A lot of Irish people support Premiership teams for historical reasons. Ireland's history of emigration has meant that lots of Irish people have played in English League teams. Good Irish footballers if they wanted to be successful had to go to England to become professional players. There are a million Irish born people living in the UK so naturally they followed teams that had Irish players as part of their team e.g. Liam Brady played for Arsenal and Sampdoria in the 1970s and 1980s. Roy Keane was captain of Man Utd for several years during the 1990s/2000s. There are countless other examples. Harry Kane, the England captain is first generation Irish. The connections are long and deep. Liverpool, Manchester, Glasgow etc. all have had large Irish immigrant communities and those associations continue. Gaelic football and hurling are both native sports in Ireland. They have the biggest national and local support. Every community in the country has it's local and county teams. The supporters are more passionate because the players are from the community. They see them every day, they work with them etc. Gaelic players are not professional so they all have day jobs. However they train just as hard as professionals. They literally do it for the love of the game and pride in their county (condado).
The thing about making friends in Ireland is that we have a parish mindset. So friendships are created younger in schools and in housing estates and not so much outside those locations they keep it local. so If you're new to Ireland kids will become friends faster and longer but adults tend to socialise with who they grew up with. Nothing to do with race.
I know a few foreign people who have said the same about Irish people, we smile and are friendly, but that doesn't mean we want to be friends. Friendship means a deep obligation in Ireland, a good friend is like family, it's very important and most Irish people will maintain a distance because of this.
Hi Marc, let me firstly say that your English is excellent and I understood you perfectly. On your last point, I think it is the same in a lot of places (not just Ireland) - until you start 'putting down roots', people don't want to invest in deep friendships because they are not sure if you are staying. I know it's a bit of a Catch-22 but I'm Irish living in Germany and I got this sense here also. You've got to remember also that if you live in Dublin, a lot of people have moved there from the rest of Ireland and they have their network of friends already in place from their home town. If you are active, when I lived in Dublin, I was in a hiking club - we met every two weeks and hiked mostly in Wicklow. It was a great way to meet new friends.
1 thing I noticed when watching English/UK TV was that people seem to make friends really quickly. They meet a few times and consider each other friends. Irish people are far more cagey. We take a long time to consider someone a real friend. We usually have work friends and home friends. Home friends are usually built up over many many years generally through school whereas work friends, if we change jobs, usually the friendship phases out. Same with neighbours. We are quite careful who we allow be close but once your in, you're a friend for life.
Unfortunately for in comers, we never do get "in" . Larger Irish families satisfy a lot of need for company. Social do's and don'ts are v distinct in Ireland. That can make it harder to mesh in as you don't know the rules. There is also an understandable resistance/ dislike for English accents. Collective guilt is thing. In spite of having made Ireland my family's home for 40 years, by choice, people are very quick to assume that I'm some kind of acolyte of Cromwell. It can be dispiriting but heck, I still dont want to be anywhere else.
You are 100% right about the Irish being difficult to form friendships with which is strange because we are also genuinely one of the most welcoming people you would ever meet. This contradiction is not just with outsiders but also among the Irish themselves. It also is not a two faced characteristic however in other ways we also suffer from that too. I have long pondered this and my view is his. People who become friends will open up to each other and the Irish do not like the vulnerability that this brings. We as a nation suffer from an ongoing theme of begrudgery and petty jealously amongst ourselves and if you open up yourself then you expose yourself to potential negativity. We are not a tight a nation as I believe we think we are. If we were a nation who as individuals formed a closer bond with each other then our people would have United together easily and cast out our British oppressors hundreds of years ago. That’s my view
Many lrish meet their friends in school and have lifelong friendships. It is difficult to gain that sort of in depth trust and understanding quickly. It takes time. The onion analogy is a good one.
It's funny when someone from another country points it out to us as we are often told how friendly we are with tourists, but now that you have, yes, we are probably not the easiest nation to become friends with. I'm in my 60's and all those I consider friends are people I've known for decades. I've often thought this was just me, but it's interesting to hear it may be a national characteristic. There have been several attempts to introduce Water bills both North and South but (perhaps because it rains so much,) the Irish have fiercely and successfully resisted these attempts politically for the time being anyway. Greetings from Belfast.
I'm Irish and I have been told that we are hard to make friends with too. I agree 100%. Something is wrong with us haha. I tried to talk about this with my brother and he said we are like onions.. every time you peak a layer, there is another one.. it's hard to really get down into the centre because there are so many layers but when you do... you will be forever a friend and will rarely be betrayed or hurt by that person. I don't know what made us this way.. maybe centuries of mistrust and hardship but it's difficult to know. Anyway, great video & have fun in Ireland!
im irish amd live in london. it is entirly due to our history amd opression. realistically we have only been living as 1st class citizens for about 60 years. sad but true
As an Irish man, I agree with your last point. Yes we are friendly but it is actually hard to get close to an Irish person. We don't have plugs in the bathroom mainly for safety reasons, we use the same three pin system they use use in the UK which is supposed to be safer in a room with running water. By the way I support St. Patrick's Athletic football team. Many Irish people support English teams because most Irish international players play for English or other UK teams. We don't have the money in our own domestic league. But Gaelic football and hurling are incredibly popular in the country. So many people support UK team along with a domestic soccer club and their own county GAA team, Gaelic football and hurling as well as their own local club GAA team. Remember, GAA is an amateur sport so players do not earn a living from the game.
If all the fans of English teams bought a season ticket for their local LOI team instead of one trip to England per year, we’d have a great league here. They like to say it’s because of the standard of football but they’re mostly bandwogoners and event junkies who wouldn’t know good football if it bit them on the arse.
@@Dreyno no it wouldn't be different at all. The clubs would just keep the money. The irish league 100 years behind, and the fans of these clubs have themselves to blame. If they put pressure on the fai to make a proper system and a proper plan to develop the so called professional game in Ireland then it would be better. All I hear is, ohhh the football is more purer bollix. It isn't purer, just a shite system. Ireland and northern Ireland need to join leagues and make a proper pyramid system, which would make it more competitive, which in turn would bring in more investments, and rich owners.
The voltage in Ireland and UK is 230 - 240 volts, if you have your phone charger plugged in or your electric razor, if the plugs are faulty and get wet, not only you could get electrocuted, but you could also die or even serious injuries because our voltage is so high did a quick look up for you it's also illegal to have electrical sockets in the bathroom because of how unsafe they are due to the extremely high voltage here
Good list. I think about making friends in ireland its just a come and go thing. people come and they go and then they come again, i would never look at how much people commit or anything like that. You just walk the road. The secret to making friends anywhere i think is just to turn up when you are supposed to, works for me.
About the sunlight, Ireland is in the same timezone as the UK but is further west, so that means we really 'should' be half an hour behind the UK. What that means is that the sun rises and sets around half an hour later than it 'should'. So for example the sun starts setting at around 9:30 in Bath in the summer, but at 10:00 in Dublin, even though Dublin is only a tiny bit further north. OF course, Spain takes this to the extreme, being in +1 GMT despite being 1000+ km further west than the centre of that time zone. The sun starts setting at around 10:20 during the longest days of the year in A Coruña, even though it's far further south than Ireland/UK! On the other hand, the sun starts rising at about 7:00 on those days, while in Ireland it starts rising around 5:00.
Do The Spanish people own their water ? Irish people already have paid for water, it was an European union agreement. Now our government want to privatise our water...... ah....no way ! You might have seen since living in Ireland, that we have rather a lot of water falling from the skies, too much at times ! But our governments over the decades have not maintained the water infrastructure and wasted the money from our taxes on frivolous vanity projects but, alas not on infrastructure. Now they want a private company ( nestle) to sell us our own water ?? No way, we won't pay
Sure, we do own the water, but the problem is the treatment and transortation of the water. For decades the councils did it but didn't get enough funding for upkeep so now we have an old, leaky network and aging treatment works that need gazillions to bring them up to date. Our lovely politicians saw an opportunity to include a sell off of our water infrastructure, including the headaches, at the same time as the rest of the family silver was for sale after the big crash of 2010. They only changed their minds when we all spat the dummy and they realised it would be political suicide to push it through. Round 2 has yet to begin, but I bet it's only a matter of time.
@@michaelkelly339 yes we do own the water, conservative government and county councils squandered money set aside for infrastructure, road, railroads, publictransport and water. I want to know where the hundreds of billions went, if not on the national infrastructure. The European union acknowledged that we pay through our taxes for our water upkeep . God bless the Victorian times, that was the last time a good to tip water and sewage overhaul happened in Ireland. My concern is, when whatever government is in power, if the eventually get the water and sewage sorted, up and running. Do you really think that our politicians will have any qualms in selling our water, our infrastructure to a private entity ???? Of course there will be board memberships etc for the clever few. Water is a God given right, a miracle of nature,, it's for the people and flora and fauna, not the likes of Nestĺe and their ilk. Wasn't Alan AK47s brother lobbying on behalf of one of these huge multinational corporations who acquire assets. Water is fast becoming a very precious commodity nowadays, he who controls the giver of life, controls the world
@@martinafitzgerald6995 Exactly. That's why we have to keep an eye on what's planned. It's only a matter of time til there's another attampt to finish the job of privitisation. In fact it may have already happened via a backdoor. One thing for sure: if a water charge is levied none of the other taxes will reduce to balance it out. Of course once the assets are sold, they're sold.
@@michaelkelly339 well they sold out forests to China or a Chinese corporation. Not a word spoken. They haven't invested in the national grid, but we are all to buy electric vehicles. The public transport is laughable, they won't nationalise it. But when the vehicle hire companies were left with thousands of cars and vans, and no customers during covid. What did our government do ? Let the market decide, as is the capitalist motto ?? No .... we hired their stock for public services , it is unbelievable. I thought that i would be in a position to take advantage of the market and but a decent low milage up to date car, more fool me. The price of second-hand cars actually went up ! This defied the market. There are hundreds of instances of this rigging of the system and not one person is ever held accountable. They get rewarded. Mediocrity is king in the republic of Ireland.
@@martinafitzgerald6995 Not wanting to sound too cynical but mediocrity isn't just king, it's a refuge. If you try something different the whole media and governance system is set up to attack. Irish people can be very conservative, as you know, and anyone who stands out attracts begrudgery. It will take a change of attitude to make anything other than mediocrity attractive. It's no accident that the most successful Irish people have their real success elsewhere. At home they'd be derailed by begrudgery. Sad but true, although slowly changing. I spent some time in the public sector and there's a strong ethos of "if you never do anything different you can't be criticised, so keep your head down and take the salary". That's why I left and why they were happy when I did.
Water that’s heated by electric is expensive, so is usually on timer or turned on and off. You can get shaver points in the bathroom or some bathroom cabinets have a shaver socket.
Water is free in the north of Ireland. You only pay water rates if you own farmland with a cattle drinker on it. I have my own well for drinking water.
If the water is heated by an immersion heater, then we turn it off once the water has been heated to avoid having an enormous electricity bill. With regard to water taxes, the Government tried to introduce them a few years ago and there was almost a national uprising as we think that this is more than covered in our income tax. There are no electricity sockets in bathrooms (apart sometimes for a shaver) for safety reasons. Water and electricity are not a good mix!
You are correct about Irish people and the Premier league. It's a little bit like in Spain if you live in Valecia a lot of people still support real Madrid or barca. Even though valencia have a pretty strong set up. Yes there are a lot of valencia fans in valencia, but I've met people who support barca or Madrid and have never lived there. Even more so when you go to places in spain with no big team. Basque country being an exception most people there seem to support bilbao. I am a bohemians fan in dublin and the team is growing but a lot of people still just want the easy option of the premiership
Being from Ireland, I would say it's hard for any person to really open up. In regards to emotions or feeling. I was always told to be the support for others. I think it depends on the person and their family values
I don't think a lot of people smoke at all. Compared to Spain it's virtual non existent. You see it on nights out but not during the day anymore. In spain a lot more people smoke.
2:56 THE * PRICE* OF. Hot Water is turned off at peak times to save money, It's 30-50% cheaper to heat your Immersion tank at off peak times and with good insulation that will stay hot until the next off peak time. Yes no plugs in bathrooms because we use 240V electricity, you use 110V. There are some bathrooms fitted with individual outlets connected to transformers so you can use your 110-115V Spanish accessories. But all the Irish (and British) electrical goods work to a 240V standard which is way too dangerous for a bathroom. 6:02 TO " ESTABLISH" A... I Love this analysis. Well done, keep it up. 🙂
Interesting video, I’m Irish btw. Haven’t lived there for nearly 30 years so I found this very informative. You’re English is better than mine ! Well done. 😂😂👋
Have you tried mixing water with electricity ? There are special sockets that can be fitted in bathrooms but earthed sockets are illegal , for safety reasons.
Hola Marc. Soy de Dublín pero vivo en Guadalajara, México desde hace tres años y medio. Un consejo, para enchufes eléctricos decimos "sockets", no "plug-ins". 👍🏼
We pay water bills in recent years. In the old days there was water bills, then it was moved to the Car Tax bills, then they brought back the Water bills.
Glasgow Celtic are the most popular club in Ireland. Quit shaving and come to Dalymount Park some time with me to see Bohemians and I'll get you lots of new Irish friends! :)
I am from spain, i am following you to the other channel, it is very useful to me becouse i will be in dublin this summer to improve my english and all the information that you show us there is very interesting. And i am going to use this Chanel to practice and arrive there with the best level posible. Thank you very much and concratulation for your work!!
Elec outlets in toilets/bathrooms are not allowed under electrical wiring regulations in the UK and Ireland followed suit. The reg dates back to the days of fuses when water and electricity were an even worse mixture than they are today. You must have noticed the same thing when you lived in Bath. There are exceptions for shavers and double insulated heaters. Many bathrooms have shaver sockets that are speccially protected, they're usually in the same unit as the light neatr the mirror.
going back a lot of the successful premier teams had a lot of irish players who had gone over for work, so you would get a lot of people supporting the team that they either knew the person or they came from their area.
After living in a few different cities around Europe it’s difficult to make friends with most locals yeah they’re friendly but to be friends isn’t that easy you need more than a year to build a real friendship with a local or anyone. After living in your home town for more than 20 years I can tell you it’s very difficult to be friends with Catalans not impossible but tough. Your English is spot on!
When you have lived abroad for a while you end up adapting to the way of being of the place. I think it's a matter of living longer in the country. A greeting from Spain
Tienes razón, soy irlandés y tengo unos amigos españoles aquí en Irlanda. The thing that changed everything was when my family cooked proper traditional Irish food for my friend and his wife. We all became closer. Ahora, visitamos nuestros hogares y tenemos amigos en comunes.
We are moving very fast in Ireland, maybe a little to fast. Intergeneration is cool but everyone need's to get involved. Devided we fall. Law's are being changed mostly for the better but not enough conciliation and debate is happening around these changes. Slowly and steady does it. ✌️☘️
Hola, saludos. Soy irlandés y estoy aprendiendo castellano. Soccer / fútbol no es algo importante en Irlanda, entonces los fans de fútbol siguen los ingleses y los alemanes. Football gaélico o el rugby son más populares. Ahora, aqua es gratis. Quizás, en el futuro no. Tu pronunciación es muy buen. Puede ahorrar dinero con el ‘immersion’ (para calentar el agua) pero mucha gente tiene paneles solares también. Los irlandeses fuman menos y menos cada año, los españoles fuman muchísimo. Tengo amigos españoles y ellos son personas geniales. Para tener amigos irlandeses necesitas asistir algo como una liga pequeña de fútbol o un deporte que te gusta o asistir un club de senderismo o de drama y tal. A veces, los irlandeses tienen sus propios familiares y amigos y ellos creían que los extranjeros no quieren ser amigos. Pero, de verdad, somos privados. Los irlandeses no hacen amigos en el pub, el pub es para charlar y pasar tiempo con sus propios amigos y compañeros (normalmente). The best of luck to you a chara agus Fáilte! If you REALLY want to have Irish friends sign up for an Irish language class, you won’t find more welcoming people. Sláinte / Saludos
Greetings and welcome to Ireland, I'm Irish and I've been supporting Barca since childhood, 49 years old now. I used to work in an Irish bar in Barcelona actually for many years. Kitty O'Sheas at Nou Santa Maria on the corner of Diagonal Numancia, not far from Camp Nou. I support Derry City too as that is where I live now, originally from Tralee County Kerry. I've subscribed to your channel, and as we always say, Visca Barca Visca Catalunya 👍
England also is silly about having electric outlets in bathrooms. In the USA we have been using GFI's for decades, completely safely. Ground Fault Interrupters. They immediately cut off the current if something using electricity is introduced.
Another excellent video, Marc. I think that your English language knowledge is really excellent but maybe you could slow down a bit. Just a thought and no offence meant, Marc. I know that Spanish people speak Spanish at very high speed. Keep up the great work and keep posting. Anthony
Lol couldn't make out what he meant by a plug in the toilet I thought first he meant like a plug to block the toilet bowel 😆 Electrical socket oh right
Water and electric make bad bedfellows. Its a no brainer safety wise. On a visit to Brazil many years ago I remember the shower in my hotel room had a light switch INSIDE the shower cubicle. The water fell directly onto the switch causing it to spark. Obviously safety was not a big factor in Latino land.
You can't really compare Brazil to anywhere in Western Europe, to be fair. Ireland and the UK are outliers when it comes to power in the jax. It hasn't been a serious risk since ELCBs becamse mandatory and it's allowed to have socket outlets in the bathroom almost everywhere.
We're difficult to make friends with because we already have friends. We're not interested in being a language teacher. Your English is perfect by the way.
it astounds me also,why anybody would want to leave the iberinian pennisula is crazy, to come to this dark,grey,cold shithole where u cant even make friends bcos everyone is odd as fuck.
5:09 When you say’ there are no plug in in the toilets in Ireland’ I assume you mean bathrooms. All rooms that contain a bath or shower are called special locations in the electrical rules and a very high level of safety is required that’s why no plug sockets are allowed. Some one could plug in a hairdryer or an electric fire while some one was using the bath or shower. If you thing someone would not be stupid enough to use a hairdryer while in the bath then think again !
I am Irish and follow St. Pats. Irish people follow English teams that are easy to follow, Liverpool, United etc. You will find very few Burnley, Southampton supporters . As a league of Ireland supporter I find it quite sad. Most people do not smoke in Ireland. Only 30% of population are smokers.
I grew up beside St Patrick's Athletic club. Many times on a Sunday morning I'd be hung over, trying to sleep, and the song " oh when the saints come marching in " would be blaring out loud.😆
Point 1 can be difficult for me sometimes too. I'm not sure if it'd because I've lived abroad or just how I am but it can be annoying even as an Irish person not knowing if someone like you or not.
Nonsense most Spanish slaughtered before they got to shore. A reward was paid by the British for their head. Mind you saying that our DNA is very similar to the Basque people. How!! I don’t know.
Regarding friendship,I think there's also an expectation/fear that foreigners will return home so it's not worth making the investment. I don't agree with it but it does seem to be some ppl's attitude.
Hi Marc Just saw your vlog. Hope you are enjoying living in Ireland I agree with number 7, as a Shamrock Rovers fan it amazes me why so many Irish people "follow" English teams. Unfortunately it is a trait of Irish people, glory hunters. Many seem to take delight in knocking Irish football teams, it's so weird. As you know, being a football fan is about supporting your local team and actually go to games and not just be a SKY TV Subscriber. I would love if you could come to Tallaght to watch Rovers, no better time than this Tuesday when we play in the Champions League qualifiers. Point 1 is interesting, Irish people are friendly but I do agree they tend not to be friends with Foreign people. I see this in my own job. Maybe Irish people feel a person from a foreign land may not fit in with their friends of feel Foreigners prefer to hang around with their fellow country people. Good luck with the vlog 👍☘
I'm irish foreigners don't and can't take the humour at all!! But alot have made friends with irish and tbh most foreigners tend to stick with their own kind instead of mixing and getting into the culture of ireland. Show some respect and interest to ireland and it's history, way of life etc.You reap what you sow.
Thank you 🙌🏼 it depends, for example in my case I think my pronunciation could be better sometimes but I have a lot of vocabulary. My advice is: when you listen to some word or expression that you do not know, try to find out the meaning and therefore memorize it easier 😄👍🏻
Irish people are a breed of their own, and it is taking some getting used. Too when we now have soo, soo many foreigners over here! And. We don't understand their language, which tends to make us keep our distance a bit and let them get on with there holiday or job or whatever else they are doing, ! No disrespect, we are only starting to get used to foreigners over here these past few years!! Oh and my sons support Manchester ⚽ football, why?? 🤔I do not understand this myself as a mother!! . Maybe. It has something to do with DAVID BECKHAM ?? 😨😱😵 😀😁😂
Football was very stigmatised here ,up until the 90s.Up until 1971 the GAA had a series of rules against sports that originated in england which included Football ,rugby cricket and hockey ,if any member even attended a fund raiser for these supports let alone play or go to a match they were kicked out of the GAA.Thats 50 years ago but the legacy persists abit,in that football is considered an english game therefore the top level of competition there which is the premier league is superior to what we have here and also though its not really the case now ,but as i said the legacy is still there,that you might aswell be hung for asheep aswell as a lamb and support english teams because you were going to be considered a traitor either way. This is coming from a GAA fan btw,the ban was necessary at won time but it should have been abolished straight after independence not in 1971 it fuelled far too much resentment between the codes.
I am Irish and I f*****g hate GAA. I am seventy years of age and grew up with all the tyranny. In my home town Ballyfermot. the local Parish priest and his cronies chopped down soccer goalposts and barred grown men from church for starting up soccer teams. How are ye!!!
I never understand foreign peoples problem with the Bathroom, when I was working with one,it was the taps and with you the plug. Mind boggling. Really, these are first world problems.🤔
Irish people are a breed of their own, and it is taking some getting used. Too when we now have soo, soo many foreigners over here! And. We don't understand their language, which tends to make us keep our distance a bit and let them get n with there biddy or job or whatever else they are up too! No disrespect, we are only starting to get used to foreignersivi g over here these past few years!! Oh and my sons support Manchester ⚽ football, why?? 🤔. Maybe it was DAVID BECKHAM THEY Love?? 😨😱😵😍😍😍😘. 😀😁😂
Yes. You're a nice guy but we take a long time to trust others. We mind our own business The electric sockets were banned because of water shocks. Ireland wants to ban smoking altogether. Everywhere They will do it soon because the high tax isn't working. 😊
When you were complaining about the lack of power sockets in the jax, and you were saying you need it for your electric shaver, then you said girls need them too for..... all I could think of was Spanish girls using an angle grinder to shave their nether regions... I used to go out with a Spanish girl.. Anyways I hope you enjoy your stay 👍
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A lot of Irish people support Premiership teams for historical reasons. Ireland's history of emigration has meant that lots of Irish people have played in English League teams. Good Irish footballers if they wanted to be successful had to go to England to become professional players. There are a million Irish born people living in the UK so naturally they followed teams that had Irish players as part of their team e.g. Liam Brady played for Arsenal and Sampdoria in the 1970s and 1980s. Roy Keane was captain of Man Utd for several years during the 1990s/2000s. There are countless other examples. Harry Kane, the England captain is first generation Irish. The connections are long and deep.
Liverpool, Manchester, Glasgow etc. all have had large Irish immigrant communities and those associations continue.
Gaelic football and hurling are both native sports in Ireland. They have the biggest national and local support. Every community in the country has it's local and county teams. The supporters are more passionate because the players are from the community. They see them every day, they work with them etc. Gaelic players are not professional so they all have day jobs. However they train just as hard as professionals. They literally do it for the love of the game and pride in their county (condado).
Real friendship takes years to establish. I wouldn't expect someone to become a really close friend in a short period of time.
The thing about making friends in Ireland is that we have a parish mindset. So friendships are created younger in schools and in housing estates and not so much outside those locations they keep it local. so If you're new to Ireland kids will become friends faster and longer but adults tend to socialise with who they grew up with. Nothing to do with race.
That is very true.
Do u have any friends u made in adulthood
I know a few foreign people who have said the same about Irish people, we smile and are friendly, but that doesn't mean we want to be friends. Friendship means a deep obligation in Ireland, a good friend is like family, it's very important and most Irish people will maintain a distance because of this.
Hi Marc, let me firstly say that your English is excellent and I understood you perfectly.
On your last point, I think it is the same in a lot of places (not just Ireland) - until you start 'putting down roots', people don't want to invest in deep friendships because they are not sure if you are staying. I know it's a bit of a Catch-22 but I'm Irish living in Germany and I got this sense here also.
You've got to remember also that if you live in Dublin, a lot of people have moved there from the rest of Ireland and they have their network of friends already in place from their home town.
If you are active, when I lived in Dublin, I was in a hiking club - we met every two weeks and hiked mostly in Wicklow. It was a great way to meet new friends.
1 thing I noticed when watching English/UK TV was that people seem to make friends really quickly. They meet a few times and consider each other friends. Irish people are far more cagey. We take a long time to consider someone a real friend. We usually have work friends and home friends. Home friends are usually built up over many many years generally through school whereas work friends, if we change jobs, usually the friendship phases out. Same with neighbours. We are quite careful who we allow be close but once your in, you're a friend for life.
Unfortunately for in comers, we never do get "in" . Larger Irish families satisfy a lot of need for company. Social do's and don'ts are v distinct in Ireland. That can make it harder to mesh in as you don't know the rules. There is also an understandable resistance/ dislike for English accents. Collective guilt is thing. In spite of having made Ireland my family's home for 40 years, by choice, people are very quick to assume that I'm some kind of acolyte of Cromwell. It can be dispiriting but heck, I still dont want to be anywhere else.
Well done. Thank you for this lovely post. Good luck to you from America.
You are 100% right about the Irish being difficult to form friendships with which is
strange because we are also genuinely one of the most welcoming people you would ever meet.
This contradiction is not just with outsiders but also among the Irish themselves.
It also is not a two faced characteristic however in other ways we also suffer from that too.
I have long pondered this and my view is his. People who become friends will open up to each other
and the Irish do not like the vulnerability that this brings. We as a nation suffer from an ongoing theme of begrudgery
and petty jealously amongst ourselves and if you open up yourself then you expose yourself to potential negativity.
We are not a tight a nation as I believe we think we are.
If we were a nation who as individuals formed a closer bond with each other then our people would have United together
easily and cast out our British oppressors hundreds of years ago.
That’s my view
Yeah the no plugs in bathrooms is a safety thing, it’s to do with the high wattage that Irish sockets operate at
Many lrish meet their friends in school and have lifelong friendships. It is difficult to gain that sort of in depth trust and understanding quickly. It takes time. The onion analogy is a good one.
It's funny when someone from another country points it out to us as we are often told how friendly we are with tourists, but now that you have, yes, we are probably not the easiest nation to become friends with. I'm in my 60's and all those I consider friends are people I've known for decades. I've often thought this was just me, but it's interesting to hear it may be a national characteristic. There have been several attempts to introduce Water bills both North and South but (perhaps because it rains so much,) the Irish have fiercely and successfully resisted these attempts politically for the time being anyway. Greetings from Belfast.
Such an interesting comment, thank you 😄
@@seandoherty925 I'd collect water off my roof before I'd pay for it 🤣
Usually in bathrooms in ireland over the mirror there should be a light you can plug in there but with a two pin plug
Hi Marc, I am from Dublin living in Bangkok Thailand. I love your channel. Keep up the good work.
That is a great and unusual combination haha, thanks for your kind words 🙏😄
I'm Irish and I have been told that we are hard to make friends with too. I agree 100%. Something is wrong with us haha. I tried to talk about this with my brother and he said we are like onions.. every time you peak a layer, there is another one.. it's hard to really get down into the centre because there are so many layers but when you do... you will be forever a friend and will rarely be betrayed or hurt by that person. I don't know what made us this way.. maybe centuries of mistrust and hardship but it's difficult to know. Anyway, great video & have fun in Ireland!
I agree with you, hehe love the “onion” comparison 🧅 thank you for sharing your thoughts 🙌🏼🍀
OnIoNs HaVe LaYeRs
How many layers though?!
Man I hate Barcelona PEOPLE😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
im irish amd live in london. it is entirly due to our history amd opression. realistically we have only been living as 1st class citizens for about 60 years. sad but true
As an Irish man, I agree with your last point. Yes we are friendly but it is actually hard to get close to an Irish person. We don't have plugs in the bathroom mainly for safety reasons, we use the same three pin system they use use in the UK which is supposed to be safer in a room with running water. By the way I support St. Patrick's Athletic football team. Many Irish people support English teams because most Irish international players play for English or other UK teams. We don't have the money in our own domestic league. But Gaelic football and hurling are incredibly popular in the country. So many people support UK team along with a domestic soccer club and their own county GAA team, Gaelic football and hurling as well as their own local club GAA team. Remember, GAA is an amateur sport so players do not earn a living from the game.
If all the fans of English teams bought a season ticket for their local LOI team instead of one trip to England per year, we’d have a great league here.
They like to say it’s because of the standard of football but they’re mostly bandwogoners and event junkies who wouldn’t know good football if it bit them on the arse.
@@Dreyno no it wouldn't be different at all. The clubs would just keep the money. The irish league 100 years behind, and the fans of these clubs have themselves to blame. If they put pressure on the fai to make a proper system and a proper plan to develop the so called professional game in Ireland then it would be better. All I hear is, ohhh the football is more purer bollix. It isn't purer, just a shite system. Ireland and northern Ireland need to join leagues and make a proper pyramid system, which would make it more competitive, which in turn would bring in more investments, and rich owners.
@@jasonwall5012 Keep the money? Do you think LOI clubs have money lying around? If they have money they spend it. Every last cent.
The voltage in Ireland and UK is 230 - 240 volts, if you have your phone charger plugged in or your electric razor, if the plugs are faulty and get wet, not only you could get electrocuted, but you could also die or even serious injuries because our voltage is so high did a quick look up for you it's also illegal to have electrical sockets in the bathroom because of how unsafe they are due to the extremely high voltage here
Interesting data ⚡️☠️
The voltage is the same throughout Europe.
Good list.
I think about making friends in ireland its just a come and go thing. people come and they go and then they come again, i would never look at how much people commit or anything like that. You just walk the road.
The secret to making friends anywhere i think is just to turn up when you are supposed to, works for me.
About the sunlight, Ireland is in the same timezone as the UK but is further west, so that means we really 'should' be half an hour behind the UK. What that means is that the sun rises and sets around half an hour later than it 'should'. So for example the sun starts setting at around 9:30 in Bath in the summer, but at 10:00 in Dublin, even though Dublin is only a tiny bit further north.
OF course, Spain takes this to the extreme, being in +1 GMT despite being 1000+ km further west than the centre of that time zone. The sun starts setting at around 10:20 during the longest days of the year in A Coruña, even though it's far further south than Ireland/UK! On the other hand, the sun starts rising at about 7:00 on those days, while in Ireland it starts rising around 5:00.
different heating systems, in ireland hot water has to be heated up in a tank before use while spain you just heat as you use
Irish people make friends when they are young and they keep them for the rest of their life, so they have very little room or time for more friends.
Your English, is a whole lot better than my Spanish.
Do The Spanish people own their water ?
Irish people already have paid for water, it was an European union agreement. Now our government want to privatise our water...... ah....no way ! You might have seen since living in Ireland, that we have rather a lot of water falling from the skies, too much at times ! But our governments over the decades have not maintained the water infrastructure and wasted the money from our taxes on frivolous vanity projects but, alas not on infrastructure. Now they want a private company ( nestle) to sell us our own water ?? No way, we won't pay
Sure, we do own the water, but the problem is the treatment and transortation of the water. For decades the councils did it but didn't get enough funding for upkeep so now we have an old, leaky network and aging treatment works that need gazillions to bring them up to date. Our lovely politicians saw an opportunity to include a sell off of our water infrastructure, including the headaches, at the same time as the rest of the family silver was for sale after the big crash of 2010. They only changed their minds when we all spat the dummy and they realised it would be political suicide to push it through. Round 2 has yet to begin, but I bet it's only a matter of time.
@@michaelkelly339 yes we do own the water, conservative government and county councils squandered money set aside for infrastructure, road, railroads, publictransport and water. I want to know where the hundreds of billions went, if not on the national infrastructure. The European union acknowledged that we pay through our taxes for our water upkeep . God bless the Victorian times, that was the last time a good to tip water and sewage overhaul happened in Ireland.
My concern is, when whatever government is in power, if the eventually get the water and sewage sorted, up and running. Do you really think that our politicians will have any qualms in selling our water, our infrastructure to a private entity ???? Of course there will be board memberships etc for the clever few. Water is a God given right, a miracle of nature,, it's for the people and flora and fauna, not the likes of Nestĺe and their ilk. Wasn't Alan AK47s brother lobbying on behalf of one of these huge multinational corporations who acquire assets. Water is fast becoming a very precious commodity nowadays, he who controls the giver of life, controls the world
@@martinafitzgerald6995 Exactly. That's why we have to keep an eye on what's planned. It's only a matter of time til there's another attampt to finish the job of privitisation. In fact it may have already happened via a backdoor. One thing for sure: if a water charge is levied none of the other taxes will reduce to balance it out. Of course once the assets are sold, they're sold.
@@michaelkelly339 well they sold out forests to China or a Chinese corporation. Not a word spoken. They haven't invested in the national grid, but we are all to buy electric vehicles. The public transport is laughable, they won't nationalise it. But when the vehicle hire companies were left with thousands of cars and vans, and no customers during covid. What did our government do ? Let the market decide, as is the capitalist motto ?? No .... we hired their stock for public services , it is unbelievable. I thought that i would be in a position to take advantage of the market and but a decent low milage up to date car, more fool me. The price of second-hand cars actually went up ! This defied the market. There are hundreds of instances of this rigging of the system and not one person is ever held accountable. They get rewarded. Mediocrity is king in the republic of Ireland.
@@martinafitzgerald6995 Not wanting to sound too cynical but mediocrity isn't just king, it's a refuge. If you try something different the whole media and governance system is set up to attack. Irish people can be very conservative, as you know, and anyone who stands out attracts begrudgery. It will take a change of attitude to make anything other than mediocrity attractive. It's no accident that the most successful Irish people have their real success elsewhere. At home they'd be derailed by begrudgery. Sad but true, although slowly changing.
I spent some time in the public sector and there's a strong ethos of "if you never do anything different you can't be criticised, so keep your head down and take the salary". That's why I left and why they were happy when I did.
That's an interesting way for improve english comprehension for spanish speakers. It's really good for beginners.
Thanks for your support 😎
No, electricity sockets in bathrooms is very much for safety reasons! Electricity and water/moisture really don’t mix!! 😳
Water that’s heated by electric is expensive, so is usually on timer or turned on and off. You can get shaver points in the bathroom or some bathroom cabinets have a shaver socket.
Water is free in the north of Ireland. You only pay water rates if you own farmland with a cattle drinker on it. I have my own well for drinking water.
If the water is heated by an immersion heater, then we turn it off once the water has been heated to avoid having an enormous electricity bill. With regard to water taxes, the Government tried to introduce them a few years ago and there was almost a national uprising as we think that this is more than covered in our income tax. There are no electricity sockets in bathrooms (apart sometimes for a shaver) for safety reasons. Water and electricity are not a good mix!
Thanks for your explanation 👏🏼😄
From the rivers to the sea irish water will be free 😊
It should be, but it’s not.
You are correct about Irish people and the Premier league.
It's a little bit like in Spain if you live in Valecia a lot of people still support real Madrid or barca. Even though valencia have a pretty strong set up.
Yes there are a lot of valencia fans in valencia, but I've met people who support barca or Madrid and have never lived there.
Even more so when you go to places in spain with no big team. Basque country being an exception most people there seem to support bilbao.
I am a bohemians fan in dublin and the team is growing but a lot of people still just want the easy option of the premiership
Being from Ireland, I would say it's hard for any person to really open up. In regards to emotions or feeling. I was always told to be the support for others. I think it depends on the person and their family values
I don't think a lot of people smoke at all. Compared to Spain it's virtual non existent.
You see it on nights out but not during the day anymore.
In spain a lot more people smoke.
2:56 THE * PRICE* OF. Hot Water is turned off at peak times to save money, It's 30-50% cheaper to heat your Immersion tank at off peak times and with good insulation that will stay hot until the next off peak time. Yes no plugs in bathrooms because we use 240V electricity, you use 110V. There are some bathrooms fitted with individual outlets connected to transformers so you can use your 110-115V Spanish accessories. But all the Irish (and British) electrical goods work to a 240V standard which is way too dangerous for a bathroom. 6:02 TO " ESTABLISH" A...
I Love this analysis. Well done, keep it up. 🙂
Interesting video, I’m Irish btw. Haven’t lived there for nearly 30 years so I found this very informative. You’re English is better than mine ! Well done. 😂😂👋
Usted habla ingles muy bien, felicitaciones!
Interesting observation…..you explained yourself well…i wish you good luck on your irish adventure! :-)
Have you tried mixing water with electricity ? There are special sockets that can be fitted in bathrooms but earthed sockets are illegal , for safety reasons.
Hola Marc. Soy de Dublín pero vivo en Guadalajara, México desde hace tres años y medio.
Un consejo, para enchufes eléctricos decimos "sockets", no "plug-ins". 👍🏼
We pay water bills in recent years.
In the old days there was water bills, then it was moved to the Car Tax bills, then they brought back the Water bills.
Glasgow Celtic are the most popular club in Ireland.
Quit shaving and come to Dalymount Park some time with me to see Bohemians and I'll get you lots of new Irish friends! :)
THANK YOU... DES IN BELFAST,, IRELAND
I am from spain, i am following you to the other channel, it is very useful to me becouse i will be in dublin this summer to improve my english and all the information that you show us there is very interesting. And i am going to use this Chanel to practice and arrive there with the best level posible. Thank you very much and concratulation for your work!!
Hello Gabriel, thanks for your kind words. I am glad that the content is useful for you 😄
Elec outlets in toilets/bathrooms are not allowed under electrical wiring regulations in the UK and Ireland followed suit. The reg dates back to the days of fuses when water and electricity were an even worse mixture than they are today. You must have noticed the same thing when you lived in Bath. There are exceptions for shavers and double insulated heaters. Many bathrooms have shaver sockets that are speccially protected, they're usually in the same unit as the light neatr the mirror.
going back a lot of the successful premier teams had a lot of irish players who had gone over for work, so you would get a lot of people supporting the team that they either knew the person or they came from their area.
Un buen próximo vídeo podría ser sobre contratar línea de teléfono en Irlanda 👀👀
Saludos Marc!
This is very good. This man should have more subscribers
After living in a few different cities around Europe it’s difficult to make friends with most locals yeah they’re friendly but to be friends isn’t that easy you need more than a year to build a real friendship with a local or anyone. After living in your home town for more than 20 years I can tell you it’s very difficult to be friends with Catalans not impossible but tough. Your English is spot on!
You are probably right! Thanks for your input about my English 😄🙌🏼
When you have lived abroad for a while you end up adapting to the way of being of the place. I think it's a matter of living longer in the country. A greeting from Spain
Exactly, it has a big influence on you 😄 Greetings from Ireland 🙌🏼🍀
Tienes razón, soy irlandés y tengo unos amigos españoles aquí en Irlanda. The thing that changed everything was when my family cooked proper traditional Irish food for my friend and his wife. We all became closer. Ahora, visitamos nuestros hogares y tenemos amigos en comunes.
We are moving very fast in Ireland, maybe a little to fast. Intergeneration is cool but everyone need's to get involved. Devided we fall. Law's are being changed mostly for the better but not enough conciliation and debate is happening around these changes. Slowly and steady does it. ✌️☘️
nice video Marc! Waiting to see the next one!
Hola, saludos. Soy irlandés y estoy aprendiendo castellano. Soccer / fútbol no es algo importante en Irlanda, entonces los fans de fútbol siguen los ingleses y los alemanes. Football gaélico o el rugby son más populares. Ahora, aqua es gratis. Quizás, en el futuro no. Tu pronunciación es muy buen. Puede ahorrar dinero con el ‘immersion’ (para calentar el agua) pero mucha gente tiene paneles solares también. Los irlandeses fuman menos y menos cada año, los españoles fuman muchísimo. Tengo amigos españoles y ellos son personas geniales. Para tener amigos irlandeses necesitas asistir algo como una liga pequeña de fútbol o un deporte que te gusta o asistir un club de senderismo o de drama y tal. A veces, los irlandeses tienen sus propios familiares y amigos y ellos creían que los extranjeros no quieren ser amigos. Pero, de verdad, somos privados. Los irlandeses no hacen amigos en el pub, el pub es para charlar y pasar tiempo con sus propios amigos y compañeros (normalmente). The best of luck to you a chara agus Fáilte! If you REALLY want to have Irish friends sign up for an Irish language class, you won’t find more welcoming people. Sláinte / Saludos
Its against building codes to have plugs in Ireland. Not with shaving though.. they are a different type of electrical component.
Your sound!
Greetings and welcome to Ireland, I'm Irish and I've been supporting Barca since childhood, 49 years old now. I used to work in an Irish bar in Barcelona actually for many years. Kitty O'Sheas at Nou Santa Maria on the corner of Diagonal Numancia, not far from Camp Nou. I support Derry City too as that is where I live now, originally from Tralee County Kerry. I've subscribed to your channel, and as we always say, Visca Barca Visca Catalunya 👍
Wow thanks for your kind words and I hope you enjoyed the years you spent in my country. Derry is in my to-do list 😄🍀
I’m Spanish but with this video I can practice and improve my English. I’m from main channel.
Thanks for supporting this channel in English 👏
England also is silly about having electric outlets in bathrooms. In the USA we have been using GFI's for decades, completely safely. Ground Fault Interrupters. They immediately cut off the current if something using electricity is introduced.
Another excellent video, Marc. I think that your English language knowledge is really excellent but maybe you could slow down a bit. Just a thought and no offence meant, Marc. I know that Spanish people speak Spanish at very high speed. Keep up the great work and keep posting. Anthony
Thank you for your feedback, yes we usually rush a bit when talking 😂
Lol couldn't make out what he meant by a plug in the toilet
I thought first he meant like a plug to block the toilet bowel 😆
Electrical socket oh right
Plug ins are called sockets in ireland
Para que lo sepas 😉
We pay for water, through car tax and also from the property tax.
Congrats
Water and electric make bad bedfellows. Its a no brainer safety wise. On a visit to Brazil many years ago I remember the shower in my hotel room had a light switch INSIDE the shower cubicle. The water fell directly onto the switch causing it to spark. Obviously safety was not a big factor in Latino land.
You can't really compare Brazil to anywhere in Western Europe, to be fair. Ireland and the UK are outliers when it comes to power in the jax. It hasn't been a serious risk since ELCBs becamse mandatory and it's allowed to have socket outlets in the bathroom almost everywhere.
Funny video, your spot on about us, ps, can you make a Spanish omelette video please!
Parlo Català! Vaig passar 10 anys en Barcelona. Catalunya més que mai!
You mean you don't understand the difference between being friendly and being your friend. You obviously never met a used care salesman.
Why has this commet got so few likes?? Pure gold.
We're difficult to make friends with because we already have friends. We're not interested in being a language teacher. Your English is perfect by the way.
I'm Irish and I live in Spain. My biggest surprise is that any Spaniard/Catalans would want to leave this amazing country to live in Ireland! 😂
it astounds me also,why anybody would want to leave the iberinian pennisula is crazy, to come to this dark,grey,cold shithole where u cant even make friends bcos everyone is odd as fuck.
Amazing bro! ❤️
Thank you darling 😄🍀
5:09 When you say’ there are no plug in in the toilets in Ireland’ I assume you mean bathrooms.
All rooms that contain a bath or shower are called special locations in the electrical rules and a very
high level of safety is required that’s why no plug sockets are allowed. Some one could plug in a hairdryer or
an electric fire while some one was using the bath or shower. If you thing someone would not be stupid enough to
use a hairdryer while in the bath then think again !
Well we need an uplift in national IQ so maybe having socket outlets in bathrooms could be helpful....
I am Irish and follow St. Pats. Irish people follow English teams that are easy to follow, Liverpool, United etc. You will find very few Burnley, Southampton supporters . As a league of Ireland supporter I find it quite sad. Most people do not smoke in Ireland. Only 30% of population are smokers.
I grew up beside St Patrick's Athletic club. Many times on a Sunday morning I'd be hung over, trying to sleep, and the song " oh when the saints come marching in " would be blaring out loud.😆
@@finolaomurchu8217 Ah, mo chailín bhocht. Tá brón orm. Bhí mé ag canadh ansin ❤🤍
Point 1 can be difficult for me sometimes too.
I'm not sure if it'd because I've lived abroad or just how I am but it can be annoying even as an Irish person not knowing if someone like you or not.
Nice video.. I'm from Cork originally although living abroad & my team is Barca.!! Més que un club :)
Great Catalan spelling 🔵🔴🙌🏼
Your must welcome hope you are made as welcome as I am when I go to Spain 🇪🇸
Go ahead punk make my day
I wonder what your views are on Catalonian independence. They like flying the Catalan flag in republican areas of Belfast.
The emersion is expensive the water stays hot a while .
Interesting!
Maybe not so foreigner as Irish have Spanish pirate ancestery also
Good point, I am Irish as well then ✌🏼😄
Nonsense most Spanish slaughtered before they got to shore.
A reward was paid by the British for their head.
Mind you saying that our DNA is very similar to the Basque people.
How!! I don’t know.
@@MICHAELCAMPBELL69 There's a history of trading that's a lot longer than the Armada
Regarding friendship,I think there's also an expectation/fear that foreigners will return home so it's not worth making the investment. I don't agree with it but it does seem to be some ppl's attitude.
🙌🙌🙌
I feel embassesed that we do not pay for our water. Advanced societies just pay those bills
Hi Marc
Just saw your vlog. Hope you are enjoying living in Ireland
I agree with number 7, as a Shamrock Rovers fan it amazes me why so many Irish people "follow" English teams. Unfortunately it is a trait of Irish people, glory hunters. Many seem to take delight in knocking Irish football teams, it's so weird. As you know, being a football fan is about supporting your local team and actually go to games and not just be a SKY TV Subscriber.
I would love if you could come to Tallaght to watch Rovers, no better time than this Tuesday when we play in the Champions League qualifiers.
Point 1 is interesting, Irish people are friendly but I do agree they tend not to be friends with Foreign people. I see this in my own job. Maybe Irish people feel a person from a foreign land may not fit in with their friends of feel Foreigners prefer to hang around with their fellow country people.
Good luck with the vlog 👍☘
Hello! Thank you for your comment, I am enjoying indeed 😄 I would love to watch Rovers live some day, I hope you can beat Hibernians 💪🏼
Óoooooooooo finaly
I'm irish foreigners don't and can't take the humour at all!! But alot have made friends with irish and tbh most foreigners tend to stick with their own kind instead of mixing and getting into the culture of ireland. Show some respect and interest to ireland and it's history, way of life etc.You reap what you sow.
viva españa
excellent English level!!!!how long do you Think it willt ake to reach a level like yours?
Thank you 🙌🏼 it depends, for example in my case I think my pronunciation could be better sometimes but I have a lot of vocabulary. My advice is: when you listen to some word or expression that you do not know, try to find out the meaning and therefore memorize it easier 😄👍🏻
Point 3: aw mate, you've no idea. The bollocking you'd get off your parents if you forgot to turn off the immersion back in the day 😂
Minor correction... priCe not priZe
Per que voldria un Catalan viure a Irlandia mes aviat k Catalunya, qualidad de vida, clima, platges etc?
Irish people are a breed of their own, and it is taking some getting used. Too when we now have soo, soo many foreigners over here! And. We don't understand their language, which tends to make us keep our distance a bit and let them get on with there holiday or job or whatever else they are doing, ! No disrespect, we are only starting to get used to foreigners over here these past few years!! Oh and my sons support Manchester ⚽ football, why?? 🤔I do not understand this myself as a mother!! . Maybe. It has something to do with DAVID BECKHAM ?? 😨😱😵 😀😁😂
Football was very stigmatised here ,up until the 90s.Up until 1971 the GAA had a series of rules against sports that originated in england which included Football ,rugby cricket and hockey ,if any member even attended a fund raiser for these supports let alone play or go to a match they were kicked out of the GAA.Thats 50 years ago but the legacy persists abit,in that football is considered an english game therefore the top level of competition there which is the premier league is superior to what we have here and also though its not really the case now ,but as i said the legacy is still there,that you might aswell be hung for asheep aswell as a lamb and support english teams because you were going to be considered a traitor either way.
This is coming from a GAA fan btw,the ban was necessary at won time but it should have been abolished straight after independence not in 1971 it fuelled far too much resentment between the codes.
I am Irish and I f*****g hate GAA. I am seventy years of age and grew up with all the tyranny. In my home town Ballyfermot. the local Parish priest and his cronies chopped down soccer goalposts and barred grown men from church for starting up soccer teams. How are ye!!!
We already pay through council tax . Plus it falls 364 days a year . Great english . Not a issue
Viva catalonia . 💛💙💛💙💛💙
You are lucky they have bathrooms
Begoggah he must be hobnobbing with them city folk
I never understand foreign peoples problem with the Bathroom, when I was working with one,it was the taps and with you the plug. Mind boggling. Really, these are first world problems.🤔
Irish people are a breed of their own, and it is taking some getting used. Too when we now have soo, soo many foreigners over here! And. We don't understand their language, which tends to make us keep our distance a bit and let them get n with there biddy or job or whatever else they are up too! No disrespect, we are only starting to get used to foreignersivi g over here these past few years!! Oh and my sons support Manchester ⚽ football, why?? 🤔. Maybe it was DAVID BECKHAM THEY Love?? 😨😱😵😍😍😍😘. 😀😁😂
We have GAA were more invested in that .
irish are not that friendly like people think
Yes. You're a nice guy but we take a long time to trust others. We mind our own business The electric sockets were banned because of water shocks. Ireland wants to ban smoking altogether. Everywhere They will do it soon because the high tax isn't working. 😊
Helpful tip, at about 3:00 he begins talking about what we tuned in for. The rest is annoying music and self-presentation.
When you were complaining about the lack of power sockets in the jax, and you were saying you need it for your electric shaver, then you said girls need them too for..... all I could think of was Spanish girls using an angle grinder to shave their nether regions... I used to go out with a Spanish girl.. Anyways I hope you enjoy your stay 👍
Regarding girls I said it for hair dryers and stuff like that 😂😂