos cannot control the EU like they control the UK so they spat the dummy and left, they are control freaks of the first order, psychopathic culture, take a look at India, it’s what they leave behind as locusts everywhere they go…but do not got their home it’s a different story.
That German woman who is the current Queen of the UK, yep the one that refuses to hand over the gemstone her ancestors stole….now there is a role model for a nation of thieves…never give stolen goods back and pretend you are “above” all the crimes of the past… !
Suppose the modern day Anglos are scared you many ask back the stuff they stole !
@@cypriotsinsydneyaustralia557 Stop. Quarter of the world was colonised by briton. Wealth lies in culture, education and inventions, governmental systems...physical wealth isn't permanent. We indians including you should understand it now and stop cribbing. And bad things happened with everyone, literally everyone. Remember Nanking? China got back up right? As simple as that. We weren't strong enough back then hence why bad things happened to us...
I live right in the center of SF and it has gone through increased changes since the beginning of Covid for sure. The contrast between rich and poor have always been noticeable here but much more visible in recent times. Also, it is similar to what he experienced in the first neighborhood that he went to - street encampments right on the same streets with million dollar condos. The contrast and desperation is palpable here now. More people homeless than ever before and living in tent cities and doorways.
@@cypriotsinsydneyaustralia557 live in the past while we all set sail for the future lol
@@cypriotsinsydneyaustralia557 I like your demeanor towards us, thanks a lot for that...but please don't give indians confirmation to let them keep on cribbing about bygones. Regardless thanks for such an Outlook if you are non indian.
Thank you for showing the rich side of India, unlike some media outlets **cough** BBC, CNBC **cough**
Also, its rare to see nice cars on Indian roads bcuz the traffic is crazy, so understandably they won't risk scratching up their cars (insurance there is a pain in the butt). More than likely they'll have something like a Suzuki or a Toyota to go into town and leave their nice cars aside for special occasions.
I really like your perspective, I see what you see man. Thanks for this
The country seem beautiful and complex. Life is for the daring and those who want to live. Stay good.
Yes it is one of the wealthiest. But it doesn't look like so.
Indians are poor. Their GDP per capita is only $8000. Japan is $45,000.
@Fasih Mosharraf It is $8000 kiddo. I'm talking about GDP/capita (PPP) and not GDP/capita (nominal). Please read - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(PPP)_per_capita
@@reardelt Japan is developed country. india's population is 1.3B+ & Japan's population 120M+. don't compare per capita income. Yes most of Indians are poor but India is world's 6th wealthiest country.
@@rb-kv2kf you are a kid. Japan BECAME a rich country. Japan was poor in the 1860s. By 1900, it became a developed power during the meiji period.
Also, China has a larger population than India but still its gdp per capita ppp is double of India
@@rb-kv2kf yes, poor
I like your reflections about life in India. Will definitely visit this great country.. someday.
Dude you were so smooth when that guy asked what this is.. It's you and me together bro! 😂😂😂 Also epic coconut scene... Wow! I'm glad you don't edit that stuff out! Hope you're well.
American Magnetic power - the coconut couldn't resist. But needs to be upgraded- precision wise
*_It's amazing how expensive neighborhoods and slums coexist in one country! India is an amazing place!_*
The concept is simple. India has too many people. Majority of them are not even middle class. Successive govt policies specifically prioritise urban development over welfare of rural industries due to which all the money is in the citiies. So poor people from villages migrate in humongous numbers to the cities.
Given this background, consider that rich people are busy working 9-7 and need domestic help. Poor people who come from villages are happy to do anything to earn decent wages, so they get into services like domestic help, security, food and medicine delivery, catering, fast food, selling vegetables, basic necessities, trades like plumbing, electricians, appliance mechanics, etc. And all of these serve the rich / upper middle class.
So you have the "servant" class living near the "master" class.
In other words, the slums near the skyscrapers.
In short, it is because well off Indians do not do menial labour at home and outsource it to the rural poor who migrate for a living because all govts have ensured that a supply of rural labour is never ending.
Слава Украине
@@anandsharma7430majority of Indian population are lower middle classes with incomes of 15-20k rupees per month
@@anandsharma7430 yes.
Western propaganda@@sanjithrithvik3548
Thank you, your video made me nostalgic, I was born raised in Mumbai. They say you can never take Mumbai out of you. love your take and philosophical view on contrast you saw there
15:58 "No I'm not Johnny Sins"
*LMAOOOO*
mene b pehle din yahi socha tha,aj dekh b lia is video me🤣🤣🤣🤣
Was just about to put a comment up but you beat me to it hahah. For those who understand ha
4:43 "You have to adapt to India or you hate your life here. But if i'm going to pick one place in the world, i say India; is place where you just feel more alive as a human being than anywhere else"
I completely agree with you !
18:22 Dude got his coconut helmet strapped on. Smart!
🤣🤣🤣
17:03 close one out of nowhere! OMG! People get killed from these unfortunate accidents!
Don't forget to visit Sikkim and shimla and Dalai Lama temple also you will Love this place
13:18 lady calling ambani home ugly , meanwhile - ambani laughing in his private plane 😂😂😂
it is ugly, a big mansion in a nice locality would look so much better than this, but this is what happens when you choose to live in a city with scarce land.
Mukesh : Bhag Gareeb 😂
Aur thora uthale bhai
I don't think it is ugly but they could have made a better use of 2 billion if they had more land in some other area
yaar woh architectural perspective se thoda ugly dikhta hai
They seem really nice. It's shocking to see such drastic differences in quality of life. It's also so crazy to see so much private security. The vibe was really good there. It looks absolutely fantastic.
Alot of Indian actors and actresses live in Mumbai, thats what the security is for
"Half of the population lives in slum" but they still own flat screen TV, fridge, and very often Air Conditioner. They live in slums because land is at massive premium in a densely populated city. Our plumber in Pune who runs a big plumbing business in high-rise luxury apartment blocks, his wife owns 2 eateries for IT-Profis, used to live in a Mumbai "slum" just 2 years ago, doing nearly the same in Mumbai.
Same with my family 😂😅
That’s right .. some people in the slums may have net worth more than this guy. They choose to live there for the convenience and the camaraderie .
@Muhammad Talha Hahaha nice joke
I do live in a slum but a 1bhk slum. I have a.c, refrigerator, car, bike. Not only me but 80%people in slums. The young children here are all going to good private school and one day they will buy a good house for their family.
I live in California
I had a similar reaction when I went to Mumbai and someone told me that I was living in the poshest neigborhood in the city. I am from Chandigarh in Indiam a city that is much more cleaner than Mumbai and the wealthy vs non wealthy areas are very easy to distinguish. I was staying near Jaslok Hospital, and the buildings looked incredibly shabby from the outside but the moment you stepped in, it was luxury reeking from every inch. Ceiling to floor teak, expensive china and silverware. I guess folks in Mumbai dont really care about public spaces as much. You'll see the difference in Delhi as well. The rich parts of Delhi, ie Lutyens delhi/South Delhi are clearly so much more better than the worse parts of the city.
Very right point.
The population density (which translates in to heavy building density) and the heavy monsoon ensure that the exteriors fade away in a few years. Too many people on the streets takes a toll on the beauty of the streets. You will have a similar reaction if you lived in a smaller city in North America and visited NYC, SF or Chicago.
Love Mumbai! I remember the days when I lived there!!!
When
where r u now.? ran away with johny sinn
@@masoodahmed9782 kya?
@@Lucy-ch4pm abhi ap kaha rihti ho gurrgaoo mn ya foreign kahi.
@@masoodahmed9782 America 🇺🇸
Yes so I am a foreigner living in Mumbai. There is indeed not much to see here in terms of architecture, yet there is so much money in this city. And I realised that the cost of my living here is just as much as it was in Switzerland, if not more in fact.
From the outside, most of the buildings look ugly, but once you enter, the interiors can be really lavish.
People take very good care of their property, indoor. Whatever belongs to them. That's how it goes and that's how it ends.
And the thing is that the prices of real estate here are so high compared as to what people earn that owning your own 2 bedroom apartment is already a huge luxury in itself.
People do have good cars but they rarely take them out of the garage, by fear of having them scratched by wreckless drivers.
People put a lot of money here in their children's education by sending them to colleges abroad (mostly to the US).
Now no matter how dirty and shabby the city might look, you end up getting terribly attached to it over the years (weird I know hahaha...)
The various areas of the city are like small separate towns or villages with their own style, their own charm.
And yes, there is not much to do activity wise with children here, but since people are so friendly, children end up having loads of friends to play with every day. So the leisure is spent mostly in socialising within the housing society premises or at the nearby park.
We are also lucky to have a lot of greenery in Mumbai dependingvon where we live and the proximity of the ocean makes it much less polluted than Delhi for example.
LMAO abt the different set of directions! That happens in a lot of non European countries. I think ppl are just trying to be helpful. They end up sending you on a mission tho!
Yes and because the network of lanes and roads is so haphazard and complicated too.
The thing about India is that to reach from Point A to point B there are different roads and different people prefer different routes. No one would want to confuse you
Haha well in Mumbai that's only coz ppl find their own quick ways to reach their destination yeah!
18:04 "this is when you know you are in wealthier neighborhood when there is a dog walker" 🤣🤣🤣🤣
i had the opportunity to visit india for work many years ago. it was one of the most amazing experiences ever. your videos really represent what life was like on the ground. gonna watch all of your content as this video was amazing
India itself looks like a world of contrast!! Nice video! Greetings from Brazil! 🇧🇷
You were strolling in the neighbourhood of prominent indian industrialists, polititians and bollywood actors. Bandra-Juhu is where actors like Shahrukh Khan & Amitabh Bachchan reside.
Yep.. It's called white privilege, I guess Mumbai still hasn't learnt its lessons when a white guy like him called David Headley recce the important locations in Mumbai and gave, it to his Pakistani handler who trained the 26/11 Attackers of Mumbai. Good job Mumbai.
@abuaimen28 Uh no you wouldn't. Go there before you talk.
@abuaimen28 ya you ll live a place like San Francisco , homeless poop on streets
@ryan yeah, the audacity to go around a billionaire's most protected house. Hmmm. I wonder if any brown guy could do that in the neighborhood of Bill gates. 😐
@ryan this u tuber looks similar to him..nt all white people..otherwise no one disturb him
Thank ytou for showing us India! Beautiful country, beautiful people! Blessings!
Lol beautiful country and beautiful people stop lying 🤣 🤣
@@cuporange7867 You must be thinking that because you have never seen good souls in your so called developed country.
Dude what an awesome video. Loved the narration too - very insightful thoughts on India and I feel the same way. Takes me a couple of days to get used to the noise, crowds, incessant honking, poverty but I realize they’re good people and I always miss India after leaving. Agree with directions like no one knows where anything is. Definitely feel very alive in India. Can tell by all your videos you had a very wholesome upbringing that has enabled you to enjoy and admire various settings and cultures. Look forward to watching your other videos. Thanks and keep em coming. 💯
One thing that was very striking to me is how many trees are all over the place. It is very refreshing and nice in a way. They haven't tried to necessarily get rid of nature and overpower it, they just let it happen. It adds a lot of character.
15:00 to 16:20 Maximum crowd was college students who were bunking classes 😂
thank you. very enjoyable feature, appreciate your delivery as well.
Been there two years ago.... very hectic place. Wouldn’t like to live there but I do like huge cities...Mumbai is one of them. There is power💪
More like corruption than power
Totally would live there
Thank you, thank you for this. I also feel the energy of India when watching documentaries about it. I haven't even been there but through watching your video I actually felt I was there. Again, loved it I just explored India from my couch!!
Mumbai looks much cooller than I had thought. Love from Pakistan🇵🇰
Pakistani saying mumbai is cool is not good from security standpoint😂
@@oksowhat Security issues are created by politicians, people of Pakistan love you and many in India love them as well. every problem has a solution so does Pak-India relations, I hope we would enjoy cordial relations with one another one day.
@@mehtab.a.sindhi07 it was just a joke, moreover indian people dont love pakistani people, rather most of us have no feeling for you guys, also people here hate the ideology of pakistan.
@@oksowhat It's not necessary to love each other's ideology to have good relations. Most of the times, it's interests that define the nature of relations and unfortunately two countries have largely divergent interests. Still, I'm hopeful we would resolve our issues one day. I believe in you guys.
@@mehtab.a.sindhi07 Do visit us some day! :)
love these videos; India has been a curiosity of mine since I was a child. I am most definitely visiting one day.
Taylor Packard you’ve a shit curiosity
Farhaad Khan , What about Pakistan?
@@Tameemterminator Yo, shut up, She is always welcome.
I would love to visit India one day insha Allah.
God bless Indian people.
WELCOME BRO WHERE ARE YOU FROM?
@@wasimkhan473 he's from karachi
We appreciate locals visiting us.. But not the ISI agents.. 😂
@@jeetshetty8094 how conservative u r
sorry bro, but some folks who came over from Karachi to Mumbai in 2008 have destroyed chances for easy travel for Pakistanis now.
I loved your narration while you walked the streets. What makes it good is that it is so ad hoc but so true.
I must say recemt days Tv is just useless😅 u tube gives u lots of contents. Welcome to india Sir. Happy journey♥️
If you want to see cars and bling you have to explore northern part of India like Delhi and Punjab because people in western and southern part are more shy and loves simplicity even though they filthy rich
Interesting observation. Thank you :)
I’ve been watching you for a while man and I bet you get the Johnny Sins thing all the time
I just loved Mumbai.... every part of it... it is really different... vast differences in rich and poor... just like NYC..
Yes...Mumbai is home to 70+ billionaires and 7million+ daily wagers
How could you love a Place like that I‘m shocked…
@@youngthugger8736 Your comments are disguisting. You won't even have little bit respect to others. Surely after reading the comments I can say that one will not find good souls more often in developed countries. You guys are egoistic and arrogant. And you will not understand the culture of others countries because you yourself doesn't have any culture.
Realestate is expensive in Mumbai, and most areas are old in Mumbai. I saw Benz, Bmw and Jaguars
I like old areas you can relate to it. For aesthetic purposes I think they need to redirect funds like putting up tiles on pavements, using machine to clean roads every morning. Homeless could be relocated to makeshift homes. A lot can be improved with little investment.
@@alternateaccount4868 nice suggestion
@@alternateaccount4868 457k people visits mumbai every week and not everyone comes with money. Nobody who is living in Mumbai is forced to stay as a homeless because there are thousands of jobs waiting !!! Ofcourse, locals in the city are relaxed and expect soft-spoken employees. Yes more funding for pavements will be good in old part of city too.
Funfact you always ask for jaguar .😂😂😂😂😂.. The Owner of jaguar an Indian. Sri. Ratan Tata Sir
This is very nice walk through the city. This is exactly what I would do in any city, apart from visiting historical places/monuments -- walk through its neighborhoods to get a real feel of it!
This is the 0.001 % of Mumbai. Life for the remaining 99.999% is a 2 hour one way commute in bone crushing crowded trains without AC in 99% humidity. Crushed roads during the rains, water logged rails and roads which make commutes twice as long. Working 30 years of your life to own a 200 sq foot apartment somewhere far away from these lavish suburbs. Everyone who moves to the West view it with rose colored glasses till they have to move back and work in the city.
I never went out of my country but with you I'm discovering the world thank you...india is one of the countries that I really wanted to visit for its amazing culture especially Rajistan i've heard a lot about it...anyway nice videos can't wait to see some another amazing ones
I agree! Spent a fair amount of time in Bombay over the years. Man! That coconut! So close! You live to tell another tale. Anyway, cool vids! Cheers from Scotland
6:47 You can see Both Jaguar and Mercedes lel
I remember how this video was recommended to me by YT when it was released in 2020, and today I found this man's channel again and binge watched a complete series on Mormons despite having a life changing Excel exam tomorrow 😂 Peter is a phenomenal vlogger! (25/8/24 9:55pm)
So beautiful city love from Pakistan 🤩
Welcome to India 🇮🇳 to my beautiful city Greater Bombay from the USA 🇺🇸. Thanks so much for your love for India and for my great city. Shalom! Blessings from India 🇮🇳. Take care
Why you saying 'shalom' ? Peter is Italian-american
@@FakeR19920828 that's fine I normally say that. Nothing wrong with it. So what if he's a different nationality. Shalom means hello or peace. I speak Hebrew so it's not new to me.
I love how friendly the kids are ❤️
They're just excited to see a white guy lol. Won't get the same treatment if you're african or other dark skinned ethnicity.
Hi Peter .I'm South African Indian....yes...I agree...India is alive...there is just so much of everything...India is different..with every visit....awesome video
Many trees in this country
😂😂🤣🤣😝😝😁😁🤭🤭
This is mumbai city country name India 😂😂🤣🤣😁😁😆😆😄😄
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
DO land trump😄😄😄
Smoke Trees 😋
Cheers and a huge thumbs up, Peter! I just found your amazzzzzing videos about the different cultures around the world. Gotta confess, I am totally hooked, bro! 👌 👏 👏 👏 Cheers from Canada 😉 😆
In Mumbai distance is measured in time, Since the traffic is so dense most of the time.
I agree! I was a spoiled brat until I went to India. It was through a school trip I took. 2 weeks there and my eyes were opened to a lot of stuff I never would have learned. Traveling is hands down the best education I feel like.
Thank you for sharing! I was waitress. My next thing is to go India 🇮🇳. You’re so right on!
What a great and incredibly FASCINATING life you lead Peter, I am so ENVIOUS ! You do a fantastic job and people warm to you incredibly quick ,what a fantastic thing to do,travel the world and tell EVERYONE about it …. Very interesting well done !
The land of contrasts indeed. By the way I was amused when the shopkeeper said "modern chocolate". Like other shops sold antique chocolates 😅
Well other chocolate of probably traditional Indian chocolate.
Where you from?
@@SunShine_747 Who? Me or the other guy?
@@farouqomaro598 yes you
@@SunShine_747 😂.... I am from Borneo. Currently in the UK on work. How about you?
Peter you have an amazing talent to disarm people when they are defensive / offensive … it’s incredible and attractive too