Glad you and your mom enjoyed Edinburgh and the Highlands! If you enjoyed your Loch Lomond beer, come and visit Loch Lomond and the Trossachs National Park next time!
Your mom is so adorable!!! I love that you were able to show her around. Hopefully my wife and I will be able to visit the UK. I already told her I've been wanting to visit for the last couple of years thanks to my UK DJ friends I've met on Mixcloud and when I discovered your channel (thanks to Lost In The Pond), I've been very impressed/inspired and love your journey through eventually becoming a UK citizen and wanting to live there. FYI your puns are awesome! LOL
You hit some great cultural spots, and things to do, glad she loved the haggis! Always let them try it before explaining what it is. As for Arthurs seat, what you showed is actually the crags, an ancient laval flow that came FROM the now extinct arthurs seat, which is the taller hill to right.
Haha your mum is like my mum visiting. Just takes over the chores and you’re like ‘ta but you didn’t have to’. I put my mum in front of Netflix with a coffee whilst she visited me in LA as I was gagging for a hair wash shower. I put my towel on the rack as I usually do afterwards. She used my bathroom after me and put my towel on the shower curtain pole to dry out better….there’s something about mothers who can’t help mothering and showing you up for not adulting like they adult.
14:16 I think there's a yard at Trafalgar square as well. The original yard was in the parliament buildings that burn down, so they had to reconstruct official yards (as I recall it)
I feel as though I should point out that the haggis is only cooked in the sheep’s stomach, it isn’t actually part of what you eat…and even then, most modern haggis are in a synthetic bung and not the traditional sheep’s stomach. It’s actually the the pluck (lungs and heart) that is used in the dish, which are really finely chopped, mixed with oats and lentils and spiced with white pepper and coriander (spice not herb) and maybe a few other things depending on the family recipe. I was a little baffled when prior to tasting it you claimed that cranachan was just like Eaton mess, as the only ingredient they share is cream. So I was obviously relieved when you realised the error of your proclamation 😊
I've never heard of lentils being used in Haggis and, as a Highlander from Inverness, I've been eating it for half a century. A traditional haggis recipe describes haggis as "sheep's 'pluck' (heart, liver, and lungs), minced with onion, oatmeal, suet, spices, and salt, mixed with stock, and traditionally encased in the animal's stomach and boiled". No lentils there.
@@Thurgosh_OG sorry, you’re absolutely right. I gave up meat over 30 years ago and just got a little muddled up, as vegetarian ones almost always have lentils in them. Though not a highlander (though I did live in Oban for a while), I am Scottish (born and brought up on the Firth of Clyde), so I should have known better.
I'm from the highlands, another famous place near glencoe is glen etive. Turn into the junction and after a mile or so you will see where they filmed 007 Skyfall!
Glad you enjoyed Edinburgh! I was so surprised when I saw youse during pride so glad it all makes sense now and youse made the most of the glorious weather!
That's not wrong, but I think cran-a-can is actually the anglicised version of it. The native Scottish version of the word I'm pretty sure has the 'ch' sound from "loch" instead of the second 'c'. 🙂
We ADORE Edinburgh! We met there and had our mini-moon there! I also love Poundland and got VERY excited to visit a Dollarama when we were in Canada last year!
Lovely, brought back memories of our stay last year. I took lots of photos and video but haven't even processed any of it into planned projects as yet. We were supposed to go on the steam train that goes on the viaduct but it was cancelled. We still drove over there but there were no trains that day. I understand they've had other cancellations since then. While it's still something we'd like to do, I'm not sure I'd want to risk booking again.
I just love that your mom is so happy and keen to try all the different experiences. At least you have found good Mexican food in the UK now! Thanks for the video both of you.
I swan in the fountain when I took a short cut through princes street gardens at 3 am. On my way to Bread Street .good old days. Cranachan pronounced CranaCan , so close, but so far . I'm glad you enjoyed yourselves . Haste ye back .
I think it is so interesting how Americans who try Irn Bru immediately go to Bubblegum but Scots/Brits who drink it and who don't have that flavor as part of their palette go elsewhere.
Coburn street, yep a lot of stairs, there is a city burried undernearth that, You can get a tour at Mary Kings close go down and underneath, see how folk used to live. I live in a little town called Falkirk not much in the way of excitement happens here, you might have heard of the "Kelpies" You've heard of Irn Bru? that company started out here , its just next to Stirling where the Wallace monument and castle is, Williams best friend is burried in a little church yard just outside my front door, up the hill is what remains of the Antonine wall, the old northern frontier of the Roman empire, Falkirk is about 30-40 minutes by train from both Glasgow and Edinburgh and 15 minutes over the valley from "The gateway to the highlands" Falkirk or other little spots like it will be a cheaper place to get accomodation for your next trip than Edinburgh and is a good quiet place to use as a base to explore other places.
An Edinburgh local. Always good to know somewhere for accomodation to recommend to people (I'm a southsider so knew exactly the hotel you meant). Glad you guys had a good time.
Evan, I'm really struck by how relaxed you seem in this video! Normally, you've got a bee in your bonnet about this or that - you talk very fast and you often seem quite angry; but here you're really chilled - and the contrast is just so noticeable... Is it straggly hair, holiday mode? Best behaviour when in Mom's company? Or just out of the sheer madness that is London, I wonder?? Whatever, I like this Evan a lot more - I do hope we see some more of him - and if I see you back in Edinburgh again, I shall gladly buy you a drink!
I hope the Irn Bru was cold. She's from north America and no ice-cubes in sight. You're mum is amazing, what wise older actress is she reminding me of?
Cranachan - has a soft 'ch', as in 'och' or 'loch', not a hard 'ch' as in 'chopsticks'. Really Evan, have you learned nothing? :D Glad your mum liked the Haggis, Neeps, and Tatties... and glad you enjoyed your visit to Auld Reekie (Edinburgh).
How were you in Scotland waiting for a train and then suddenly in Greenwich, at the shrine to standard Imperial measurement without straddling the Greenwich Meridian with one foot in the West and one foot in the East? 😮
Greyfriar's Kirkyard. The Maiden, not the gallows. I'm glad you took your mom there, it was a nice thing for her to see and do with you. (J.K. Rowling only wrote a few chapters in that cafe, and it wasn't that one at the time she wrote it.)
If you think Edinburgh is light at night during summer. You need to visit Shetland, where the sun doesn't set during summer, or the Simmer Dim as we locals call it 😁
I've been really disappointed on several recent trips to Scotland, eating out in well over a dozen different places in total, and not a single one of them has had cranachan on the menu, I was really looking forward to trying it 😢 On the plus side, I have had plenty of haggis, venison and black pudding 😋
Cranachan is not normally found in restaurants, as good as it is. If not available go for sticky toffee pudding, I'm diabetic but when I see it on the it's screaming my name.
Good one,Evan & Mom,upvote for me : did all the Edin. haunts,apart from the Castle and you were up here (more by chance) for Pride weekend ! 👌👍 P.S. (1) The Guildfrod Arms is a fairly decent pub,centrally located in Edin.,so I presume you were travelling to/from Waverley Station [NB a bit further down,you could have done 'The Black Bull' Pub and had your 'Trainspotting' film fix! 😂] (2) The Elephaunt House,next to the Edin.Central Lib.,has been for closed awhile,due to lengthy repairs after an electrical fault(s) fire;and is one of a number of cafes/bars,around Edin.,with special plaques claiming J.K.Rowling/Harry Potter connections. 🙄
I need to try American bubblegum, I see so many Americans trying Irn Bru and saying it tastes like bubblegum and I'm like "How??" lmao. We also have a bubblegum drink from the brand "Barr", tastes completely different to Irn Bru.
A traditional haggis recipe describes haggis as "sheep's 'pluck' (heart, liver, and lungs), minced with onion, oatmeal, suet, spices, and salt, mixed with stock, and traditionally encased in the animal's stomach and boiled".
This is why the vegan version is so much nicer 😂. My last boss was prout Scot and a meat-eater, too, and even she agreed that the McSween meat-free haggis is more delicious.
I thought I saw you in Edinburgh outside Waverley during the festival. I did I double-take, decided I would look stupid if it wasn't you, and continued walking xD Just as well I did, because it looks kinda dead for Fringe-time. Couldn't have been you.
Sticky toffee pudding as sold today was actually brought to the UK by Canadian pilots durring WWII. Alought simular recipes dating back from the 1800s do exist in parts of the UK. It didn't become popular in the UK untill chain restaurants started to serve in the late 1970s as it can be prepared beforehand and easily warmed up just before service. I dont like as much as traditional British puddings such as oven baked rice pudding, bread and butter pudding or treacle sponge
@@williamwilkes9873 Definitely British. A 'Chippie' is a 'Fish and Chip' shop selling battered foods like cod, mackerel, sausages, burgers and fish cakes (fish cakes are white fish with mashed potatoes in a circle shape, covered in breadcrumbs and deep fried mostly served with a portion of chunky chips (thick fries) and covered in slat and vinegar (though the best way to coat them is vinegar first, then salt as the vinegar 2nd washes the salt off). Almost everything is deep fried, including a Mars bar, with a light batter over it. UK Mars Bars are like US Milky Ways.
Fun! Sorry I missed that Mexican restaurant in Edinburgh… wait a minute, no I’m not! I was there for a Scottish experience- I can get Mexican at home. Warm/cold I. September. And my god, the shortest skirts ever that I had to constantly pretend not to notice.
Glad you and your mom enjoyed Edinburgh and the Highlands! If you enjoyed your Loch Lomond beer, come and visit Loch Lomond and the Trossachs National Park next time!
Your mom is so adorable!!! I love that you were able to show her around. Hopefully my wife and I will be able to visit the UK. I already told her I've been wanting to visit for the last couple of years thanks to my UK DJ friends I've met on Mixcloud and when I discovered your channel (thanks to Lost In The Pond), I've been very impressed/inspired and love your journey through eventually becoming a UK citizen and wanting to live there. FYI your puns are awesome! LOL
You hit some great cultural spots, and things to do, glad she loved the haggis! Always let them try it before explaining what it is. As for Arthurs seat, what you showed is actually the crags, an ancient laval flow that came FROM the now extinct arthurs seat, which is the taller hill to right.
Your Mom seems lovely. Thanks for sharing her visit. Loved this video.
Haha your mum is like my mum visiting. Just takes over the chores and you’re like ‘ta but you didn’t have to’. I put my mum in front of Netflix with a coffee whilst she visited me in LA as I was gagging for a hair wash shower. I put my towel on the rack as I usually do afterwards. She used my bathroom after me and put my towel on the shower curtain pole to dry out better….there’s something about mothers who can’t help mothering and showing you up for not adulting like they adult.
Some of Highlander, when he first meets the Kurgan, and Monty Python’s Holy Grail were also shot in Glen Coe.
And Dragonslayer. I wanted to be an Extra but was too young at the time.
I am glad that you found the Guildford Arms, one of the places that I love for the variety of real ales.
Aww...Great choice with the Guildford Arms...a gorgeous pub & great beers on tap!
Very clean-running train! Almost invisible exhaust. Good fuel and experienced crew.
It was real smooth!
They're electric LOL
@@w0033944 Nope!
@@mytube001 Some are electric-only.
@@w0033944 I can find no info that supports your statement. And in this case, there is exhaust to be seen, just very clear.
14:16 I think there's a yard at Trafalgar square as well. The original yard was in the parliament buildings that burn down, so they had to reconstruct official yards (as I recall it)
Welcome to Scotland 🏴 Your mum is a star!
God I wish I was in Scotland again. It was such a beautiful time
Me too. Lived there for 20 years. Best years of my life. ❤
I feel as though I should point out that the haggis is only cooked in the sheep’s stomach, it isn’t actually part of what you eat…and even then, most modern haggis are in a synthetic bung and not the traditional sheep’s stomach. It’s actually the the pluck (lungs and heart) that is used in the dish, which are really finely chopped, mixed with oats and lentils and spiced with white pepper and coriander (spice not herb) and maybe a few other things depending on the family recipe.
I was a little baffled when prior to tasting it you claimed that cranachan was just like Eaton mess, as the only ingredient they share is cream. So I was obviously relieved when you realised the error of your proclamation 😊
I've never heard of lentils being used in Haggis and, as a Highlander from Inverness, I've been eating it for half a century. A traditional haggis recipe describes haggis as "sheep's 'pluck' (heart, liver, and lungs), minced with onion, oatmeal, suet, spices, and salt, mixed with stock, and traditionally encased in the animal's stomach and boiled". No lentils there.
@@Thurgosh_OG sorry, you’re absolutely right. I gave up meat over 30 years ago and just got a little muddled up, as vegetarian ones almost always have lentils in them. Though not a highlander (though I did live in Oban for a while), I am Scottish (born and brought up on the Firth of Clyde), so I should have known better.
I live in Seattle and make cranachan for Christmas dessert... 😊
If mama wants a baked bean sandwich, she can have a baked bean sandwich dagnammit! 😂
I'm from the highlands, another famous place near glencoe is glen etive. Turn into the junction and after a mile or so you will see where they filmed 007 Skyfall!
Glad you guys enjoyed Scotland! Next time, make sure to come north and experience the real highlands! Sutherland and Caithness are truly fantastic.
Your mum's a star great attitude to life and happy to try new things a fine example to us all..
Wow great shots of the Train Mr Edinger 😊❤
so glad you loved my beautiful city ❤🏴
Just moved to edinburgh for uni. Think it has a really nice vibe.
Glad you enjoyed Edinburgh! I was so surprised when I saw youse during pride so glad it all makes sense now and youse made the most of the glorious weather!
the way you pronounced cranachan made my day lol 😂
it's unintuitive, but the -chan is just pronounced -can like cran-a-can :)
You can get the ice cream version, which has raspberries, oatmeal and a dash of Scotch in it. Quite delicious - and very Scottish!
reminicent of peter ohanraharahan
That's not wrong, but I think cran-a-can is actually the anglicised version of it. The native Scottish version of the word I'm pretty sure has the 'ch' sound from "loch" instead of the second 'c'. 🙂
@@zak3744 Came to say this...
@@wessexdruid7598 Ock eye the new... 🙊
We ADORE Edinburgh! We met there and had our mini-moon there!
I also love Poundland and got VERY excited to visit a Dollarama when we were in Canada last year!
Lovely, brought back memories of our stay last year. I took lots of photos and video but haven't even processed any of it into planned projects as yet. We were supposed to go on the steam train that goes on the viaduct but it was cancelled. We still drove over there but there were no trains that day. I understand they've had other cancellations since then. While it's still something we'd like to do, I'm not sure I'd want to risk booking again.
I just love that your mom is so happy and keen to try all the different experiences. At least you have found good Mexican food in the UK now!
Thanks for the video both of you.
Ah Princes Street Gardens and an Irn Bru, you're making me homesick!
Irn Bru is made from girders
There's a brilliant comedy sketch my Mitchell and webb about Queen Victoria pointing out the trees smell that way
aw i felt for ya mom when you asked if she ready go home n she said no bless her could you of not kept her here
I swan in the fountain when I took a short cut through princes street gardens at 3 am. On my way to Bread Street .good old days. Cranachan pronounced CranaCan , so close, but so far .
I'm glad you enjoyed yourselves . Haste ye back .
I don’t know why this video took 3 months to come across my feed! I enjoyed seeing your mom get an appearance 😊
So have you seen the Mitchell & Webb Linden tree sketch?
that sketch was first thing I thought about when Evan started on about the trees! 🤣
7:28 James Bond's Skyfall was in another Glen just off of Glen Coe as well.
I love your mum's enthusiasm! 😊
Aw great to see you guys having a lovely time in Scotland
Your mum's as cool as you Evan lol! great video thoroughly enjoyed it!
I think it is so interesting how Americans who try Irn Bru immediately go to Bubblegum but Scots/Brits who drink it and who don't have that flavor as part of their palette go elsewhere.
As an Australian, I think Irn Bru tastes just like a soft drink we have called Creaming Soda (which is actually bubblegum pink in colour) 😋
Hm. I sort of agree with you. As a Englander, it's a weirdly fruity, bitey taste. Not my favourite, but I don't hate it.
It tastes like bubblegum to me. I'm a Brit.
British people know what bubblegum tastes like. Irn Bru tastes like Irn Bru to me, but I'm Scottish.
@@ShirinRose we have cream soda in Scotland, made by the same company as Irn-Bru... I love Irn-Bru and hate Cream Soda... strange
She's so sweet and positive!
Coburn street, yep a lot of stairs, there is a city burried undernearth that, You can get a tour at Mary Kings close go down and underneath, see how folk used to live.
I live in a little town called Falkirk not much in the way of excitement happens here, you might have heard of the "Kelpies" You've heard of Irn Bru? that company started out here , its just next to Stirling where the Wallace monument and castle is, Williams best friend is burried in a little church yard just outside my front door, up the hill is what remains of the Antonine wall, the old northern frontier of the Roman empire, Falkirk is about 30-40 minutes by train from both Glasgow and Edinburgh and 15 minutes over the valley from "The gateway to the highlands"
Falkirk or other little spots like it will be a cheaper place to get accomodation for your next trip than Edinburgh and is a good quiet place to use as a base to explore other places.
An Edinburgh local. Always good to know somewhere for accomodation to recommend to people (I'm a southsider so knew exactly the hotel you meant). Glad you guys had a good time.
Evan, I'm really struck by how relaxed you seem in this video! Normally, you've got a bee in your bonnet about this or that - you talk very fast and you often seem quite angry; but here you're really chilled - and the contrast is just so noticeable... Is it straggly hair, holiday mode? Best behaviour when in Mom's company? Or just out of the sheer madness that is London, I wonder?? Whatever, I like this Evan a lot more - I do hope we see some more of him - and if I see you back in Edinburgh again, I shall gladly buy you a drink!
Loved this ❤❤❤❤there PoundLand was amazed 😅
Haggis is cooked in the sheeps stomach. You dont eat it. Ingredients are heart, liver, oats spices 😋
and lungs
7:17 is this hidden valley up here ? I rember I went to do landscape photography up there it was niiice ❤
The graveyard is called Greyfriars, it is also where Greyfriars Bobby is buried and where the book is based on.
Ur mums beans on toast technic was spot on lol love the reaction
The Jacobite train is a really nice day trip.
Worth every penny - the scenery from the train is quite breathtaking.
There's irony for you! A Cornish pasty in Edinburgh! For those who don't know Cornwall is in southwest England on the Atlantic coast.
They still taste good to us up in the real North.
@@Thurgosh_OGMaybe it’s the REAL North of Scotland..but I live in the REAL North of England..😂👍
Sadly irn bru is no longer the number one drink since they halved the sugar, great video
The Guildford is a very fine pub! Glad you enjoyed your stay.
My parents spent their honeymoon in Scotland, in February, skiing.
Edinburgh is another of those cities supposedly built on seven hills. It's one of the places I need to visit before my old knees give out completely.
Like watching your travels with mum
Loch Lamont? No. Its LO-mond.
It's lovely. You should go there.
You got a seat in the Guildford? Good job! 🤣
I hope the Irn Bru was cold. She's from north America and no ice-cubes in sight. You're mum is amazing, what wise older actress is she reminding me of?
Glad you both had fun! Also Cranachan is pronounced "cran-i-can" ;)
Cranachan - has a soft 'ch', as in 'och' or 'loch', not a hard 'ch' as in 'chopsticks'. Really Evan, have you learned nothing? :D
Glad your mum liked the Haggis, Neeps, and Tatties... and glad you enjoyed your visit to Auld Reekie (Edinburgh).
How were you in Scotland waiting for a train and then suddenly in Greenwich, at the shrine to standard Imperial measurement without straddling the Greenwich Meridian with one foot in the West and one foot in the East? 😮
Greenwich looks dramatically different from when we lived down in the metropolis in the 1990s
👍👍
Greyfriar's Kirkyard. The Maiden, not the gallows. I'm glad you took your mom there, it was a nice thing for her to see and do with you. (J.K. Rowling only wrote a few chapters in that cafe, and it wasn't that one at the time she wrote it.)
Thank you for enjoying Irn Bru ❤
I love an iron bru. Great for hangovers
strong and strongly flavoured alcohol is really great for hangovers. Or perhaps you meant for curing them?
If you think Edinburgh is light at night during summer. You need to visit Shetland, where the sun doesn't set during summer, or the Simmer Dim as we locals call it 😁
Love quality youtubers visiting the city I left London for.
I've been really disappointed on several recent trips to Scotland, eating out in well over a dozen different places in total, and not a single one of them has had cranachan on the menu, I was really looking forward to trying it 😢
On the plus side, I have had plenty of haggis, venison and black pudding 😋
Cranachan is not normally found in restaurants, as good as it is. If not available go for sticky toffee pudding, I'm diabetic but when I see it on the it's screaming my name.
Good one,Evan & Mom,upvote for me : did all the Edin. haunts,apart from the Castle and you were up here (more by chance) for Pride weekend ! 👌👍
P.S. (1) The Guildfrod Arms is a fairly decent pub,centrally located in Edin.,so I presume you were travelling to/from Waverley Station [NB a bit further down,you could have done 'The Black Bull' Pub and had your 'Trainspotting' film fix! 😂]
(2) The Elephaunt House,next to the Edin.Central Lib.,has been for closed awhile,due to lengthy repairs after an electrical fault(s) fire;and is one of a number of cafes/bars,around Edin.,with special plaques claiming J.K.Rowling/Harry Potter connections. 🙄
Look like your mum had a great time
No Black Pudding in the breakfast? Lol! One of my favorite breakfast items that I can't get anywhere near me.
Well done on your pronunciation of Pitlochry. You just need to apply the same Scottish ch sound to cranachan.
I need to try American bubblegum, I see so many Americans trying Irn Bru and saying it tastes like bubblegum and I'm like "How??" lmao. We also have a bubblegum drink from the brand "Barr", tastes completely different to Irn Bru.
The Loch Lomond brewery makes some excellent beers.👍🍺
Your Mum is so cool.
you were close with haggis it's made of sheep lungs, oatmeal, onion and spices then packed in a sheep's stomach and boiled
A traditional haggis recipe describes haggis as "sheep's 'pluck' (heart, liver, and lungs), minced with onion, oatmeal, suet, spices, and salt, mixed with stock, and traditionally encased in the animal's stomach and boiled".
This is why the vegan version is so much nicer 😂. My last boss was prout Scot and a meat-eater, too, and even she agreed that the McSween meat-free haggis is more delicious.
I thought I saw you in Edinburgh outside Waverley during the festival. I did I double-take, decided I would look stupid if it wasn't you, and continued walking xD
Just as well I did, because it looks kinda dead for Fringe-time. Couldn't have been you.
Your Mom rocks!
Sticky toffee pudding as sold today was actually brought to the UK by Canadian pilots durring WWII. Alought simular recipes dating back from the 1800s do exist in parts of the UK.
It didn't become popular in the UK untill chain restaurants started to serve in the late 1970s as it can be prepared beforehand and easily warmed up just before service.
I dont like as much as traditional British puddings such as oven baked rice pudding, bread and butter pudding or treacle sponge
you coming to Liverpool on this Trip?
Wow Evan we get it. You’re straight stop hating on the trees😂
Great to see your mum trying the Scottish cuisine. Should have visited a chippie and got her a deep fried Mars bar.
Mexícan?
@@williamwilkes9873 Definitely British. A 'Chippie' is a 'Fish and Chip' shop selling battered foods like cod, mackerel, sausages, burgers and fish cakes (fish cakes are white fish with mashed potatoes in a circle shape, covered in breadcrumbs and deep fried mostly served with a portion of chunky chips (thick fries) and covered in slat and vinegar (though the best way to coat them is vinegar first, then salt as the vinegar 2nd washes the salt off). Almost everything is deep fried, including a Mars bar, with a light batter over it. UK Mars Bars are like US Milky Ways.
Taking Mom to poundland. Not to be confused with poundtown which is very different
Fun! Sorry I missed that Mexican restaurant in Edinburgh… wait a minute, no I’m not! I was there for a Scottish experience- I can get Mexican at home. Warm/cold I. September. And my god, the shortest skirts ever that I had to constantly pretend not to notice.
Where are the highland cows?
Excellent
ok so how did we get from Edinburgh to Greenwich was it a Harry Potter spell very confusing
magic of editing
@@EvanEdingerTravel lol
You pronounce "Cranachan" exactly as you did "Pitlochry", with the germanic "ch" as in "ich". 😊
Cranachan is nothing like Eton Mess! For starters Cranachan dates back go 8th Century.
Beans on Toast - Go Mom!
"Quite delicious" Mumma is now Scottish 😂
Laughed out loud at the honeymoon comment. You clearly have no idea how many stunning Scottish islands there are. We have over 900 islands in Scotland
Carry on regardless Eh!
What are those trees called?
linden trees
The Cum Trees
@@scottythedawgHow dare you?
oi i had my honeymoon in scotland!
You Mum is really nice.
Irn Bru beats Coke and as such it takes like victory! lol
Irn Bru Tastes like home.
Aye, right enough.
My favorite city
.....
My first thought is, in a video about your mum, don't constantly walk in front of her and obscure her. My second though is, great vid :)
Oh, so THAT'S why you've grown your hair...so you can look like your mum! 😄