When you were talking about miles vs hours, that is another way we are different. You thought 182 miles takes 4 hours, but with our road system, we can go almost 300 miles in 4 hours.
I was gonna say, between Knoxville and Nashville, it's about that distance, and that's about a 3 hour drive on the interstate, with stopping part-way for gas and a bite/drink, plus one rest area, so dividing it into three shorter legs. Knowing when we will arrive at our destination is usually more relevant than the actual distance. To expand on your difference statement, we actually tend to think in terms of time, rather than distance, while I believe the U.K. folks do it the other way 'round.
That’s not necessarily true. I drive from Seattle to Portland a lot and it can take three to four hours thanks to the horrible traffic in each of the metro areas. And the distance between both cities is only 173 miles.
I live in New York State. Over the years I and my family have hosted many European guests. They ALL assume that I am not far from New York City, or Niagra Falls. I am about the same distance from both. They think we can drive into the city on our "night off", or go see the Falls on our day off. We are a 7 hour drive from both.
I once told a friend my mom was originally born in New York before her family moved to California and they thought it was so cool she was born in NYC. I had to show them a map of where Poughkeepsie was, haha.
😆 my work commute is 37 miles one way, approximately 35 minute drive. When I moved from Hawaii to Washington State, I thought that was a long drive because my commute to work in Hawaii was 16 miles and it took me nearly 2 hours to get to work! Needless to say, I also didn't realize how enormous the US is 😆
I live in North Carolina. My grandparents lived in New York. To drive from NC to NY is about 7 1/2 to 10 1/2 hours give or take traffic. Conversely a flight is about an hour and a half. Still, the total cost was cheaper to drive more often so over the summer when we were out of school we’d drive up to visit our grandparents. This continued into my adulthood until their passing. A half day drive is nothing.
Yes even the northern USA states except Alaska have hotter days and more of them than the uk. I live in Pacific Northwest of the USA, Vancouver Washington, which is across the Columbia river from Portland Oregon. This year we have had about 6 days over 38C, and 15-20 days over 32C. We also get snow in limited amounts, usually only for a day, but sometimes for a week. The USA southeast states have the most humid heat that lasts for months, and yes it can be unbearable without air conditioning.
805 mi (1,295 km) from El Paso, TX to Los Angeles, CA. Approximately 11 hours 42 mins to drive 859 mi (1,382 km) from El Paso, TX to the Louisiana Welcome Center just inside Louisiana Approximately 12 hours 20 minutes to drive.
Growing up on a farm in the 1960's, if my mom wanted to go to the store or shops as you call them, it was a forty- five-minute drive each way. Same with our school bus ride to school each morning, again a forty -five- minute ride each way.
Don't know where you got my family portrait from that is behind you, but keep it. Anyway drove from northern Vermont about 50 miles from Canadian border to Tucson, AZ. Took just under 5 days (2300 miles approx.) Had massive snow storm outside of Buffalo, NY from the great lakes that took most of the day. Two bad things was driving alone and DO NOT drive on Intersate 40 from Missouri into New Mexico. took all day and there is nothing out there
Nice reaction. Thanks for sharing. I live in Dallas Texas. My parents live in the south part of Texas. I have to drive 534 miles to see them. It takes me 10.5 hours. I lived in England for six months. I agree that your summers are hot. I thought is was because you’re an island with high humidity. Also I noticed that cut flowers last longer in England - again, more humidity. Thanks again
Last winter I move from Atlanta, Georgia, to Blaine, WA, which is on the US/Canada border. Since it was winter and I didn't want to drive through the Rocky Mountains without 4 wheel drive, I went to Sacramento, California, then up to Blaine. It was 3,345 miles and took 55 hours including gas and meal stops. I didn't sop overnight anywhere, but only slept in my truck for a few hours a few hours before hitting the road again.
The population density in the US depends greatly on the state you're talking about. For instance, my state, New Jersey has 1263 people per square mile. Whereas Wyoming has 5.67 people per square mile. The UK's population density is 740 people per square mile.
I remember when I first met my ex from Japan and he asked me how often I visited the beach and he was shocked when I said, “usually ever summer when we visit family in California”. He had no idea how far away Colorado was from the ocean. When my best friends or family tell me they’re going on a long drive I always respond “👀” and they always come back with, “WELL NOT FOR YOU!” since they live in Slovakia 😂
Many state capitals are not the largest cities due to geographic (central location), political (to avoid favoritism), and historical (established before the big cities were) reasons.
We did a road trip a few years ago. Chicago, Illinois to Salt Lake City, Utah. 1,400 miles each way. We drove out in two days and took three days to drive back. Wonderful trip, especially once we got to Utah!
@AliKaiProject, if you ever did decide to relocate, the best region for you, I believe, would be the area of Southern Appalachia, including East Tennessee, and the western parts of the Carolinas. You would feel culturally welcome, as a lot of local traditions are based on English roots, but with a lot of Scots-Irish, some German, and a bit of Cherokee in the mix, plus, obviously, our racially diverse cities, bringing to the shared culture music, food, and various other contributions. You can see the Highland Games, up in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, and the Kuumba Festival in Knoxville, TN. The arts community in general is quiet, but persists in many arts. Not sure about general school quality, but we do have good state universities. We also have all four seasons, with mild Winters, and generally, no extreme weather events. Then, there's the broader food culture. You could dine out every night and day, and never go to the same decent place twice in a year.
In comparison UK is a tiny village but its what we have here which makes us different. While you have wide open spaces for the most part we don't. We have quaint little cottages in quaint little villages, over looked by fairytale castles and palaces
When my husband and I were first dating. he lived a 1 and 1/2 hour drive away. It wasn't considered a long-distance relationship. My friend lived next door in New Mexico and would drive here in Arizona, to go to work. 45 minutes each way, 5 days a week.
Hi there. I've seen this video before and it seems it was much longer. I recall Laurence saying three UKs would fit inside Texas and some other facts missing from this version. Like seen your reactions
Most times, state capitals are not in the largest city in the state. You guys really are lucky to have the weather you do. But there is something to be said for variety too. Keeps it interesting.
100miles doesn’t get me to another State lol! We drive 100miles/day within our city with daily activities….if we hit the highway, we can get to another state in a little more than 100 miles (some states more…maybe some states a little less)
Yes you can have some of our land...move here! We'll take you :) If an American came to the UK and complained about your 29 C and humidity, they don't live in a region of the US that has humidity at all, lol. That's nothing to most of the south.
When I said South I meant the Eastern Southern region. We definitely get VERY humid here and my friends/family in GA and in TX would be quick to point out how bad, lol.
@joebloggs396 Yes, but many of us work in our gardens, ride bicycles, take walks. Coming home from a trip out west, when one gets off the plane, it is so hot and humid that one feels one will drown. I have lived in the deep south my entire life, except for my first three years were in AZ, hot, but not humid. I am sixty-three and have yet to acclimate to the climate in Alabama. Our next house will have a pool and I will jump in the pool after just a few minutes of gardening. I know this because we did have a pool when I was growing up. Oh, do I ever miss a pool!
Don't be deceived by population density figures. If you look at population density in the US as a whole, we'll look very sparsely populated, but that's not the real story. We have very densely populated coasts and a whole lot of wilderness and cropland without human settlement in the middle.
nah driving from minnesota to north carolina was 24 hours driving all the way through texas cant take no more then id say 6 hours, texas is just... boring in truth just like real life texas has to compensate bc it is un interesting if you dont believe me go ahead and look up tourist attractions in texas.... point made.
Along I-10 Texas is almost 900 miles, that is a good 13-14 hours of just driving. California is 795 miles along I-5, that is 12ish hours. If your big drive is Minnesota to North Carolina, you don't have a good idea of how big this country is.
I was a little girl riding with my parents from Alabama to Dallas I kept asking where were the trees and grass😂😂 Drove through Amarillo a couple years ago and I only saw those wind mill thingys the buried Cadillac's were cool😊
When you were talking about miles vs hours, that is another way we are different. You thought 182 miles takes 4 hours, but with our road system, we can go almost 300 miles in 4 hours.
I was gonna say, between Knoxville and Nashville, it's about that distance, and that's about a 3 hour drive on the interstate, with stopping part-way for gas and a bite/drink, plus one rest area, so dividing it into three shorter legs. Knowing when we will arrive at our destination is usually more relevant than the actual distance. To expand on your difference statement, we actually tend to think in terms of time, rather than distance, while I believe the U.K. folks do it the other way 'round.
That’s not necessarily true. I drive from Seattle to Portland a lot and it can take three to four hours thanks to the horrible traffic in each of the metro areas. And the distance between both cities is only 173 miles.
I live in New York State. Over the years I and my family have hosted many European guests.
They ALL assume that I am not far from New York City, or Niagra Falls. I am about the same distance from both. They think we can drive into the city on our "night off", or go see the Falls on our day off.
We are a 7 hour drive from both.
I once told a friend my mom was originally born in New York before her family moved to California and they thought it was so cool she was born in NYC. I had to show them a map of where Poughkeepsie was, haha.
I think he forgot one (Louisiana) state has parishes instead of counties.
😆 my work commute is 37 miles one way, approximately 35 minute drive. When I moved from Hawaii to Washington State, I thought that was a long drive because my commute to work in Hawaii was 16 miles and it took me nearly 2 hours to get to work! Needless to say, I also didn't realize how enormous the US is 😆
I live in North Carolina. My grandparents lived in New York. To drive from NC to NY is about 7 1/2 to 10 1/2 hours give or take traffic. Conversely a flight is about an hour and a half. Still, the total cost was cheaper to drive more often so over the summer when we were out of school we’d drive up to visit our grandparents. This continued into my adulthood until their passing. A half day drive is nothing.
Just a heads up, most state capitals are NOT the biggest cities in their respective states...
Yes even the northern USA states except Alaska have hotter days and more of them than the uk. I live in Pacific Northwest of the USA, Vancouver Washington, which is across the Columbia river from Portland Oregon. This year we have had about 6 days over 38C, and 15-20 days over 32C. We also get snow in limited amounts, usually only for a day, but sometimes for a week. The USA southeast states have the most humid heat that lasts for months, and yes it can be unbearable without air conditioning.
On interstate 10, it’s shorter to drive west from El Paso Texas to LA than it is to drive east across Texas to Louisiana.
OMG that’s wild! 😱
805 mi (1,295 km) from El Paso, TX to Los Angeles, CA. Approximately 11 hours 42 mins to drive
859 mi (1,382 km) from El Paso, TX to the Louisiana Welcome Center just inside Louisiana Approximately 12 hours 20 minutes to drive.
@@Longhauler85 hey, thanks for doing the math 😊
@@halah34 I got a little bored last night 😂
El Paso Tx is closer to San Diego, CA than it is to Houston TX
Growing up on a farm in the 1960's, if my mom wanted to go to the store or shops as you call them, it was a forty- five-minute drive each way. Same with our school bus ride to school each morning, again a forty -five- minute ride each way.
Don't know where you got my family portrait from that is behind you, but keep it. Anyway drove from northern Vermont about 50 miles from Canadian border to Tucson, AZ. Took just under 5 days (2300 miles approx.) Had massive snow storm outside of Buffalo, NY from the great lakes that took most of the day. Two bad things was driving alone and DO NOT drive on Intersate 40 from Missouri into New Mexico. took all day and there is nothing out there
Many state capitals are smaller than the states biggest cities. Sacramento CA, Albany NY, Juneau AK, Santa Fe NM, Austin TX. Just to name a few.
Philly is huge compared to Harrisburg pa
Carson City, NV
Springfield IL compared to Chicago.
Frankfort, Kentucky
Baton Rouge compared to New Orleans.
Nice reaction. Thanks for sharing. I live in Dallas Texas. My parents live in the south part of Texas. I have to drive 534 miles to see them. It takes me 10.5 hours. I lived in England for six months. I agree that your summers are hot. I thought is was because you’re an island with high humidity. Also I noticed that cut flowers last longer in England - again, more humidity. Thanks again
California we always use minutes or hours instead of miles😮
Last winter I move from Atlanta, Georgia, to Blaine, WA, which is on the US/Canada border. Since it was winter and I didn't want to drive through the Rocky Mountains without 4 wheel drive, I went to Sacramento, California, then up to Blaine. It was 3,345 miles and took 55 hours including gas and meal stops. I didn't sop overnight anywhere, but only slept in my truck for a few hours a few hours before hitting the road again.
The population density in the US depends greatly on the state you're talking about. For instance, my state, New Jersey has 1263 people per square mile. Whereas Wyoming has 5.67 people per square mile. The UK's population density is 740 people per square mile.
100 miles is a short and drivable destination 💯
I have driven 900+ miles between Florida and Virginia in less than 14 hours.
I remember when I first met my ex from Japan and he asked me how often I visited the beach and he was shocked when I said, “usually ever summer when we visit family in California”. He had no idea how far away Colorado was from the ocean.
When my best friends or family tell me they’re going on a long drive I always respond “👀” and they always come back with, “WELL NOT FOR YOU!” since they live in Slovakia 😂
I Live in Indianapolis….It’s about a 3-3.5hr drive to Chicago……
And It takes about 1.5hrs to find parking when you arrive in Chicago lol😂
Lol OMG! That sounds like London haha!
Many state capitals are not the largest cities due to geographic (central location), political (to avoid favoritism), and historical (established before the big cities were) reasons.
We did a road trip a few years ago. Chicago, Illinois to Salt Lake City, Utah. 1,400 miles each way. We drove out in two days and took three days to drive back. Wonderful trip, especially once we got to Utah!
@AliKaiProject, if you ever did decide to relocate, the best region for you, I believe, would be the area of Southern Appalachia, including East Tennessee, and the western parts of the Carolinas. You would feel culturally welcome, as a lot of local traditions are based on English roots, but with a lot of Scots-Irish, some German, and a bit of Cherokee in the mix, plus, obviously, our racially diverse cities, bringing to the shared culture music, food, and various other contributions. You can see the Highland Games, up in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, and the Kuumba Festival in Knoxville, TN. The arts community in general is quiet, but persists in many arts. Not sure about general school quality, but we do have good state universities. We also have all four seasons, with mild Winters, and generally, no extreme weather events. Then, there's the broader food culture. You could dine out every night and day, and never go to the same decent place twice in a year.
In comparison UK is a tiny village but its what we have here which makes us different. While you have wide open spaces for the most part we don't. We have quaint little cottages in quaint little villages, over looked by fairytale castles and palaces
When my husband and I were first dating. he lived a 1 and 1/2 hour drive away. It wasn't considered a long-distance relationship.
My friend lived next door in New Mexico and would drive here in Arizona, to go to work. 45 minutes each way, 5 days a week.
Metro London population is 14.9. New York is 19.5 LA is 18.4 Chicago is 9.5.
Houston has 7.1 and Phoenix 4.9. 5 largest ( by population) cities in U.S.Austin is a little over 2 mil.
Watch the top 10 most beautiful states.
Hi there. I've seen this video before and it seems it was much longer. I recall Laurence saying three UKs would fit inside Texas and some other facts missing from this version. Like seen your reactions
New Sub enjoy your video!
You still can have Canada. They have plenty of land. It's just a little to cold for people to live near the arctic
Juneau is the capital of Alaska.
Most times, state capitals are not in the largest city in the state. You guys really are lucky to have the weather you do. But there is something to be said for variety too. Keeps it interesting.
100miles doesn’t get me to another State lol! We drive 100miles/day within our city with daily activities….if we hit the highway, we can get to another state in a little more than 100 miles (some states more…maybe some states a little less)
I was doing a 90mile/day journey to work and back, It was taking me roughly 1hr 20minutes each way.
did he say that there are almost the same amount of people in Alaska as there are in the borough of Staten Island in NYC.
Yes you can have some of our land...move here! We'll take you :) If an American came to the UK and complained about your 29 C and humidity, they don't live in a region of the US that has humidity at all, lol. That's nothing to most of the south.
When I said South I meant the Eastern Southern region. We definitely get VERY humid here and my friends/family in GA and in TX would be quick to point out how bad, lol.
But you can also afford air conditioning with the cheap energy.
@joebloggs396
Yes, but many of us work in our gardens, ride bicycles, take walks. Coming home from a trip out west, when one gets off the plane, it is so hot and humid that one feels one will drown. I have lived in the deep south my entire life, except for my first three years were in AZ, hot, but not humid. I am sixty-three and have yet to acclimate to the climate in Alabama. Our next house will have a pool and I will jump in the pool after just a few minutes of gardening. I know this because we did have a pool when I was growing up. Oh, do I ever miss a pool!
Ironically Austin is the 4th largest metro area in Texas, that is counting Fort Worth with Dallas
Don't be deceived by population density figures. If you look at population density in the US as a whole, we'll look very sparsely populated, but that's not the real story. We have very densely populated coasts and a whole lot of wilderness and cropland without human settlement in the middle.
I live very very near dead center on the North American continent. Everything is out of reach from here.
USA was surveyed usually before Europeans settled here. 😂 That's why so many western states looked squared off.
Alaska and Hawaii became states in my birth year 1959.
nah driving from minnesota to north carolina was 24 hours driving all the way through texas cant take no more then id say 6 hours, texas is just... boring in truth just like real life texas has to compensate bc it is un interesting if you dont believe me go ahead and look up tourist attractions in texas.... point made.
Crossing Texas East/West or North/South takes 12 to 13 hrs.
Along I-10 Texas is almost 900 miles, that is a good 13-14 hours of just driving. California is 795 miles along I-5, that is 12ish hours. If your big drive is Minnesota to North Carolina, you don't have a good idea of how big this country is.
I was a little girl riding with my parents from Alabama to Dallas I kept asking where were the trees and grass😂😂 Drove through Amarillo a couple years ago and I only saw those wind mill thingys the buried Cadillac's were cool😊