What's an incredibly american thing americans don't realize is american? | Ask Reddit

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  • Опубліковано 9 чер 2024
  • Reddit gets extra American today
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,2 тис.

  • @joniharrison9492
    @joniharrison9492 Рік тому +975

    When my husband and I were first married I suggested we make some (American) pancakes. I am from the UK and he is from the US. He told me we couldn't make them because we didn't have any pancake mix. We had eggs, milk, sugar, butter and flour in the house. We both stared at each other for a few seconds looking confused. Since that day we have never used a pancake mix and he is always the person who makes the pancakes in our house. His whole world changed that day.

    • @johnjames8707
      @johnjames8707 Рік тому +24

      pancake mix just add water less work

    • @BeerHuntor
      @BeerHuntor Рік тому +24

      brit here, always used mixes for pancakes.. to much work to make it from scratch for one day.

    • @justcomments
      @justcomments Рік тому +64

      @@BeerHuntor that may be, but they really are delicious from scratch! Lovely weekend treat and a great crash course in cooking with confidence. I did them every weekend at Uni.

    • @bengaljam4550
      @bengaljam4550 Рік тому +4

      I've made them both ways. i prefer the mix.

    • @joniharrison9492
      @joniharrison9492 Рік тому +68

      @@BeerHuntor at the time I didn't even know there was a mix. We only ate English pancakes once a year in our family growing up, and we always made them from scratch. This was why we both looked confused. It hadn't occurred to him to make them without a mix and I didn't know mixes existed. I guess we both lived sheltered lives.

  • @MareSerenitis
    @MareSerenitis Рік тому +774

    Flags. Everywhere. At all times.
    Honestly one of the creepiest things. It's entirely normal and even expected for them, but I found it just really kinda low-key unsettling.

    • @klimtkahlo
      @klimtkahlo Рік тому +48

      I saw that a lot in young countries. They need to remind themselves of what their flag looks like!

    • @alexisrobinson5652
      @alexisrobinson5652 Рік тому +19

      It’s not everyone or everywhere in America and it’s not really expected (coming from an actual born and raised American) I’m on the northeast coast and I’ve seen maybe 2 people with flags in my entire life

    • @laulau194
      @laulau194 Рік тому +12

      Yeah it was very weird to me that a bunch of my lecture halls just randomly had flags in them

    • @hi-ve1cw
      @hi-ve1cw Рік тому +48

      I remember the first time I went to america I was astonished at the number of flags, it felt like I was being brainwashed lol. I remember standing on a pier in san fransisco and counting all the flags I could see from just where I stood, and it was 56 flags! Insane.

    • @riverstein7251
      @riverstein7251 Рік тому +23

      I live in Texas and as you’d expect from one of the most patriotic states, they’re everywhere. It’s at the point where the first sign I get that something really bad happened in the news that day is seeing an American flag at half mast. Then looking around the corner to confirm that, yep, they’re all at half mast, time to Google who died this time.

  • @ninamarie177
    @ninamarie177 Рік тому +545

    As a German™️ I lay out my groceries in the perfect stacking order at checkout. Heavier items, boxes and frozen stuff comes first, then refrigerated items and lastly delicate stuff. This way, items stay cold, nothing gets squished and I can basically play Tetris and optimise the space in my reusable tote bags.

    • @rosemarielee7775
      @rosemarielee7775 Рік тому +26

      Fore thought avoids so much panic!

    • @leza4453
      @leza4453 Рік тому +49

      Okay, I'm German and do the exact same thing. And get annoyed if people before me don't move their stuff fast enough. I mean, how many times in their life do people need to go to the supermarket to get that right?

    • @portlyoldman
      @portlyoldman Рік тому +38

      It’s not just Germans mate, I do it too 😁

    • @myrtlesocks2811
      @myrtlesocks2811 Рік тому +33

      As a Dutch person, I do the same and I honestly really love packing my groceries (may be a bit of a weirdo in that aspect); large bottles have to stand up, boxes, cartons and heavier packages in between,, lighter packages on top of those, flat things like cold cuts put on the side, veggies and fruits on top, then eggs, bread and - if I'm in the mood - things like crisps or prawn crackers. I have to be able to put my bags down and have them not fall over, that's perfect!
      And yes, this is all done on the side if I have a lot of things, because we have places especially for packing our groceries and I wouldn't want to bother anyone by taking too long. I don't like it when people I'm with pack my groceries the wrong way and would absolutely hate bag boys.

    • @durabelle
      @durabelle Рік тому +24

      As a Finn (living in the UK) I follow the same logic. I also pack most of my shopping straight into my backpack, rest in totebags if needed, so I'd also hate baggers. I prefer stores with self checkouts so that there's no huge rush, although I don't take that long anyways, but in Aldi I just pack everything back into the basket and carry it to the side table to pack properly.
      Finnish supermarkets all have these long conveyor belts divided into two or three sections with a small packing table behind them for your bag, so you can let everything pile up, pay, and then go do your packing while the next customers shopping starts to pile up on the section next to yours. Very handy.

  • @snowohno4898
    @snowohno4898 Рік тому +453

    I did not wait 6 years to go on a bench to be made fun of like this.
    Also benches weren't only good for sitting, there was benchball! The sheer joy of getting to stand on a bench as well.

    • @baronvonsatan
      @baronvonsatan Рік тому +23

      You can't just leave a comment about something called "benchball" and not elaborate. Some of us are Americans here, you know! 😂😂😭

    • @DairyFreeAutism
      @DairyFreeAutism Рік тому +31

      Bench ball is so good though. I miss it.

    • @aim-to-misbehave5674
      @aim-to-misbehave5674 Рік тому +18

      Just went to refresh myself on benchball rules after not playing it for a decade or so, and it has its own wikipedia article 😂 a cultural artefact

    • @nicelliott1175
      @nicelliott1175 Рік тому +12

      I'm Canadian, and the benches (and benchball!) were such a fundamental part of school that I honestly never considered that it might not be a thing in the States. Usually most "American things" also apply to Canada, although often in a less extreme form, but how can they not have benchball?

    • @laurie7689
      @laurie7689 Рік тому +8

      @@nicelliott1175 I'm not even sure what it means to sit on a bench in relation to schools. The closest thing to a bench in any school I attended in the USA were the gym bleachers. I think that there may have been one or two benches outside the cafeteria and maybe one near the entrance of the school. I almost forgot to add that those benches are usually concrete and only fit two or three people seated. Those are the only benches in my schools that I attended. Benchball is not something that I've ever heard of before.

  • @laulau194
    @laulau194 Рік тому +457

    My dad did successfully pull a reverse of the military benefits situation and manage to wangle a few 'government employee discounts' on hotels on a trip to the US... he was working for the UK civil service and successfully argued that there was no specification of which government you had to work for.

    • @CraigyDizzle
      @CraigyDizzle Рік тому +55

      That's both amazing and hilarious 🤣

    • @Lea-im3wr
      @Lea-im3wr Рік тому +12

      That's like working at grocery store A and wanting a discount for that at grocery store B

    • @YGwynBlaidd
      @YGwynBlaidd Рік тому +48

      @@Lea-im3wr I mean, as long as the grocery store A's policy only said 'Must work at a grocery store', you could argue your way through there too.

    • @Lea-im3wr
      @Lea-im3wr Рік тому +5

      @@YGwynBlaidd Lmao that must be a US thing too xD. There is no way somebody would get a discount for that here in Germany. You would only get that kind of discount if you or a close family member of yours really works there.

    • @YGwynBlaidd
      @YGwynBlaidd Рік тому +4

      @@Lea-im3wr I'd have no idea, I'm from Wales 🤣 but I can definitely see something like that working in America!

  • @SentientMeatbag
    @SentientMeatbag Рік тому +582

    I think smiling and being friendly to strangers isn't an American thing, it's a population density thing. The busier a place is, the less strangers interact with each other.

    • @louvelvet
      @louvelvet Рік тому +19

      this.

    • @RiedlerMusics
      @RiedlerMusics Рік тому +35

      also the lack of good public transport in the US at large makes the general population not realize how many untrustworthy people there are.

    • @skellious
      @skellious Рік тому +1

      I grew up in a village, then a town and now I live in a city. many people still don't talk to strangers

    • @coasttocoast2011
      @coasttocoast2011 Рік тому +13

      Yeah, I live in a small town in Australia, we do get a lot of backpackers and seasonal workers here because we’re a fruit growing area but we do smile and say hello to everyone in the street

    • @Inucroft
      @Inucroft Рік тому +3

      come t the north, UK

  • @apjtv2540
    @apjtv2540 Рік тому +317

    In the UK, we generally don't approach veterans to thank them for their service. In the UK, thanking them for their service is letting them get on quietly with their day without being bothered.

    • @jwb52z9
      @jwb52z9 Рік тому +35

      One of the many peculiarities about Americans is that they like things to be visible and audible in a physically personal way. I'm an American and I don't get it. It's like they think, "If you don't tell me X, I don't know that you really think X properly and you're SUPPOSED TO think X forever".

    • @elusivemayfly7534
      @elusivemayfly7534 Рік тому +2

      @@jwb52z9 lol, we are an emphatic people!

    • @elusivemayfly7534
      @elusivemayfly7534 Рік тому +7

      I can understand that! I’m American and have found some of our vets are uncomfortable with the attention, others accept the thanks solemnly but seem to appreciate it.

    • @8arcasticallyYours
      @8arcasticallyYours Рік тому +13

      It must get really irritating for military veterans to have to deal with that all day, every day while out in public

    • @TheWeepingDalek
      @TheWeepingDalek Рік тому +5

      i also think it's because of the mess of Iraq. and while i don't think we blame the soldiers themselves we just don't like the fact they were there in the 1st place.

  • @vonvard9765
    @vonvard9765 Рік тому +105

    I must say. Any ex military would 100% NOT wear any kind of army clothing after their service in the UK. In fact any CURRENTLY serving military personnel would get ripped to shreds if they wore their "fatigues" in public.
    It's very "look at me"

    • @c0ronariu5
      @c0ronariu5 Рік тому +6

      I’m not military but have family who are, and I just think it’s wanky

    • @sarahmichie4382
      @sarahmichie4382 Рік тому +26

      It’s also actively discouraged, as it draws attention to you, and can put you in danger. Military friends I know are not allowed to wear uniform unless on duty or travelling to / from work.

    • @Serenity_yt
      @Serenity_yt Рік тому +15

      Yeah. In Germany to. You only see uniformed military personel on duty, on the way to or from work picking sth up. Or travelling by train (they have to wear uniform for some kind of free ticket I think. Im to lazy to google that or ask friends that currently active military rn) I guess it also depends where you live, I live near a base and in general there are a few in the area, until the 2010s we also had huge US Army bases here, so no one would look twice at fatigues. Still no one would just randomly walk up to someone and thank them. If you're feeling very extroverted that day maybe a nod and a Servus/S'gott/hallo before moving on.

    • @steveg4082
      @steveg4082 Рік тому +3

      A 300 lbs./660kg./21 stone American man in anything military-style is cringe squared.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Рік тому +2

      I can get wearing surplus stuff. The things are usually quite comfortable and practical.

  • @alexandracrowdle6834
    @alexandracrowdle6834 Рік тому +157

    The best two moments of schooling in the U.K., when you get your pen license so you can write in pen and not pencil and then year 6 and you get to sit on the bench. It’s the closest most of us will get to royalty sitting on a throne.

    • @laurie7689
      @laurie7689 Рік тому +3

      There is no such thing in the USA. Using pencil or pen is at the discretion of the teacher.

    • @dkecskes2199
      @dkecskes2199 Рік тому +7

      Ok I've heard of the pen license thing, but what is the bench thing?
      Edit: USA schools have almost nothing but benches in their lunchrooms, and by about age 9 I started wanting just a normal chair.

    • @ceridwenaeradwr8105
      @ceridwenaeradwr8105 Рік тому +12

      Ohhh, the pen licence thing! I remember that.
      When we were going through it, our school had a policy that if you made 5 mistakes with the pen in a single lesson, then you would lose your licence and have to earn it back again.
      I made those five mistakes, technically lost my licence, but they didn't actually take it off me and i've been illicitly using pens ever since

    • @KatieM786
      @KatieM786 Рік тому +10

      UK person here - I never heard of the pen license thing. Maybe I'm too old? Please tell me more!

    • @alexandracrowdle6834
      @alexandracrowdle6834 Рік тому +4

      @@KatieM786 I think it’s probably relative to schools. My older sister who was three years older didn’t have to get one but I did. I think it’s supposed to teach children how to care about their work. It’s so weird yet everyone wanted one. 😂😂

  • @diptoncowboy
    @diptoncowboy Рік тому +145

    As someone from New Zealand that has travelled to the USA a number of times, the taking the credit card away was an issue, the only time my card has ever been compromised and used by someone else is in the USA and the only time it was out of my sight is at a restaurant. So I no longer trust the staff with it and now when I am there will go up and pay at the counter.

    • @robertmurray8763
      @robertmurray8763 Рік тому +16

      I don't let anyone take my credit card. Totally stupid letting someone take your card but very American!

    • @jwb52z9
      @jwb52z9 Рік тому +9

      @@robertmurray8763 It's not generally an issue because you're not responsible for any charges you didn't authorize on an American credit card.

    • @robertmurray8763
      @robertmurray8763 Рік тому +16

      Why take the card away when they from you. When the waiter can bring the card terminal to you and you can tap. No fraud.

    • @diptoncowboy
      @diptoncowboy Рік тому +1

      @@robertmurray8763 wasn't an option when I was last there but would use it if it was.

    • @bengaljam4550
      @bengaljam4550 Рік тому +10

      I've done it hundreds of times in my life. Never an issue. It would be a crime to charge someone else's credit card and it would be easy to track.

  • @Mobile_Dom
    @Mobile_Dom Рік тому +161

    funny thing about "pickups in the UK" is that this strangely applies to Teslas, all teslas are designed for American roads first, and even the ones that have china or mainland Europe in mind, most don't have as many narrow and unruly roads as the UK, so even the smallest tesla model 3 in the UK looks like a fucking canal boat a lot of the time

    • @minikipp8549
      @minikipp8549 Рік тому +19

      i'm loving the canal boat analogy 😂😂😂

    • @Mobile_Dom
      @Mobile_Dom Рік тому +20

      @@minikipp8549 watching a model s try to take a turn in a little country village is the most stressful and speedy thing you'll see a Tesla do

    • @xzonia1
      @xzonia1 Рік тому +6

      And here I was thinking Teslas look so small next to most cars made in the US. Lol

    • @ninamarie177
      @ninamarie177 Рік тому +10

      @@xzonia1 here in Germany, the Teslas sold here look like your average larger car. SUVs are considered unreasonably large in cities. I think my VW Golf is somewhere in the middle and many single people or people without children drive Fiat 500s, Mini Coopers or Smarts.

    • @xorsyst1
      @xorsyst1 Рік тому +7

      I actually decided not to get a Tesla model 3 because it was too large to park on our (uk) drive. Yeah, we have a small drive even for this country, but they genuinely are bigger than average.

  • @kjmorley
    @kjmorley Рік тому +57

    “Thank you for your service.“ I believe to be a rebound effect for the way service members were treated after Vietnam. As a non-American though, I find it somewhat cringy and superficial… a little like “thoughts and prayers” after a tragedy.

    • @8arcasticallyYours
      @8arcasticallyYours Рік тому +10

      Yes, "Thoughts and prayers" never helped anyone. Ever.

    • @devilundercover
      @devilundercover Рік тому +1

      Yea I don’t get this either
      So cringe worthy. As a non American I found this Weird

    • @itsgonnabeanaurfromme
      @itsgonnabeanaurfromme 8 місяців тому

      It's weird. Most US soldiers basically are sent to just carry out the political whims of whoever is in power to help their benefactors.
      They're being paid, too. Nurses and doctors help people more.

  • @drufc
    @drufc Рік тому +112

    One thing that I found to be uniquely American was the sheer number of car accidents. I spent about 3 months a year working in the US and saw more car accidents than in every other country I’ve been to combined.
    That and the fact that i ordered loaded sweet potato fries once and they came with marshmallows and syrup on them?!
    The menu stated that the loaded fries had bacon and cheese but didn’t say what was on the sweet potato fries.

    • @ShawFujikawa
      @ShawFujikawa Рік тому +36

      I didn't think they would take the 'sweet' label in sweet potato that literally and actually put it into a sweet dessert dish lol.

    • @cpMetis
      @cpMetis Рік тому +10

      Car accident density is gonna vary a lot by area.
      Our area, there's maybe one accident every other month and most of them are non-fatal, spread across a dozen miles, and everyone hears about them when they happen.
      City about two hours away seems like they have to shut down the highway from a fatal accident every other week.
      And then.... some places are just scary. Driving past Nashville was absolutely anxiety-inducing and we were almost involved in three or four accidents over a couple days. People have no idea how to respect their cars or the road and won't even blink while nearly taking out half the interstate with no warning.

    • @jwb52z9
      @jwb52z9 Рік тому +15

      It's at times like that that I wish an American could be around to warn people. Marshmallows put on sweet potatoes are an American thing, but it's regional. Cut up chunks of sweet potatoes with marshmallows melted on them is a thing for the American Thanksgiving holiday in the American South, but you might find it rarely in the northern states.

    • @elusivemayfly7534
      @elusivemayfly7534 Рік тому +6

      Yikes! I’m from the Southeast US, and that’s crazy even by our standards! I fully believe you, though, and I bet you can get them with whipped cream by request. I personally believe in the sanctity of the sweet potato fry (and sweet potato). I’m from a small agricultural town that still hosts an annual Sweet Potato Festival, so we’re serious about our taters.

    • @Phiyedough
      @Phiyedough Рік тому +3

      There are videos of actual US driving tests, in some states it only takes 5 minutes and they are not on real roads!

  • @Aayush_Shah
    @Aayush_Shah Рік тому +257

    One thing I found funny is Americas obsession with sugar, as an Indian I like spicy food but my cousins can’t bare anything that doesn’t have sugar in it and don’t want to adapt their taste buds to try something new

    • @ffxiprincess411
      @ffxiprincess411 Рік тому +55

      It's not that we're obsessed, it more that every food we've ever had is made with sugar. You can't buy any pre made food that isn't full of sugar and salt. It's really sad actually.

    • @RNS_Aurelius
      @RNS_Aurelius Рік тому +13

      @@ffxiprincess411 I believe this came about due to restrictions on trans fats so the next cheap way to make nice food was salt and sugar.

    • @rajder656
      @rajder656 Рік тому +6

      spicy food is great

    • @QALibrary
      @QALibrary Рік тому +7

      @@RNS_Aurelius unless the trans fat ban come into an effect in the 1980s then the links not possible - even now there bread so sugger up it classed as cake in a lot of places

    • @cpMetis
      @cpMetis Рік тому +3

      Then you have me. Hate sugar AND spice.
      Then I'm diabetic, so rule out hard carbs.

  • @synthiandrakon
    @synthiandrakon Рік тому +57

    The funny thing about the British national anthem is that no one knows the words. Sure some people know like the first verse but I've never been in a crowd singing the national anthem who didn't devolve into mumbling along by verse 2.

    • @caitlin329
      @caitlin329 Рік тому +8

      They notably leave out later verses, too, like
      'O Lord our God arise,
      Scatter our enemies,
      And make them fall!
      Confound their politics,
      Frustrate their knavish tricks,
      On Thee our hopes we fix,
      God save us all!'
      And
      'From every latent foe,
      From the assassins blow,
      God save the Queen!
      O’er her thine arm extend,
      For Britain’s sake defend,
      Our mother, prince, and friend,
      God save the Queen!'

    • @MareSerenitis
      @MareSerenitis Рік тому +9

      Most people's only contact with our national anthem is sporting events, and a significantly non-zero amount of people don't give even half a fuck about those.

    • @augustevarkalaite321
      @augustevarkalaite321 Рік тому +7

      When a country doesn’t have an Independence day there isn’t much of a reason to sing the anthem. Lithuania has 2 Independence days, one fight for Independence day, crowning of one king day and all of those days we sing the national anthem. So you learn the national anthem naturally.

    • @jaydemorton9814
      @jaydemorton9814 Рік тому +1

      I don't like sports but I know all the words to Flower of Scotland and theres a lot more of them so I think its more about the attitude. I also do not know the words past god save the queen.

    • @wendyheatherwood
      @wendyheatherwood Рік тому +10

      The correct way to perform our national anthem is to sing the first two lines and then make incomprehensible vowel sounds until you get to the final line. Anyone doing anything else is doing it wrong.

  • @selenamartinez2017
    @selenamartinez2017 Рік тому +48

    As someone who grew up in NYC, I find it funny that so many of these are also just things I saw on TV. We didn’t have pep rallies, no one cared about a high school sport unless they played it, there was no football, no one I knew owned a pickup truck, we didn’t have cheerleaders, and we never said the pledge after elementary school. You’d NEVER smile at a stranger on the street or the subway. I didn’t even know that drive-thru ATM’s existed til this video. It’s wild how much your experience can differ even in the same state depending on how (sub)urban the environment.

    • @meekos699
      @meekos699 Рік тому +4

      This^
      I think a lot of what other countries think of is the Ugly American. It really is dependent on which region/state you’re from. I’m from Columbus, Ohio and we’re a huge sports state (to which I personally give less than a shit about), so they care deeply about sports. We only did the pledge once a week but nobody really did it except who we called the few hillbillies (kids from the South). Pickups are huge in Southern Ohio, not at all in North. My own state is divided along the South and the North because a lot of the South is apart of the Appalachia & moved in from Kentucky. We aren’t very fond of each other lol
      I think a LOT of what people view of these weird American things are Southern things

    • @michellemaine2719
      @michellemaine2719 Рік тому +4

      This is definitely a NYC thing. New Jersey and upstate New York had all those things, much to my chagrin and disgust.

    • @nanoflower1
      @nanoflower1 Рік тому +1

      We had pep rallies in the South when I went to high school but it was never a big thing for most of the students. Just an excuse to get out of class every so often. Now I know the pep rallies are a big thing in some places. Maybe it's the bigger schools or places like the MidWest where football is big even in high school. (

    • @MrJest2
      @MrJest2 Рік тому +2

      NYC is it's own world, and many Americans would posit that it's not even American.

  • @coolstertothecore
    @coolstertothecore Рік тому +57

    I visited the US about 15 years ago and on my return discovered that my bank account had been emptied (and taken into the overdraft). It was the hotel worker who asked to take my card, which I thought was odd at the time. So it definitely does happen. It took a few weeks to get the money back so thank goodness I was living with family. Very stressful!

    • @petersdrue
      @petersdrue Рік тому

      I've never had a hotel worker take my card...

    • @coolstertothecore
      @coolstertothecore Рік тому +4

      @@petersdrue I never have in the UK but when I questioned it she said she had to take it and acted like I was a stupid tourist! I'm guessing they must have traced it back to her as we used cash everywhere else.

    • @nanoflower1
      @nanoflower1 Рік тому +1

      @@petersdrue Really? My experience has been that they always want the card on file just in case there are extra charges when you check out. (Like items taken from the mini-fridge or movie rentals or room damage.)

    • @aurora6920
      @aurora6920 Рік тому +1

      @@nanoflower1 in the UK we don't have mini fridge charges or movie rentals, i have been to a lot of hotels here as i travel a lot, it must be an American thing. Never heard of anyone getting charged for damage either. In a standard British hotel you get tea and kettle and generic TV channels. I guess that's why they don't take our card to have it on file, there is no need to here.

    • @nanoflower1
      @nanoflower1 Рік тому +1

      @@aurora6920 The only time I ever ended up being charged for a movie was in Spain. I must have ended up tuning the TV to a movie channel (think it was the Grinch) and left it there when I turned off the TV. That was enough to qualify as a purchase even though I didn't watch the movie. Could have argued with them when I checked out but I was in a hurry to get to the airport so I had to let it go.
      It's one reason why I prefer to add a code to prevent any accidental PPV purchases.

  • @helvete983
    @helvete983 Рік тому +26

    The drug commercials were the one thing that really stuck me on my visit to the US. Especially the massive warning list of symptoms, I was like "are you trying to sell this or scare people away from using it?"
    The military thing is weird too, at Atlanta airport my departure lounge had American soldiers returning home, I was so tired of hearing "thank you for your service"

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Рік тому +1

      Here the commercials basically say at the end "in case of risk or side effects, ask your doctor or pharmacist"
      Basically telling people to see the corresponding specialist if they feel something is off.

    • @MrStabby19812
      @MrStabby19812 Рік тому +2

      Ask your Dr about neuromex. Sideeffectsmayincludebaldnessinsomniaandtoothloss.

    • @Nostripe361
      @Nostripe361 Рік тому +1

      I’ve heard some us soldiers are also tired this. They just want to be left alone with their discount and benefits

    • @itsgonnabeanaurfromme
      @itsgonnabeanaurfromme 8 місяців тому

      ​@@HappyBeezerStudiosif the person if on that medication, it's pretty obvious to contact their health provider if something's off

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios 8 місяців тому +1

      @@itsgonnabeanaurfromme not just for prescription medication, but the normal ads for over the counter stuff.

  • @lemming9984
    @lemming9984 Рік тому +11

    As a Brit, I didn't understand 'The Bench' thing at all! I don't think I've ever been aware of benches - other than in peoples gardens and parks....

  • @denisal2697
    @denisal2697 Рік тому +60

    Random fact: I had my citizenship ceremony recently (in Edinburgh) and there was no picture of the Queen involved. Also, we do sometimes have baggers (less common since COVID) but they're only there to fundraise for a charity so, we always tell them to leave the bags alone and then give them a couple of quid regardless

    • @chrisy8989
      @chrisy8989 Рік тому +14

      It's usually kids and they put your milk on top of your bread and tins on top of your eggs! Safer to do it yourself.

    • @katashworth41
      @katashworth41 Рік тому +7

      The only time I’ve seen them here (and have been on the other end) is Scouts and Guides raising money for camp/charity.

    • @xzonia1
      @xzonia1 Рік тому +1

      I don't really get this. Y'all expect the handicapped, moms wrangling their kids, and the elderly to bag their own groceries? That seems so inconsiderate to me, having lived in the US my whole life. Baggers are necessary.

    • @avr7120
      @avr7120 Рік тому +12

      @@xzonia1 if you can put it in your cart, you can transfer it into a bag, no? i think americans are simply lazy cause noone has a problem putting stuff in a bag here.

    • @lucie4185
      @lucie4185 Рік тому +9

      @@xzonia1 we have scan and shop here too where you put your things straight from the shelves to your own carrier so many people don't even use the conveyer belt system. If someone needs extra help it is available for asking.

  • @ellanaomi8656
    @ellanaomi8656 Рік тому +96

    brit here! on the family photo christmas card front what people tend to do in my family is send a generic christmas card with a robin, tree, angel etc. and then people write christmas newsletters. usually a side of a4 with family photos from events throughout the year accompanied by updates on who has been up to what over the last 12 months. you fold it up and put it inside the card. less obnoxious then just plastering your family's faces under some cheesy happy holidays greeting and you actually get to keep up to date with whats happening in your relatives' lives who you dont see all the time.

    • @jiggyprawn
      @jiggyprawn Рік тому +1

      Stealing this

    • @cordeliabryant8259
      @cordeliabryant8259 Рік тому +4

      Family friends in the Lake District do this. Didn’t realize it was a UK thing.

    • @robertmurray8763
      @robertmurray8763 Рік тому

      Yes.

    • @charlotteke98
      @charlotteke98 Рік тому +1

      In Belgium, it's very common to send a Christmas card with a family photo (especially families with young children).

    • @JBG-AjaxzeMedia
      @JBG-AjaxzeMedia Рік тому +8

      literally have never done a family photo or a a4 letter to my family, just send a normal card, with a present, and it done.

  • @savannah4439
    @savannah4439 Рік тому +124

    I think you’re describing the drive-thru of a bank rather than a drive-thru ATM lol…I’ve definitely seen normal ATMs (like you would see in a building) that are by themself next to a lane that exists solely to drive up to the ATM

    • @evan
      @evan  Рік тому +32

      oh oops

    • @hitenmaster7841
      @hitenmaster7841 Рік тому +5

      Drive thru banks are like the sorting office in Futurama lol

    • @lorrainehinchliffe5371
      @lorrainehinchliffe5371 Рік тому +1

      We have drive through ATMs in Canada too.

    • @nanoflower1
      @nanoflower1 Рік тому +1

      Yeah, it used to be that all they had were the drive thru lanes at the bank with the vacuum tubes but now most of the lanes are going to have an ATM instead of using the teller.

  • @billyhills9933
    @billyhills9933 Рік тому +18

    Once upon a time they used to play the British national anthem on TV after all of the programmes had finished and the channel would then be closed down for the night. Yes, TV used not be on 24 hours a day.
    There were many jokes made about people who would stand and salute during this.
    Anyway, I'm off to listen to the shipping forecast.

    • @sailiealquadacil1284
      @sailiealquadacil1284 Рік тому

      Same here in Austria. At least, I think that the TV programme ended with the anthem. I've never actually seen this happen myself.

    • @nanoflower1
      @nanoflower1 Рік тому +1

      That was the same in the USA. I can remember seeing some of the networks going off air at midnight or so when I was a kid. It was normally with a clip of a US flag waving as the national anthem played.

  • @bdhesse
    @bdhesse Рік тому +48

    Basically everything you just said about the US is the same in Canada. We're a weird mix of American and English culture. We're basically socially American and economically British. But we've built our identity around not being British or American. Also, we're apparently stronger than both because it gets colder here.

    • @jenniferbrown913
      @jenniferbrown913 Рік тому

      In a nutshell.

    • @terryomalley1974
      @terryomalley1974 Рік тому

      How are we economically British?

    • @lanzsibelius
      @lanzsibelius Рік тому

      Yeah a fair amount of these also apply to Mexico, guess we are not that different

    • @yooperskeptic
      @yooperskeptic Рік тому +1

      Also, Canadians are just delightful people

    • @bdhesse
      @bdhesse Рік тому +3

      @@yooperskeptic I dunno. I've dealt with plenty who really are the absolute worst. But then, I also live in the Texas of Canada

  • @elliottmcleandeboer
    @elliottmcleandeboer Рік тому +35

    This vid was so validating - now I know that everyone in the UK had the "older kids bench" experience

    • @8arcasticallyYours
      @8arcasticallyYours Рік тому +2

      Never experienced that. It must be a thing for the younger generations

  • @Prince_S._Park
    @Prince_S._Park Рік тому +22

    something that i find simultaneously very american and also "other countries don't exist" is the teeth whitening. it exists in other countries but it's excessive in the us, and most of all they went around and changed it to "lol british people have yellow teeth" when it's actually every other country in the world have normal coloured teeth (teeth can be healthy and still look yellow-ish, it's not about the whiter it is the cleaner) and us people have them really white

    • @Phalaenopsisify
      @Phalaenopsisify Рік тому +7

      Yes, and if you actually do go in to get your teeth whitened you joke with the dentist "but not American white, lol" and both laugh.

    • @Hirotoro4692
      @Hirotoro4692 13 днів тому +1

      Slightly yellow is the natural colour of teeth

  • @victoriaposada6330
    @victoriaposada6330 Рік тому +43

    I LOVED getting the free lolly pops as a kid at the drive thru bank. One time I didn’t get one so every time after that I too rolled my window down so the teller could see I was there 😂

  • @Dan-B
    @Dan-B Рік тому +25

    What truly baffles me more than giving your bank card to a server, is that seemingly all Americans don’t see even a little bit of an issue with it 😆
    Why would you even risk a complete stranger using your card, even if fraud is rare? Just do it yourself 😛

    • @danielbliss1988
      @danielbliss1988 Рік тому +1

      People are just more trusting with that kind of thing here. I am binational US/UK. One of the weird moments for me coming over to the US for university was when my aunt had me run a grocery errand. Just gave me her card and asked me to just sign her name. I was like, "won't they fuss over the signature"? I got a confused look, and to cut a short story even shorter, they didn't.

    • @MrJest2
      @MrJest2 Рік тому

      You can't. In such places, usually there is no publicly accessible POS where you can do the transaction yourself - the machine is hidden in the back, where customers aren't allowed.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Рік тому +1

      @@danielbliss1988 I did errant for my mother before. Usually not an issue. Not with a credit card, just the common bank debit card, so usually entering the pin code into the machine is enough.
      And wow? customers aren't allowed to do their own transactions but are expected to freely hand over something that sensitive? I know where I won't eat.

  • @danh4698
    @danh4698 Рік тому +7

    I too hate the anxiety of packing knowing someone is behind you and the cashier is watching - so I always use self-service where it's far more chill and there are ten other people also packing up their shopping so it's not just you someone is waiting for.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Рік тому +1

      That is why you put the stuff in the cart and pack it away from the checkout. No annoyed person behind you and you still got all the time in the world to pack your bags. Plus you can put the stuff in your own backpack or trolley.
      One visit to a german supermarket should make obvious why that system works so well. The cashiers move at the speed of light and the next in line is already annoyed when you move the cart around.

  • @Elyza404
    @Elyza404 Рік тому +9

    I always got told by americans how bad the socialized healthcare is with wait times and such. But they cant seem to grasp that while I mostly use the government healthcare we can also use the private one. So when corona was overflowing the public sector I went to get my treatment in the private sector. I paid 300 euros/year for insurance and a 100 euros of deductible and the insurance covered 1200 euros worth of treatment at my neurologist.
    The thing is the insurance companies and the private sector have to compete with the public with much lower prices compared to US and we still get many of the same benefits.

  • @TrepeGB
    @TrepeGB Рік тому +58

    I’ve only ever once had someone walk away with my card (at a hotel) and that person cloned it and went on a shopping spree. Forgive me if I don’t want strangers taking my card.
    Also, as a northerner, I have to agree with the American about London. When I was 15 I visited London for the first time with family and I decided to go for a walk by myself. I got lost and kept trying to ask people for help and they either ignored me or told me to go away. I haven’t had much better interactions generally since. I’m used to being able to stop anyone on the street and they help me and have a chat.

    • @BeerHuntor
      @BeerHuntor Рік тому +2

      this is definitely a southern thing..

    • @clsisman
      @clsisman Рік тому +3

      @@BeerHuntor I’d say particularly London. Some southern cities too but to a lesser extent

    • @MrsUzumaki
      @MrsUzumaki Рік тому +3

      Yikes, what area did you end up in?? That's harsh, even for London!

    • @TrepeGB
      @TrepeGB Рік тому

      @@MrsUzumaki I don’t remember exactly where it was now, but it wasn’t a touristy area.

    • @MrsUzumaki
      @MrsUzumaki Рік тому +3

      @@TrepeGB Sorry you had to experience that. I hope you have a nicer visit next time 😊

  • @Phiyedough
    @Phiyedough Рік тому +36

    I've always thought people who voluntarily join the armed forces are just doing a job like any other. There are dangers but there are dangers with lots of jobs. I do think recognition is due for people conscripted into the military during major wars. One American thing that I had never heard of until a few days ago is sewing "notions".

    • @f0rth3l0v30fchr15t
      @f0rth3l0v30fchr15t Рік тому +2

      I mean, it's not always a job like any other, but it is weird to see a guy who was basically a fry cook in North Carolina for 5 years call themselves a veteran.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Рік тому

      Okay, someone actually going on deployment surely deserves some respect. But the person doing mandatory training sitting somewhere comfy didn't do anything big.
      And since conscription was suspended in 2011 our forces do advertise more. It isn't even a bad deal. Get a job with a decent wage, a place to live, depending on what exactly you do a finished work apprenticeship, and from an employer perspective they get someone who knows how to work in a hierarchy.

    • @FerretKibble
      @FerretKibble Рік тому

      @@HappyBeezerStudios Exactly what respect is someone due for driving supplies to an invasion? Because the people actively invading another country certainly ain't earning any.

  • @ThisWeekNetwork
    @ThisWeekNetwork Рік тому +6

    The bench was a sign of superiority over the younger students and I miss that power trip 15 years on

  • @caitlin329
    @caitlin329 Рік тому +22

    You can ask cashiers for help bagging your shopping, as someone who's worked in retail. Is it sometimes annoying? Yes. But not everyone can easily bag their stuff.

    • @Liggliluff
      @Liggliluff Рік тому +11

      If it's an elderly or visible disabled person, it's perfectly understandable. Some disabilities are hidden, which can cause some confusion. But if it's just some lazy person then it's just annoying.

    • @caitlin329
      @caitlin329 Рік тому +3

      Yep. But you usually can't tell.

  • @joshmilton
    @joshmilton Рік тому +127

    Americans: British food is terrible
    Also Americans: The food we cooked at home was a series of mixing different things from boxes

    • @jnak974
      @jnak974 Рік тому +2

      British: Everything American is terrible.
      Americans: Everything British is amazing.
      Wakandans: ……colonizers.

    • @jnak974
      @jnak974 Рік тому +1

      I’m joking, please don’t hate me.

    • @RondaGuptonPruett
      @RondaGuptonPruett Рік тому

      As an American this is is pretty true. Our culture is a slave to convenience.

    • @Serrifin
      @Serrifin 7 місяців тому

      Legit though, the state I grew up in, Iowa, is in a cultural crisis because the extent of which we are taught about our state is that someone died there in the Lewis and Clark expedition. It’s was rated by Iowans as one of the states with the least history. The culture in a lot of states is being pretty quickly dominated by national culture due to it being convenient to just follow national teaching standards. I was shocked to learn other states (and cities even) specifically taught about their own history, like how kids in Illinois will learn about the nazis and Skokie.

  • @elzar5987
    @elzar5987 Рік тому +48

    The british national anthum i've found isn't too well known by younger generations nowadays. while the older folk find it perposterous we don't know it since they had to learn it in schools.
    i went out of my way to learn it once and by the time an event came round to sing it, i'd completely forgotten

    • @jacturner6886
      @jacturner6886 Рік тому +8

      Do you not watch the England football games? I think only those who don't, don't know the national anthem. Pretty much every english football fan knows the english national anthem from the international matches.

    • @ItsAsparageese
      @ItsAsparageese Рік тому +4

      The only file stored in my brain under the "English national anthem" category is Eddie Izzard singing "God attaaaack the Queen / send big dogs aaaafter her / that bite her bum" 😆 ... And I'm not even sure that's a spoof off the actual anthem lol

    • @sarahspaceslippers
      @sarahspaceslippers Рік тому +6

      I go out of my way to not hear it,
      I don't agree with the message and I think the national anthem should be something else.

    • @jaydemorton9814
      @jaydemorton9814 Рік тому +8

      I live in Scotland our national anthem is Flower of Scotland and when people say we're gonna sing the national anthem and put on God save the queen a large crowd gets confused this is why I don't know it not because it wasn't taught but because we don't even use it for football.

    • @elzar5987
      @elzar5987 Рік тому +3

      @@jacturner6886 oh really? I thought the national anthem was only reserved for BIG games.
      Nah I don't watch football, so had no idea it was a thing for every international game

  • @corringhamdepot4434
    @corringhamdepot4434 Рік тому +20

    Back in "pre-history" there were small pick-up trucks sold in the UK. Like a Mini and VW Polo pickups. Which made economic sense when they also made estate versions of compact cars. As they had a lot of common parts.

  • @flopjul3022
    @flopjul3022 Рік тому +3

    5:30 in the Netherlands we use the red solo cups for beer pong, so they are not hard to be found but not every store has them either. i used to work at a Jumbo supermarket and last time i checked they still sell those(atleast in my Jumbo since not every shop has the same products due to them being different sizes) but discount stores like Action does have them too

  • @elusivemayfly7534
    @elusivemayfly7534 Рік тому +12

    Box pancakes: this brought back a nice memory of my dad making them as a treat. It wasn’t every day or weekend, so it was a fun surprise. I think we always ended up sacrificing the first one to the burned food gods.

  • @AnnieFaulkner918
    @AnnieFaulkner918 Рік тому +7

    My high school pep rallies in the states were one of my biggest anxiety triggers at the time, they were so loud and terrible and overstimulating. I had a panic attack my first year and then for the rest of high school I would either hide in a closet or have my mom call me out for a fake doctor’s appointment lmao

  • @AddiRockART
    @AddiRockART Рік тому +26

    The “look at this guy with dirt cheap insurance” made me laugh so hard- people don’t believe me when I say you will pay 450-1400 a month for insurance lol 😂 but dude if you go to hospital once you’re absobloodilutely fucked. Just laugh at the medical bills like “45,750??? For pneumonia??? Just let me die and bury me raw” since caskets cost like 6 grand and funerals are like 3400… just no. 😂🤣

    • @MrsUzumaki
      @MrsUzumaki Рік тому +4

      "bury me raw" LMAOOO

    • @xzonia1
      @xzonia1 Рік тому +3

      Same! 😂
      My monthly cost on health insurance is only about $100 a month, but my out of pocket max is $4000 per year for in network only (another 4k for out of network), so it ends up costing about the same because I hit my max most years.
      Yeah, people can't even afford to die in the US! 😂

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Рік тому +1

      Had 3 wisdom teeth removed at two doctors officeswith a perscription for paracetamol/codein painkillers for afterwards.
      Cost me 5€ co-payment for the pills.
      On another appointment I needed to get two fillings and an x-ray (to check if root canal treatment was neccesary) and a month later another appointment because there were still some issues.
      Price? nothing! Completely free. All covered by mandatory (tax-funded) insurrance.

  • @spareumbrella8477
    @spareumbrella8477 Рік тому +12

    The red solo cup thing is so true, coming from a British perspective. Yes, we all just kind of assume that all American frat parties and whatnot use those red cups. To us, it's as American as bald eagles and guns.

    • @nanoflower1
      @nanoflower1 Рік тому

      They do tend to get used at parties but only because they are cheap. Being American it was never something anyone gave a second thought to. Now there are other options like styrofoam cups but those tend to cost a bit more so the Solo cups still win.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Рік тому

      insert picture of stereotypical obese american in tank top, cargo pants and US flag cap yelling in his pickup truck with the roof full of screeching eagles while blasting his machine guns while transporting a full load of red solo cups filled with watery beer.

  • @lindseynager7266
    @lindseynager7266 Рік тому +16

    Hi Evan! I'm in London on Study abroad right and completely sick with COVID (first time. Didn't realize how hard it was going to mess me up). Im having a really hard time being away from all my comfort foods/items. You're videos always really brighten my day so I appreciate it during these harder times for me. Trying to experience as much as I can in London while still being COVID safe.

    • @caitlin329
      @caitlin329 Рік тому +1

      Ooh yeah sorry you're over here at such a bad time! A lot of people have covid at the moment :(
      Hope you feel better soon

    • @lindseynager7266
      @lindseynager7266 Рік тому +1

      @@caitlin329 Thank you! Hoping that the worst is over, but today I walked down the road to the nearest tube station and was like painfully exhausted so...maybe not 😅😂

    • @elusivemayfly7534
      @elusivemayfly7534 Рік тому +1

      I hope you feel better soon and get ahold of some good comfort items!

    • @hypsyzygy506
      @hypsyzygy506 Рік тому

      @@lindseynager7266
      There is such a thing as 'Long Covid' which persists for months after the initial infection. Exhaustion is common.

    • @lindseynager7266
      @lindseynager7266 Рік тому

      @@hypsyzygy506 Love that for me, is that why my lungs hurt when I walk any real distance?

  • @jaydemorton9814
    @jaydemorton9814 Рік тому +19

    I graduated to the bench and then when I got to high school everyone had chairs! Like 12 year olds had the right to sit at the same height as 18 year olds (this was maddness and the teachers had to stand so they were still higher) which messed so much with my primary school heirarcy.

    • @laurie7689
      @laurie7689 Рік тому +1

      US American school children, even in elementary schools, typically use chairs. We use chairs all the way through school.

    • @ceridwenaeradwr8105
      @ceridwenaeradwr8105 Рік тому +1

      Aaargh, lucky. My secondary school had everyone except the oldest year sitting on the floor again.

    • @Vonononie
      @Vonononie Рік тому +1

      Same for me. Cross-legged on the floor until the last year of primary where we lorded it over the children from our benches. Then secondary everyone on chairs with the teaches standing to the side. Only thing that kept this madness in check was that as you got older you slowly worked your way to the back. The feeling of being in the back row at 16 was peak maturity

    • @danh4698
      @danh4698 Рік тому +3

      We did sit on the floor in secondary, slowly making our way back to the chairs sixth form sat on as we grew older. BUT during sixth form the school decided to get proper seating for the back of the hall, so we got properly comfy, tiered chairs in sixth form, and felt even more like we'd made it :P

    • @danh4698
      @danh4698 Рік тому +1

      Also our uniform was changed in yr 9 from these horrible narrow grey skirts to kilt-style skirts, which made sitting cross-legged on the floor SO much easier, my goodness.

  • @MadnessQuotient
    @MadnessQuotient Рік тому +19

    Here is a thing that feeds into the whole massive high school sports thing and the pep rallies etc;
    Massive schools with multiple thousands of pupils.
    UK high schools are much smaller than American ones. Their events are much less culturally impactful because they aren't representative of a whole city or town.

    • @Serenity_yt
      @Serenity_yt Рік тому

      It's also a sports are done in school thing. In Germany if you dont go to a boarding school every Sport you do has 0 connection to your school and is organised indepently by a football Club e.g.. The after school stuff schools do offer is mostly things like orchestra, choir, theater, ... and some sports but you wont compete in those (the majority of time, one of my schools did actually do a gymnastic meet once a year for schools in the area that offered the elective which were 3 of a few dozen) for that you need a local club you parents mostly organise for you.

    • @defeatstatistics7413
      @defeatstatistics7413 Місяць тому

      yep, american pals are surprised that the town I grew up in has 7 secondary schools. School sports are basically irrelevant, if you're a decent footballer you're likely to be in the academy of the local football club. The only people who watch school sports here are parents.

  • @pink_nicola
    @pink_nicola Рік тому +8

    The only time you’ll get people bagging your shopping at a supermarket in the UK is if it’s people raising money for charity or some other cause like guide/scout trips, and then it’s a nice thing people will normally happily donate for, it’s how I now know how to pack my own shopping well 😂 (I do wonder how that works these days though with how cashless things have gone)

  • @emdivine
    @emdivine Рік тому +3

    2:39 "like, frequently" I just prefer a system where it's impossible, and also more comfortable for all involved. Doesn't need to be a real problem, it's archaic and weird and doesn't need to be continued and supported

  • @pigeoncube8881
    @pigeoncube8881 Рік тому +7

    being an immigrant to the US who didn't go to high school here and then ending up as at a job that does "spirit week" with themed dress-ups, it took me about a million years before I realised that's an American high school thing that the adults think makes the workplace have a fun, casual atmosphere. I would get so skeeved out by it, like why are you telling me what to wear??????? but now that I get it, it actually is a fun thing. so when we have a sports themed day, I'll be the only one with a rugby or real football hat while everyone else has local teams lmao

    • @klimtkahlo
      @klimtkahlo Рік тому +3

      Same! How about when Americans give adults a gold star. There are things I will never get used to. The more time I spend in America the more European I realize I become!!! Must be a somewhat subconscious attempt to preserve one’s own identity. Who knows…

  • @joebleasdale5557
    @joebleasdale5557 Рік тому +12

    Either my primary school was the only one in the UK that didn’t do the “Year 6s on benches in assembly” thing or it’s just not as much of a nationwide thing as UK Twitter has you believe.
    In fact, we didn’t know it even existed. It genuinely baffled me when I went to parties as an adult and people said “yeah, it’s like at school, when you finally got to sit on the benches in Year 6”. I had no clue what they were on about.
    We sat on the floor with everyone else, and we had no problem with it. Being the oldest was nice enough. Plus assembly was in the hall, why would you bring the benches in from the gym? 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @OllieWales
      @OllieWales Рік тому +6

      At my primary school, the hall was also the gym so it was actually easier to just rearrange the benches that it was to pack them all away and bring them out again for lunch or PE or whatever

    • @Molikai
      @Molikai Рік тому +2

      Yeh, Im' wondering if it's an English thing - I'm scottish, and have no fricking clue what they are on about.

    • @mich-ul4sk
      @mich-ul4sk Рік тому +1

      @@Molikai I'm English and I haven't got a clue what they are on about either!

    • @AnimeManiac1987
      @AnimeManiac1987 Рік тому +2

      My primary only had one hall so it had to be multi-purpose. We had three gym frames hung on the wall that swung into place when needed and the benches attached to them like ramps or bridges. I also remember the older you were the farther back you were in assembly, 6th on the benches and teachers on chairs

    • @8arcasticallyYours
      @8arcasticallyYours Рік тому +1

      Never known about it either

  • @tessgonzalez285
    @tessgonzalez285 Рік тому +15

    another american thing is the big yellow school bus. apparently this is not really a thing outside of the US

    • @aim-to-misbehave5674
      @aim-to-misbehave5674 Рік тому +6

      Yeah, most kids go to school on a normal public bus here in the UK - even when it's a "school bus", what that usually means is that it does a specific route in the morning to pick kids up (usually through surrounding villages to drop them off in the bigger town) and then goes off on its normal bus route all day until it's time to pick them up and drop them home again
      Some schools might have specific buses that they own and that only do runs for the school, but it's definitely not common (and they're not yellow)

    • @leonardo.diCATio
      @leonardo.diCATio Рік тому +1

      Honestly I'm kind of glad it's such an eyesore. I imagine they'd get hit a lot more often if they weren't bright yellow and covered in lights.

    • @HaohmaruHL
      @HaohmaruHL Рік тому +2

      Because unlike normal countries public transportation doesn't exist in the us and you can't walk anywhere. If that's the case in other countries they'd just drive their kids to school themselves

    • @laurie7689
      @laurie7689 Рік тому +1

      @@aim-to-misbehave5674 In the USA, in many places, the only bus that you'll ever see is the yellow school bus. Bussing is not really a thing outside of the large cities, however small cities and towns will have dedicated school buses.

    • @MadnessQuotient
      @MadnessQuotient Рік тому

      @@leonardo.diCATio
      Like who is driving into a BUS? It's huge. How hard can they be to avoid, yellow or not?

  • @Torsin2000
    @Torsin2000 Рік тому +2

    Here's the main thing, and reason I think, for thanking military veterans in the past few decades. It all goes back to the Vietnam war, when those Veterans returned they did not get thanked, instead they either got ignored or called 'baby killers' and other things. From that time a lot of that generation has pushed, and you've seen, the thankfulness to Veterans for their service. A kind of over-reaction to the way the policies of how the Vietnam War was run, during a time when the draft was last active, and that the individual members (likely drafted) were denigrated and blamed.

  • @JustMozzi
    @JustMozzi Рік тому +1

    Honestly, i’d forgotten about ‘the bench’, but now realising it, I don’t think life has been better than that moment

  • @caitlin329
    @caitlin329 Рік тому +14

    I feel like I've seen the red solo cups in Tesco or something at some point. So not always so difficult to acquire.

    • @jujutrini8412
      @jujutrini8412 Рік тому

      Yeah you definitely see them around.

    • @wintrwunderland
      @wintrwunderland Рік тому

      I mean, I even bought them from Poundland once before. That’s the polar opposite of “one of those expensive American shops”!

    • @tams805
      @tams805 Рік тому

      They used to be. And he went to university a fair few years ago now.
      Of course, you could always have gotten normal non-red cups.

  • @domb1994
    @domb1994 Рік тому +5

    Just looked at the pancake recipe and saw another one. CUPS as a unit of measure in recipes. Whenever I come across a US recipe I always have to google how big a standard cup is. Why not give the weight!!

    • @nuriafg6955
      @nuriafg6955 Рік тому

      because they don't know how to use grams and would give you the weight in weird measurements that don't make it any easy to divide the recipes lol

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Рік тому

      I have cups between 100 ml and 400 ml, so no idea what that even means.
      And they do have weight measurements in the USCS, so no reason to measure something by volume that expands depending on temperature and altitude.

  • @emm7758
    @emm7758 Рік тому +2

    sometimes when the older students went on class trips you’d be able to sit on the bench for that day and i went home and told my parents bc it was so fcking exciting. genuine highlight of my life

    • @emm7758
      @emm7758 Рік тому

      where the birth of my superiority complex started

  • @tylerj7298
    @tylerj7298 Рік тому +1

    God, you just brought back so many memories about drive-thru banks. I remember the tube and the lollipop

  • @MissesLykaa
    @MissesLykaa Рік тому +4

    As a Dutch person we have lots of boxes for pancakes, even one for American pancakes specifically. For me it just depends what I have in the house, if I have the ingredients I'll make it from scratch but the box mix is easy too

  • @baronvonsatan
    @baronvonsatan Рік тому +11

    Here's an EXTREMELY American pancake-making tip: instead of water, use Sprite or 7-Up for super-fluffy pancakes. Plus adult-onset diabetes.

    • @dozergames2395
      @dozergames2395 Рік тому +1

      Me and the bois are trying this the next time we have The chance

    • @dkecskes2199
      @dkecskes2199 Рік тому +7

      Sparkling water does the same floofing without the extra sugar, for those interested.

    • @baronvonsatan
      @baronvonsatan Рік тому

      @@dkecskes2199 Why didn't I think of that?? You're right, of course.

    • @KatieM786
      @KatieM786 Рік тому +4

      Also if you're doing proper deep fried fish and chips you can put beer in the batter for flavour and fluffiness.
      Just realised this is probably the most English thing I've ever written on UA-cam 😂🤣😎

    • @jus4795
      @jus4795 Рік тому

      You can use carbonated water instead of sprite -> no sugar ;)

  • @RubyMadigan
    @RubyMadigan Рік тому +1

    And the stress of packing at the till is why I now do the smart shop option. Scan and pack leisurely as I go

  • @mitchumsport
    @mitchumsport Рік тому

    this was a great list, loved it

  • @1ich_mag_zuege
    @1ich_mag_zuege Рік тому +6

    knowing the names of their supreme court judges

  • @daiseighelliott
    @daiseighelliott Рік тому +4

    The saddest thing about the bench thing is that every year before me the year 6s got to sit on the bench but for some reason we just didn’t and I never got that privileged and still had peas and sweetcorn stuck to me hands

  • @DaveBartlett
    @DaveBartlett Рік тому +9

    Surely, if there's a human at the other end of the pipe talking to you and sending your cash etc. It's a drive through bank teller, NOT a drive through ATM (Automatic Teller Machine) - not much automatic there!

    • @caitlin329
      @caitlin329 Рік тому

      It's a T lol

    • @kukui1679
      @kukui1679 Рік тому +1

      yah we have drive thru atms too tho not just the person on the other side version

    • @bengaljam4550
      @bengaljam4550 Рік тому

      The ATM I use has a teller show up on a screen from some other location that you talk to. You aren't talking to someone who physically works at that bank.

    • @laurie7689
      @laurie7689 Рік тому

      @@bengaljam4550 The drive-thru ATM I used doesn't have any video or audio. It is simply a computer-like system that asks what you want to do via screen text. You pull your vehicle up to the machine, roll down your window, and mash the appropriate buttons, get your money and drive off.

    • @bengaljam4550
      @bengaljam4550 Рік тому

      @@laurie7689 Yes. They have that too but with the interactive teller you can do a lot more than those ATM's.

  • @elliottsw
    @elliottsw Рік тому

    Those benches were EVERYTHING

  • @davidroddini1512
    @davidroddini1512 Рік тому +12

    You go Evan! We need more people like you promoting Ranch in other countries!

  • @bsendall5996
    @bsendall5996 Рік тому +20

    When immigrants use words like "our", "we", "my", etc when talking about the UK I get so happy like oh fuck thank god they still want to live here despite the xenophobic shenanigans we actually will crumble if the immigrant population gets sick of us pls stay guys don't listen to Barry from da pub he's been watching too much Tommy Robinson or whatever

    • @jwb52z9
      @jwb52z9 Рік тому +2

      I love that the British feel that way about immigrants. I'd immigrate in a cold second if I had both the money and physical ability to survive long enough to gain foreign citizenship. As it is, I'd have to find some wealthy British person to marry, as I'm disabled, who could support me long enough for me to gain British citizenship. I don't think I would be allowed to immigrate otherwise, unless perhaps I won a lot of money first.

    • @bsendall5996
      @bsendall5996 Рік тому

      @@jwb52z9 unfortunately I think the majority of the British currently want stricter immigration controls

    • @klimtkahlo
      @klimtkahlo Рік тому

      Well he just said that he became a citizen so thus the we and ours etc

  • @BBROPHOTO
    @BBROPHOTO Рік тому +1

    It's not about the cash being stolen when someone takes your card to do a payment, it's about stolen ID and identity theft.
    You've probably noticed Evan, that contactless no matter where you are, is available - so most people (especially in urban areas) are used to paying with Apple Pay or contactless cards being the norm. So if someone were to take your card, it would be really unsettling it's so uncommon to do so. To add, it's definitely also the abruptness of it that we aren't used to in social etiquette.

  • @caitlin329
    @caitlin329 Рік тому +10

    I'm working graduations at a British university and they play the national anthem. It is weird and uncomfortable.
    Tbf the university has heavier ties to the royal family than a lot of others. Still weird though.

    • @sophieirwin3497
      @sophieirwin3497 Рік тому +1

      Would it be Oxbridge? As I didn’t have the national anthem at either my undergrad or PhD graduation at Liverpool university.

    • @aim-to-misbehave5674
      @aim-to-misbehave5674 Рік тому +2

      Nottingham (uni of) graduate here - no national anthem for me either

    • @lucie4185
      @lucie4185 Рік тому

      No national anthem in Bath or Exeter Uni.

    • @caitlin329
      @caitlin329 Рік тому +1

      Definitely not Oxbridge lol
      Leicester. And looking online, DMU do it, too.

    • @johnd6487
      @johnd6487 Рік тому

      Think that’s a new thing for DMU, I was in the second ever year to graduate from DMU after it ceased to be Leicester Polytechnic (the change happened at the end of my first year of my studies) and I don’t remember the National Anthem being played. Is it maybe part of the new nationalism, or because they now have overseas campuses and feel a need to ram their Britishness down people’s throats? Oddly when I think back to my childhood, it was more commonly played at events, including at the beginning of the Nottingham Theatre Royal Panto every year back in the late 70’s/ early 80’s

  • @lane6866
    @lane6866 Рік тому +4

    Your face at your citizenship ceremony made my day. That was hilarious. Also, what happens if you accidentally slip into My Country Tis of Thee? Do they send you back? lol.

  • @ronhan9
    @ronhan9 Рік тому +3

    the credit card thing - we are signing a contract to not hand our cards away or share pin numbers. It could be considered negilgant by the banks if someone did buy a house on your card (or more likley swiped some extra cash and pocked like 100 USD)

  • @bobingabout
    @bobingabout Рік тому +1

    2:35 Yes, because it happens all the time in Europe, that's why we have so many security features on the card, which did actually work to reduce these cases... which is worrying that you now have contactless which feels like a departure from security.

  • @kayhardy2871
    @kayhardy2871 Рік тому +1

    Lovely video - informative and funny :)

  • @tome_1701
    @tome_1701 Рік тому +3

    I really wish the UK did have AC it's literally going to be nearly 40 degrees tomorrow and I wish a little plug in fan wasn't the only thing stopping me from instantly vaporising because of the unrelenting heat

    • @klimtkahlo
      @klimtkahlo Рік тому

      Yup and people still doubt global warming exists!!! 🤯

  • @SketchingPandaRen
    @SketchingPandaRen Рік тому +3

    As someone who has to have thing in the correct place, I always put things on the belt the way I want them bagged. Honestly I like bagging my own stuff more the having someone else to it. I've left milk out because it wasn't with the cold stuff like I wanted.
    (Also Apples either get their own bag or go with non-cold boxed or bagged food)

  • @CaptainLettuce
    @CaptainLettuce Рік тому

    Wow that some good background music cuz I didn't even realise there is background music till you said it xD blends so well

  • @user-xi1gm6de7c
    @user-xi1gm6de7c Рік тому +1

    omg your so right about that bench, I never got to sit on that bench, I think about that every day

  • @cern1999sb
    @cern1999sb Рік тому +4

    With the credit card thing, it's not the sort of thing where someone would put a down payment on a house, but they might make a mistake in billing you, e.g. accidentally add an extra item, and you have no way if checking that it is the exact amount you expect

    • @AJ-uo5zl
      @AJ-uo5zl Рік тому +1

      they have to give you a receipt though, with everything on it that you purchased

    • @cern1999sb
      @cern1999sb Рік тому

      @@AJ-uo5zl I've not been to the US, so didn't really think about that, but it makes sense. So long as you're dilligent, you should be able to catch if a mistake is made, but to me it does still appear to add an extra hoop to jump through in those instances.

  • @ozzya9977
    @ozzya9977 Рік тому +7

    "Education in the UK peaked when you got to sit on the bench"
    From someone who went to school in england, this is absolute facts!

  • @StateBlaze1989
    @StateBlaze1989 Рік тому +2

    Man, I remember our middle school and high school pep rallies. Outside of getting to be out of class for however long it was, I hated every single one of them. Doesn't help that I'm horribly introverted.

  • @TherconJair
    @TherconJair Рік тому +1

    To be fair, 10 years ago ACs were unnecessary in homes in northern Europe. Why add an appliance you maybe use one or two days a year while still needing to service them? Nowadays, with the longer and hotter heat periods it has changed. Considering most new houses or renovations add a heatpump (which is also an AC, depending in which direction it's switched to), this is taken care now.

  • @harriet.z
    @harriet.z Рік тому +4

    Idk if it’s America specific - so growing up in Asia, most of our AC units can blow cold air OR hot air depending on what temp we set it to. Older homes far up north also have heaters just for heating. But in the US when I mention turning on the AC, ppl get confused because in their lives an AC only cools down a place. The only thing that usually does both usually requires a centralized system in the building, and they call it “the thermostat”. I think to this day I still refer it as “the AC” cuz just now I grew up and that’s literally what air conditioning means. But English speakers, or maybe just Americans just do not seem to agree my “confusion” makes any sense to them. I fear I sound like a lunatic!

    • @ShirinRose
      @ShirinRose Рік тому +2

      We have those heating and cooling air conditioners in Australia too

    • @laurie7689
      @laurie7689 Рік тому

      I'm a US American and my house has a thermostat that operates two separate central systems. One is for a/c and the other is for heat. The thermostat automatically turns on and off the units, but we have to physically switch it between the cool air and the hot air ourselves. Our a/c units don't blow hot air, nor do our heating units blow cold air.

    • @vincentlevarrick6557
      @vincentlevarrick6557 Рік тому +1

      Yeah Australians get what you mean. We have 'reverse cycle' air-cons, which do exactly what you've described, can swap between heating and cooling.

  • @muhilan8540
    @muhilan8540 Рік тому +7

    well that’s not a atm is it?

    • @caitlin329
      @caitlin329 Рік тому +1

      Yeah, it's sort of just the T

  • @nicolenishimori2033
    @nicolenishimori2033 Рік тому

    i went to high school in the states but it was a k-12 school and only the high schoolers got to sit on the benches so i understand the excitement when you finally get to sit on them. though the highlight of my high school career was getting balcony seats as a senior.

  • @charlotteinnocent8752
    @charlotteinnocent8752 Рік тому +2

    "Have a nice day". Even if you don't want to be patronising, it just comes out. Reflex.

  • @tcshack701
    @tcshack701 Рік тому +3

    Free refills of water should still be a thing.

  • @senorbaconhawk11
    @senorbaconhawk11 Рік тому +3

    Red solo cups are so innately American there is a country song just titled Red Solo Cup

  • @Ivy-Tellers
    @Ivy-Tellers Рік тому +1

    13:45 in Brasil the cashiers put your stuff in the bags while they are registering it.

  • @tamsel814
    @tamsel814 Рік тому

    I keep all cards I receive, Christmas, bday, random cards. Whenever I feel sad I look at them to feel the love of those near to me. And I expecially treasure the cards I got from those that since passed away

  • @starification12
    @starification12 Рік тому +3

    As a Pennsylvanian, I think "there are drive thru liquor stores?" what? Coming from the fact that we couldn't get alcoholic beverages from anywhere other than a beer distributor or a wine and spirits store until like the past 10ish or so years. So it does make sense that there are drive thru liquor stores.

    • @jenniferbrown913
      @jenniferbrown913 Рік тому

      Also a Pennsylvanian. And I, too, was shocked by the existence of drive thru liquor stores, but not as shocked as the people in other states when they heard that we could only buy alcohol at a beer distributor or a liquor store, and NOWHERE else! Parish the thought!

    • @TheLostFae
      @TheLostFae Рік тому

      Interestingly enough I'm surprised to learn as an Australian that other countries have drive through liquor stores (we call them Bottle-Os), and we also can only sell alcohol at licensed dispensers. Although we also have a habit of having a Bottle-O basically everywhere, more frequently than just a walk in store 😂

  • @michaelmedlinger6399
    @michaelmedlinger6399 Рік тому +5

    After living in Europe for so long, baggers at the grocery store do seem strange. What is amusing: I may have bought only three or four items and have only one bag (well, if I’m lucky; they tend to use a LOT of bags). The bagger will still insist on putting it in my cart and taking it to my car for me. I almost have to rip it out of his/her hands and demand the right to carry my own bag. 😆

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Рік тому

      Can only imagine how confused they get when I show up with a backpack saying that I'm there by bike.

  • @stephenb5jones476
    @stephenb5jones476 Рік тому +2

    In Mexico there are guys who bag groceries, but the store doesn't pay them. They live on tips.

  • @wessexdruid7598
    @wessexdruid7598 Рік тому +1

    The 'thank you for your service' thing is a rebound, after Vietnam, when returning troops were treated very poorly.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Рік тому

      I wonder how many of those veterans are still around, being happy that they finally get treated right.

  • @caitlin329
    @caitlin329 Рік тому +7

    The benches in primary school assemblies were overhyped and disappointing.

  • @Relyx
    @Relyx Рік тому +3

    Even sociable people in the UK don't just randomly greet people on the street. The closest thing to that might be saying hi or morning etc. as you pass another hiker or dog walker in the countryside. But in the city? I think we just have a natural distrust of that sort of behaviour, that it must be fake, and the person either wants to rob us, or get us to donate or sign up to something.

    • @jacekatalakis8316
      @jacekatalakis8316 13 днів тому

      Meantime around here, I can start walking my dogs and end up chatting with people and end up suddenly walking two more dogs than I started with, then get confused which is which and have to then do the whole is this your dog, no, that's my dog routine. Dog walkers are some of the most talkative people I know. Bonus points if the dog walker has the exact same sort of dog that looks nearly identical too

  • @Lizziel23
    @Lizziel23 Рік тому

    I appreciate that Elizabeth line shot at the end

  • @alias201
    @alias201 Рік тому +1

    I'm South african in the UK and to be fair, there were lots of things I didn't know were South African. Specifically calling traffic lights 'robots'. And using 'so long' synonymously with 'in the meantime'.

  • @sophieirwin3497
    @sophieirwin3497 Рік тому +3

    I mean for veterans, we have Remembrance Day on 11/11 or the closest Sunday for parades or what not. And there’s a 2 min silence at 11am on 11/11, and there’s always a poppy sales to raise funds for veterans and remember the people lost due to war. Maybe the UK are a bit more subtle about it all.

    • @Jim-Scott
      @Jim-Scott Рік тому +3

      The term 'Veteran' applied to ex-military seems to be a very recent adoption by some people in the UK from America. The film Lethal Weapon had a lot of people scratching their heads wondering why 'Vets' were such a tight knit group. I know people love animals and those who care for them, but it all seemed a bit much. These days, while most of us wouldn't use the term, we do at least know what you're talking about.

    • @sophieirwin3497
      @sophieirwin3497 Рік тому +1

      @@Jim-Scott I’m from the UK as well, and I had the same thought process….who are these vets going to war? Then it finally clicked

  • @mytube001
    @mytube001 Рік тому +5

    I want to fill my grocery bags myself, thank you. I am extremely good a packing stuff efficiently and I'm faster than almost everyone else. Why the hell would I want someone else to do it?
    I lived in Ireland for a while, and they sometimes did have "bag boys", but that was just insane. I ended up with half a dozen small bags with 2-3 items in each, when one slightly larger bag could fit everything. But that system probably has to do with their flawed checkout design, with only one collecting lane, without a movable divider.

    • @Salix631
      @Salix631 Рік тому +1

      You evidently haven't been in Ireland in 20 years, that's when plastic bags were banned. I haven't seen a bag packer in years (thank goodness) and I cannot remember a time when there were no lane dividers.

    • @mytube001
      @mytube001 Рік тому

      @@Salix631 I lived there when the ban was introduced, and the bag packers probably went away with that change. Still have a few green multi-use Tesco bags from back then. But there were no dividers back then, at least not where I used to shop. Tesco and Dunnes Stores mainly. But you're right, I haven't been back since I left, 19 years ago.

    • @mytube001
      @mytube001 Рік тому

      @@toastedtcake2947 In places where this is common, can you refuse? Tell them that you will bag your stuff yourself? Will that break a store policy? Will they call the rent-a-cops on you?
      It doesn't exist at all where I live now, and it was infrequent enough in Ireland that I just accepted it those few times.

  • @noahjaybee
    @noahjaybee Рік тому

    I worked at Panera for two years and I think way back in the day they had ranch, but not any time recently. It’s not a standard foods restaurant…the point is that everything is fairly unique. But also there’s Caesar and Greek dressing that just comes out of a bottle. If they kept and charged for ranch, that’s so much profit since people would add it to pasta, dip sandwiches, etc

  • @shannonmccay
    @shannonmccay Рік тому +1

    It's true. My life has been a wreck since the bench. I miss it lol