In America, acknowledging the presence of a stranger is pretty much required. The rule is, if you make eye contact, you must acknowledge their existence at least non-verbally, with a smile or a nod. If you don't, you're being rude.
That's my take on it. If someone else doesn't, then try to keep some distance, because something isn't right with them and distance is what they want anyway.
@ Rowynne Crowley - I worked at a particular hotel near me from 1990 till just recently. I worked outside in the golf grounds department, but all of us had to go inside the hotel to use the employee cafeteria on a daily basis. In the early days there, anytime one of us passed an employee on the sidewalk who worked inside, we would smile or say a greeting, and 90% of the time the person who worked inside would either look away or otherwise pretend not to see us. It was very disconcerting.
The biggest reason we buy bags of ice is that they come in greater quantities than people can typically make at home. They are often simply poured into coolers to keep the food and/or drinks cold. They are also great for serving large groups of people, especially if the event lasts for a few hours.
Very good explanation that makes a lot of sense. In Argentina, we usually get them at petrol stations. Americans tend to be more imaginative and practical than the Brits.
I love it when your wife explains something to you from off-camera. In this one she’s explaining why people buy bags of ice. She voices something that many Americans viewers are doing - sort of shouting out (in their heads) why something in America is the way it is. Any away, just a suggestion. You might do more of that. I think it works well.
And yet I see plenty of people who shout out constantly how America doesn't matter and how what they do doesn't matter, it's weird how many people come into a video about America first and then I'm not saying this one but there are plenty of videos out there about America and people will tell you how stupid it is to do with that way and how they don't do that in their own country.
America sounds alot like Australia. People go out in PJ's . Often with no shoes. We often smile at strangers and randomly chat to each other in queues.
Unfortunately, American women smile at British men. It is interpreted as a come on. Had a friend who got sexually assaulted and she was slut shamed for having smiled at him at their first encounter. Thank you for calling this out. It is a mere formality to smile, not an invitation for sex.
@@garycamara9955 Seeing Americans outside in PJs would be exceedingly rare, although it's not so rare, in my experience, that you might see them dressed very, very casually outside within their own neighborhood. Personally, I often walk around my neighborhood like this just for exercise or to visit neighbors, when I'd dress up a bit more to go into town. It's also not all that uncommon to see Americans walk barefoot outside within their own property (not on the sidewalk), as long as it's well kept.
Sort of. A bunch of years ago when I was still in school, I remember one incident in America when a couple of Australian tourists were riding the city bus, and were very disappointed that no one would just casually converse with them. They even complained about it out loud for everyone to hear. 😆 I happened to get off at the same stop in downtown (on the way home for me, on a connecting bus afterward), so I told them that in Southern California, where public transportion is pretty much a last resort (or you're a student saving money like I was) rather than a standard means of travel, most who ride public transportation probably aren't the talkative, publicly social type, and that they'd most likely have much better luck elsewhere, especially if they're visiting a local attraction, like the zoo or the Midway Museum or the Maritime Museum (this was in San Diego, and these are some of the must-visit world-class attractions there). Generally, it shouldn't be hard for them to find Americans to strike up a spontaneous conversation with, especially if they're visiting from somewhere like Australia. Americans generally like Australians and are usually more than willing to speak to anyone visiting from another country. These blokes just weren't in the right place/situation for that. I remember this little incident so clearly because they sounded so disappointed. Even I didn't speak with them on the bus, though (I was seated far from them). I waited until we got off the bus, because, I don't know, I didn't feel comfortable speaking with anyone on the bus. Outside, it was no problem, and we had a nice chat. I wanted to make sure that they felt welcome. I didn't realize that Aussies were quite this gregarious. In contrast, most Europeans (depending on the country) are more standoffish, at least in my limited experience (and that's OK, of course). Americans are kind of in between, I suppose, depending on the location and situation, but probably more like Aussies overall. This is a very broad generalization, of course, but that's part of the topic at hand.
I sat in a five guys at a mall in London and there were free refills and it made me smile to no end to see the British reaction. Some people responded with physical anger, “why would anyone need that much pop?” Others, especially teenagers, so much happiness!
@@kyungrix1112 Or buy the smallest size pop and then refill it. At least in America they usually have three or four sizes (usually about 250ml, 500ml, 600ml, and sometimes 1L or larger) you can buy--but with free refills, why buy anything but a small?
@@curtisa3069 absolutely, I never get a large drink of I'm in the place with free refills. even then, I don't refill the drink when I'm done. there's no point unless you got alcohol to put in it 😉🤣🤣🤣
I don't think I've ever taken advantage of free refills beyond just refilling as I'm leaving. One cup to drink with my meal, one to sip on as I go about my day. The second one I'd rather have with no ice so that I can put it in the fridge at home and later add my own ice.
@Beware the Lily of the Valley yeah people like to say Americans will just sit in the restaurant constantly drinking the free refills, but most people do what you just described or don't get a refill at all.
I blew the mind of a hotel desk clerk in Swindon when I told her that every hotel in the US had an ice machine and every room had an ice bucket. Her response was, “Why?”
I brought my own Yeti style insulated Ice Bucket to this hotel I'm living in for 3 months. The ice machine is only a few doors away from mine and I fill that bucket up every day. I GOTTA HAVE ICE! 😅
@@richardfabacher3705 I get why you would want more ice in a hotter climate (especially as I myself lived in Saharan Africa for four years) but it's the actual idea of an "ice machine" that seems weird to me... is it like the reverse of a kettle?
@@theparanoidandroid3583 Much more complicated. There are basically 2 types of "ice machines: Laurence notes the refrigeration units found in stores that sell ice in large bags. The ice is made in a factory, bagged, and transported for sale. The other type, found in motels and hotels as well as restaurants and snack bars, makes ice in trays/molds by trickling water in, freezing it, then dropping it into the refrigerated hopper to be scooped-out as needed. Most home refrigerators in the US have built-in ice makers which may include dispensing crushed or cubed ice by pressing a paddle/bar/tab/lever (varies widely) or they drop cubes into a hopper inside the freezer. All forms involve a water line filling a tray which freezes the "cubes" then when they freeze, a small motorized device pushes them out and the process repeats. All testaments to our addiction to carbonated drinks. But seriously, have you ever tried to drink a 105° F Coca-Cola? Don't!
Clarification on why people buy bags of ice: they're handy for when people need lots of ice at one time. Usually, people will buy them for parties such as barbecues or to fill coolers for trips and the like.
There are more steps involved using ice trays: pull out trays; twist trays then ice flies all over the counter w/some cubes falling onto the floor; carefully pouring water into trays so it doesn’t spill (I don’t use tap water); & carefully walking to freezer. If water spills on the floor it has to be wiped up. With a bag of ice: reach in, put in glass DONE!
I live in storm country (southern Louisiana) and I've learned to keep four big bags of ice in the freezer for when the power goes out. It keeps the perishable food cold enough that it won't spoil if the power is restored that day. My power has gone out for 8-12 hours FOUR TIMES since February 1 (a little over three months) so this is not an idle concern.
@@trixie9777 there's also the step of picking the ice up off the floor, throwing it in the sink, having it bounce off the side of the sink, and landing on the counter or, if the universe is being a particular b**ch that day, back on the floor.
As an American, this will amaze non-Americans. I buy bags of Ice, because I like the shape of the ice done by various brands. I can just make rounded cubes, but if I buy ice, I can have disc-shaped, hollow tube shaped, or broken shard-shaped. Ice is a key component of cocktails, and ice matters. That's why we BUY ice !!
When I was visiting London, I went to the post office to purchase stamps. There was a woman in front of me who had a baby in a tram. I commented to her about how beautiful her baby was. She looked at me with a sheer state of horror and ran out of the post office. It's not like I said I wanted her baby to sacrifice in a demonic ritual!!
I’m from the U.K. and do that often, no problem. Is there something scary about you? Do you carry knives visibly about your person? Or were you wearing a balaclava at the time? 😂
@@nigelwylie01 I don't think its an American v. UK thing. I think it is an Rural v. Urban thing. I remember watching a UK skit that was a faux news broadcast about a man from a rural county moving to London and terrifying everyone by saying 'hello' on the tube.
I'm an American and I'm fine with interaction with strangers like this ,but there was an incident in a doctor's waiting area some years ago that was very awkward and annoying. I was sitting there and this lady I didn't know started talking to me about her family's troubles 🙄 All I could do was occasionally nod and say " yeah " and give a fake look of concern. I couldn't wait to get out of there.
100% agree especially since I'm in South Florida and it does get warm here from time to time. Yes it gets cold here in Florida sometimes it's quite cold when my friends come from the north they are suprised.
I can drink much faster, if the drink is not too cold. And the stomach is not getting a shock and the body it not turning on heat production to compensate the ice. A cold drink gives you a fresh feeling in the mouth, but that'ts about it.
As a Floridian, I can confirm we put ice in nearly all of our drinks. The only exception would be if the drink is suppose to be hot, like hot chocolate or some coffees or teas. There might be less ice in the winter and more ice in the summer, but there is always ice in the drink. It feels wrong without it.
I'm 52, lived in FL since 2000. Prior to living in Florida, 20s 30s I rarely added ice to cold drinks, soft drinks. Up to 30, I'd have ice in a tray for weeks, unused.
Here in New hampshire it's a little rarer, but we have frozen coco and iced or frozen coffee drinks we drink up here all year around.... -10f some days out and we still drink an ice coffee.
Prepared iced drinks, such as iced coffee, I do drink, but otherwise I drink room temp drinks..room temp as in, air conditioned room. I'm a Floridian and prefer my drinks this way. My husband, on the other hand, is literally an ice hog.
I live in Michigan. I rarely use ice in anything. Water and soda during the summer when it is above 90 degrees. But most days if I put ice in my drink I might start shivering.
As an American, I find these videos fascinating. I think it’s very interesting to see how people from foreign countries experience new things in other countries like America
Let’s be clear, flying the flag was exponentially more post 9-11-01. They were sold out for months and months and months for the first time since 1941.
laserwolf65, please tell Tevye the Milkman and his family (Golda, Tzeitel, Hodel, Chava, Bielke and Sprintze) hello for me the next time you're in Anatevka. Mazeltov! : ))
I recently moved to the UK from the US, and smiling in public thing is what has gotten me in the most trouble just while out for a walk. Even had a mom clutch her small child close to her after I said "good morning" while passing by.😅 I didn't realise greeting people would creep people out when I first got here. So getting all these confused and worried looks from people really confused me.😂 Still learning!
We DO greet each other believe it or not! You were most likely (being American), being overly friendly, not with any malicious intent obviously, but it does raise our suspicions when someone is "too cheery", like what are you hiding?
I’ve encountered something similar in my time in New Zealand. I’ll be out for a walk and will smile, nod, or say hello to someone and half will ignore me or purposefully look away. Makes me feel like I’m weird or something 😅 Is always a bit awkward but so is ignoring the person and/or they initiate the hello so it’s just a gamble either way haha. Definitely miss American’s more consistent openness to talk to passerbys.
Its an overhang of status thing. Unless you've been introduced you do not approach another. The higher status person is allowed to address lower status people. Thus, on average most general people would not start conversations with strangers.
Me in Florida also laughed at that. It can get up to 100 degrees there, but down here it stays 100 degrees in the summer 😂 Plus the humidity makes it worse.
"you can actually buy BAGS of ice" 8:22 🤣❄️We are obsessed with ice. We also have preferences for size and shape of ice cubes, crushed vs square vs round. My favorite ice cube is cylindrical with a hole. And then there are icy treats like snowballs aka snow cones (somewhat regional) which consists of shaved ice with sugary syrup over it. Comes with toppings too!
@@tweetypie1978 Yeah, but can you get ice from rando, pop-up ice dispensers everywhere 24/7? I never understood the economics, but they wouldn't exist if they couldn't make $ off it. Super small towns have these and I can only think they're for keeping game harvested cool enough to transport home.
@@danielwade9487 90% of that "dispenser" ice goes into ice chests for chilling drinks and keeping food from spoiling while camping, boating, having a large bbq, etc. Those super small towns are frequently near camping/boating/swimming areas.
Comes in hand for keeping drinks stored in coolers cold, too. I'm surprised Tara didn't elaborate a bit more on that for Laurence. Also people who go out fishing 🎣 for leisure keep the fish fresh with ice bought at the store. Helps, too, when the fridge and or freezer dies and you don't want perishables to go bad quickly while getting it fixed or replaced.
When I was walking in Paris with my friends ,a couple stopped us and said “ You are Americans ,right ? “ I asked them ...how did you know , and they said because you people are smiling at everyone .😂😂😂😂
Thing that bothered me when i was in europe was having to pay for water at restaurants. Like they dont just bring u water when u sit down u have to ask for it, and they usually ask you what you want to eat before u get a drink its odd
I lived in Germany for 6 years. You learn quickly not to ask for tap water. There water is very hard and has a lot of minerals in it. Most of the Americans living on the army base had to give their cats and dogs bottled water, or they would get kidney stones.
@@maryrichardson1318 lucky I live in the mountains of North Carolina, Asheville literally sells their city water in bottles, I’ve always drank from the creek and tap as springs are common here. But going to Florida, nah man, I’m good I’m not drinking tap water from the plains and swamplands.
@@chowderwhillis9448 I know how you feel. I live in central Kentucky. We have an underground spring in a cave near us that bottles the water and sells it. High Bridge Spring Water. It is DELICIOUS.
@@chowderwhillis9448 Pennsylvania, at least my area of it is pretty much the same way. I remember an actual local civil conflict that got next to zero media coverage happened because nestle tried to but the rights to all the springs .
It is a terrible reflection of society. It shows that people have no pride in themselves and dont care about others. This mentality bleeds into all aspects of the culture and if you dont care about others or even your own image why on earth would you care about the country or anything associated with it... and you wonder why things are going down the toilet.
Once upon a time in America, that wouldn't have been acceptable anywhere. I'm not that old, and I never did that. I'm glad that I can go shopping in my jeans and t-shirt. That's casual enough. I don't even wear shorts because I have a mirror.😊
Of course, Walmart is a completely different dimension. Sure, you'll get people in pajamas and sweats, but you'll also get that guy wearing a full suit of plate armor and his friend in a damp wetsuit eating a raw eggplant like an apple.
@@thomgizziz Such a stupid thing to be mad about, THEY'RE STILL PANTS. The only thing different is the material. IT DOESN'T MATTER. My wardrobe has nothing to do with anyone else. I want to be comfortable not squished into an uncomfortable outfit.
@@thomgizziz land of the free to wear whatever we want. Frankly, my idea of success is being able to spend every day wearing a bath robe like The Dude if I feel like it.
My dad back in either the late 60s or early 70s made a business trip to London. At some after work function he was served a glass of scotch with an ice cube. Then the guy serving him said “oh, I know you Americans like your ice” and promptly added a second cube.
Scotch on the rocks is what it's called. They don't dilute the whiskey much at all since you usually finish it before the cubes have melted down all the way
I purposely by pajamas that I'm not embarassed to wear outside. Just in case I need to make a late night run to the store. I'm not getting dressed just to pop out for smokes. Or in case of fire.
I ordered a drink in the US (I'm Australian) and asked for no ice and the guy was shocked and said most people ask for MORE ice. I want more space for the drink I'm paying for! Not frozen water thanks. (this wasn't a free refills place).
I also ask for no ice for that same reason, but that does include free refill places so I can go longer before needing a refill and it's usually cold anyways. Also, I hate that watered down taste when the ice melts.
A certain large fast food chain in the US has calculated the delution of the ice so the drink has a standard of sweetness to the finish. The drink might be sweeter than liked if it comes without ice.
I recently moved to a classic American suburban neighborhood, and it’s honestly just like “in the movies and tv shows”. Everyone’s out working on their lawns or their cars in the garage, and when I walk my dog I always get roped into a conversation with a stranger. People are just so genuinely friendly which I think is nice...most of the time.
@Dalmaen Actually they're just trying to figure out if you're a neighbor or someone from outside the neighborhood. It's like when the salesperson in a store says hello the moment you walk in - they're just letting you know that they know you're there. In the store's case, it's to make it more difficult for people to shoplift; out on the street, it's a way of keeping tabs on strangers vs. neighbors.
I'm from Western New York. We say pop. But to me I know the lingo and might change it up with soda. Or soda pop. It's the same thing. I don't know why people get offended.
I've called it pop all my life (I live in MI a stone's throw from the Canadian border). One time I in TX at a festival and asked for a pop, and the guy looked at me like I had three heads. I then said Coke and got what I wanted, the concession guy still giving me a weird look. Later on, I was told a 'pop' meant a hit of meth.
@@adrianlambert7130 most of his videos are complete lies, he either lived under a rock in the UK or is just an idiot just blatantly lying about things.
Larry Davison same for us here in Australia! If you go to someone’s house and they offer you a drink and there is no ice it’s considered almost undrinkable!
She's right about the PJ thing starting in the 90s. I find it tends to be location specific though. Drive throughs, Walmart, and universities ( especially during midterms and final exams).
Colleges and universities in the USA for the first two classes of the day. 8 am and 9 am. IIRC we were also allowed to bring in coffee. Some of us took a long time to wake up properly. I had classes at 8 am for the first two years. PS I *chose* that time. Enough to go back, get a proper breakfast in the dorm and do my foreign language homework immediately as far as possible. (I had a shower at 7 am and got ready). Then off to other classes 10 am, 11 am, then lunch, 2-5 pm....
my wife and I went to Manhattan in like 2003 or something and took the style to the streets. After that, we started to notice people wearing PJs in public a whole lot more... could it be that we were looking for it, or that it was happening more...? I don't know.
If I am just going to the corner store down the street then my pj's are good enough. But anywhere else i will get dressed to go. As soon as I get back home I'll get my comfy PJs back on😊
Same. My sister and I dared each other to do it once, but we put on the nicest/newest PJ's we owned and then we couldn't work up the nerve to go anywhere except Waffle House at 11 something at night. And the five people there stared at us the whole time. Ugh! It was pretty funny though. We felt like idiots.😂
In this strange time of “quarantine” I make even more of a point of smiling with my eyes and being even friendlier when out in the world. And I notice others doing the same. We all must do our best to show more kindness all around.
I visited the UK back in 2010 and while out to dinner in London I was served a room temperature Coke. I asked for ice for my drink and they were puzzled but brought me a bowl of ice. 😂
That's called "The Yank Bucket" back in the kitchen, but they have gotten less rude about it, now. In the 1990s the staff would do a little public shaming ritual of you.
Why would anyone want warm soda? It's not like it can be a preference because It objectively tastes worse. why would people in England want room temperature drinks?
I've had the reverse... You ask for ice and they bring you ONE cube. 😐🧊 Then they hand it to you as if they had flown to the artic circle and chipped it off a glacier themselves. 😐🧊 It's ice. 😐🧊🧊🧊🧊🧊🥤
As a Floridian, winter here is just cold summer. The humidity makes the cold sting, but it doesn't usually freeze for more than a couple days a few times a season
I can't imagine not having ice in my water. Of course I am a Floridian beach dweller but when I lived in Wisconsin during the winter I still put ice in my water. Lol
It’s funny because when we Americans go to Europe (or most of the world for that matter), and we are served water or drinks without ice, it can feel a little as if we’re being handed uncooked food. 😂. At least at first.
DeAnne Paris myself included. I think I tend to fill my glass with ice not only because I live in Texas but also because it’s something I watched my mother do her entire life. That’s one thing I really can’t part with. At least fill my glass HALFWAY with ice if you’re rationing it. 😉😊😉
I lived in Florida long enough to be surprised and delighted when I moved back to Michigan to get cold water from the cold tap. I had forgotten completely about that.
People typically buy bags of ice for large coolers. If you are going camping or taking a cold dish or drink a distance or even to chill drinks for a party, you would load the cooler with ice which is hard to do with just ice trays. You can consume the ice if you are having a large party and don't have enough ice for your guests, but typically it's used to cool bottles/cans.
I had visited the UK, specifically Scotland, in the 90s. I remember two instances that still make me chuckle. I was at a cafeteria-style restaurant and was asked what I would like to drink. I asked for iced tea. The lady looked at me like I had just arrived from Mars. Apparently, at the time, iced tea was a foreign (as I was) concept. I don't know if that's changed. On another occasion, I visited a pharmacy in search of a bottle of isopropyl alcohol. Once again, my antennae must have been showing, but I was able to come away with a box of isopropyl alcohol wipes. I thoroughly enjoyed my trip and I hope to go back one day and also explore a bit of England as well. 😃
We generally view iced tea as an abomination. You can buy cans and bottles of iced tea (Lipton's etc) in shops. But you will be judged for buying it. You'll rarely see it being served in a restaurant or cafe. Isoprop is usually called surgical spirit.
When my daughter was 8 months old she had a fever of 108f and they had to ice her (dip her in a bath of ice water) to bring her temperature down. She screamed the most horrific scream a parent could even imagine. So yes there are people who, per se, have cold baths. (Btw she is almost 18 and is doing much better now)
They don't recommend the ice bath anymore. Not for years, because it's too shocking to the system, but definitely cold water, or cool water increasing the coldness gradually.
Yeah, Margret Thatcher aka The Iron Lady our former Prime Minister used to take ice baths with an electric current running through the water (true). Maybe why she had that massive hair that stood up lol.
I friend of mine who managed a few Taco Bell’s told me soft drinks were so cheap that a customer could buy a regular drink and refill it and drink as much as humanly possible al day and she’d STILL be ahead.
@@Heavywall70 used to work in the restaurant industry, this is so true. Even worse with alcohol. One drink out of a bottle will cover the whole bottle so only the first drink is no profit, the rest is gravy 😂😂
Yes. I was hoping he might mention the cost of a drink in England. I bet it is extremely low. But you are right, when you are paying so much, you want to "try" to get your money's worth. (of course our plan backfired because now we are overdosing on sugar and our waist lines are enormous!)
Someone told me that restaurants have main profit from overpriced drinks, not from food, maybe that's reason why it is so overpriced. In KFC they hare "neverending drink" but also that cup has only 0.4l and cost almost like 2 2l bottles of pepsi and you mostly can't drink more than one or two cups in such short time, so they know what they doing, it's not actually valuable for customer. :-D But in western europe or USA it's crazy, they want for example 5 eur for beer in restaurant, but same brand cost 1 eur in bottle. Here in Czech Republic beer in restaurand cost cca double price of bottled same beer.
Based on the way fast food is produced, you could demand free refills for burgers as well - seriously, how much can it cost to produce a BigMac? In Germany, the calculation of a restaurant usually bases on the assumptions that drinks have to fetch a high margin because the food often does not. And free refills would kill that mechanism.
Florida has two seasons. Summer and fall. You can experience temperatures from anywhere from 20°, 85°, in fall. In summer, you're pretty much between 85° and 120°. If you come to Florida, there are tailgates at both seasons' sporting events. In Jacksonville, we even have a ice skating rink. If you get a chance, every major city in Florida has the best of every cultures' festivals, at least once a year. And, all the government websites for each is found through the state's website, www.myflorida.com.
Last time I was in Orlando was late November. 85°f at 07:00... 98° at 16:00 when these thunder storms sweep through like the armageddon. I don't know how people without air conditioning in every room manage to survive there. Only thing I liked were the little lizards and snakes, everywhere.
We have "iced tea" in the South and it's usually very sweet tea also; but that's not very common in some places in the US. I've been to some restaurants in the mid-west where the server looked at me weird when I asked for ice for my glass of tea, which they brought to me freshly brewed I'm sure, and still warm. They brought me a few cubes of ice in another glass; those cubes didn't stand a chance against that tea. I'm just glad they didn't stand there and watch to see how many packets of sugar I put in the glass.😄
It blows my mind that people STILL get confused about the different types of iced tea. Like, cold tea is a pretty simple concept. It's been in parts of America for centuries. You'd think that an American, despite not living in the South, could still become aware of the concept of deliberately cooling down tea. It's just so odd to me that it's even a conversation anymore.
Terry Davis and most of the idiots who wear their pants like that don’t realize where that moronic practice came from, the prison system! It was how sex-starved male prisoners signaled how far they were willing to go, the lower their drawers were, the more they were willing to do!
I moved back to southern Louisiana last fall (I was born here and grew up here) and I didn't even bother with a coat for the entire winter. I think I needed a sweater five or six times. If I need a sweater, it's usually in the summer and someone has the AC cranked too low. (I always brought one with me to the theater, back when we could go to theaters. Sigh.)
Winter in South Florida means i put on a long sleeve.... sun shirt. The same long sleeve sun shirt i wear in the summer because with out it i would get skin cancer.
I am from the US and the date format that we use in the company I work for is yyyy-mm-dd, such as 2023-06-29. In many of our documents and files the date is included as part of the file name and having the year identified first makes it very easy to identify when they were created and to group them together.
That's what I got used to working as a civil servant at a naval hospital, because it made the dates sort properly, and it's crept into my private usage, simply because it's come to feel 'right'.
Exactly. Or to fill the cooler with if you're having a big back yard summer party to make sure your cans of soda, beer, whatever stay cold, so you don't have to run back and forth into the house. Family reunions where you might all meet up at a park. If there is a disaster where the power goes out, a quick run to a local 7/11 or similar for a few bags of ice to fill a cooler with before the ice melts is a good thing. Stuff that you really can't afford to have spoiled like expensive meat can be saved rather than become dangerous to eat.l
...or if you're someone that has to work outside, i.e. construction workers. Most of America is rural so for many people it's often not simply a matter of popping down the shops on one's break. Cheers!
At my hotel on my first trip to England I called room service for a bucket of ice. There was confusion on both sides of the phone. But when they knocked on our door what I received was a soup cup with 3 ice cubes. This was 30 years ago and this confusion happened often. Maybe it’s different now. I was at restaurant, the manager was finally called to figure out why I would want an extra glass of ice. The funniest was many workers peeking to see what was happening (with the crazy ice lady). Anyhow, we began looking for fast food restaurants when we wanted a drink with enough ice.
@@randzopyr1038 oh I'm sure they have ice in the winter. I wanted ice in my cup. Makes you realize how things you think are completely normal are completely bizarre somewhere else. Fun though.
The thing is, any commercial kitchen should have an ice maker for practical cooking purposes. They have access, they're just being weird about it. Like, to treat a request for ice like some kind of freak show curiosity is so silly. You're telling me those cooks and servers haven't gotten way more demanding requests from customers?? Nah. They just decided to be jerks about the ice for some reason.
The going out in public in pajamas thing only really started during the last decade. I would be embarrassed to walk around in public in my pajamas (unless it was a Halloween costume), and I don't understand why so many people are okay with doing it.
Because people are slobs now. Look at photos of people out and about in the 1950s and you will quickly realize that we've become lazy, fat, depressed people.
The other day, I saw a young woman at the store who was wearing pajama bottoms, but with a stylish blouse, jacket, and shoes, all of it coordinated. She was cute, and the outfit was attractive, so, I don't know, I guess I give up.
I'm 40, and when in high school I remember the girls starting that trend, usually on test days. Not sure if that was the beginning of it generally but it was the start of it in my part of the world.
It's not so much literally going out in pajamas, it's more just the casual nature of American attire. Like a previous commenter pointed out, many people will go out in "pajamas," but it's still "coordinated" and meant to be a style. I'd also like to point out many places in the US are much hotter than the UK. This is especially true for any state in "The South," but also areas like Southern California, Arizona, and so on. Both those states have big cities in warm climates. (LA and Phoenix respectively.)
Um would scrub pants count, I have to admit I gone to sleep in scrub pants, no I don't work in the medical field, and gone on errands in the same scrub pants, just like the feel of scrub pants, being their made of basically bed sheet material.
A grin and a nod or a "hello" in passing seemed pretty universal to me when I was in Northern England and Scotland for a few days. I felt like I blended in. Amsterdam though, It took me a day or so to break the habit of seeming like a weirdo and just averting my eyes just the left and right of a person once eye contact was made.
As a Canadian planning on a move to Scotland this brings me comfort, this is how we usually greet people and Lawrence had me worried I'd be confused for a predator if I didn't break that habit!
I’m Mexican and you are right about at least wear blue jeans, in México is very uncommon to see people in their pajamas, we are very peculiar about that and how we present ourselves in public, but I think Americans do it because they want to feel comfortable, I love your channel is very good and well made, I laughed so much ,specially the part when you explain about the bags of ice for you is very rare, we buy bags of ice too , love everything about UK, I would love to one day visit your country , good luck on your channel, I subscribed already
No it has to do with a downfall in standards and a lack of pride. It is causing the downfall of the US, if you have no pride in yourself then that bleeds into all parts of life and everything starts falling apart and rotting because nobody cares.
In the south we greet everyone with ,’ hey’ ( which is perky and sounds more lik haaaayeee) we aren’t calling you, just acknowledging you. And yes, we love our flag.
i come from a small village in england so saying hi or nodding when you pass someone on the pavement isn’t completely foreign but i will never understand the flag no matter how much i try 🤔
Ice bags are not typically used to put ice in drinks. They are more often used to fill coolers. You then put your soda and beer in the cooler to keep it cold. This saves you from having to use the refrigerator.
I have ice in my drinks 365 days a year. I live in the low desert of Arizona so of course ice most of the year is lovely but I just generally prefer cold, cold drinks. We buy bags of ice here in AZ A LOT! You can even buy bags of ice at fast food drive throughs which is super convenient if you are going there anyway. Also something that is everywhere here are stores that sell water and ice. Seriously, selling water is very big business in AZ. Love your videos!
Honestly, it could be blizzarding and I would still want cold water. I live on the transition between Rockies and Canadian prairies, so it gets damn chilly. But it doesn't matter when I need a drink of water. If it isn't at least cooler than room temperature, it simply doesn't feel right.
When I first moved out of my parents’ house (about ten minutes away, lol), sometimes I’d forget my medicine over there and if I didn’t have any in my apartment, my Dad would bring it to me. I still remember the first time I opened the door. He was wearing his pajamas and robe over them, *and* his moccasin slippers. “‘Suitable for indoor and outdoor surfaces,’” he quoted, grinning. The next day my mother told me, “I can’t believe he wanted to wear that! What if something happened? What if he’d been pulled over!?” She was so scandalized. 😅 Whenever I needed something when it was late, like if I needed an anti-nausea injection (second best shot giver I’ve ever dealt with), he’d arrive in his pajamas. He’d flourish the medication vial. “See, the [breast] pocket is useful!” He’s also gone through a few drive thrus in pajamas, lol. We always joke about him continuing his PJ addiction and where he might go next. And since he can fall asleep just about anywhere, it’s good thinking to be prepared for that eventuality in his clothing choices. 🤣
4:30 - The One True Way™ to write dates and times is in ISO-8660 format: YYYY-MM-DD TZ HH:MM:SS. It's always largest-to-smallest increment and it works regardless of cultural or linguistic differences, can be automated by practically anything, and is supported directly by just about every piece of electronics that can even handle dates/times.
My roommate does this shit all the time and it drives me fucking nuts... can’t figure out why he can’t get a girlfriend, I have told him that going into public looking like a slob isn’t helping his case
Flag flying in the UK has increased over the years. When I first lived in the UK, back in 1970, it seemed that the Union flag, or the England flag, was never flying. But here in Sussex, England, one sees these flags far more frequently these days.
The pajamas thing is weird. Millennials & younger only find this acceptable. I am not included in the group of ppl that find it acceptable or would be caught dead in my pjs in public. Also, bc I don't actually wear pajamas.
@@darkharlezucreek my grandma always called it sodi-pop. But I find pop trashy sounding and wonder why people use it. We say club soda, cream soda, soda water, replacing any with pop sounds crazy.
Since “We the people” are the government, we show our connection with each other with the Flag. There is no one person (not even the President who changes) who represents all of us. That’s what the Flag says - We’re all in this together. We can do this
The Brits (Canucks & Aussies too) have the queen and so there is a symbol to focus on that unites everyone. Tho Canadians like Americans tend to fly the flag. Keen observation about the representative role of a neutral & common symbol.
I think it even goes deeper than that. The flag doesn't represent the government of the United States. It represents the people, our common desires that come along with self-determination, and thus the nation as a whole, regardless of government.
Yeah but that smells of fascism. Nothing good ever came from behind a flag. Flags and other nationalist symbols are wholly divisive. “This is our thing that makes us better than the others.” Patriotism (the doctrine of pride in something you had no hand in, ie being born somewhere, and the achievements of others) and nationalism are pure poison, an affront to humanity. Like religion and other superstitions, these are things we should have left in the Iron Age.
My brother was lucky enough (and naturally gifted enough) to graduate from a university that’s pretty respected in the area. A semester’s tuition is around 20k for in-state students. Even with scholarships my parents ended up getting a second mortgage (unknown to us at the time) to allow him to keep going there. There were, however, some students that felt it was appropriate to go in their pajamas. Sometimes in slippers!!! And of course if it was a girl, it was accompanied by a messy bun, and sometimes smeared eye makeup from the day before. When I went for a few semesters, I was shocked! It was such a difficult school to wrangle, with strict codes in other areas, and some people just... slouched through it all. And it’s not like, “it’s so early, I’ve not had my coffee yet.” My classes tended to be in the afternoon and these people kept shuffling in like that. Meanwhile, I kept up my homage to my mother by wearing blouses, never t-shirts, and if I wore jeans, dark wash only, and since I can wear heels without discomfort, slingback heels. Hair in a ballerina bun and light to moderate makeup. When I asked a girl I admired for her intelligence why she tended to wear PJs, she said, “It’s different. People notice. And I’m cute enough to get away with it.” She tilted her head with a big smile and left, slippers shuff-shuff-shuffling along. 🤦🏻♀️
@@SunflowerSpotlight ''And of course if it was a girl, it was accompanied by a messy bun, and sometimes smeared eye makeup from the day before''. She just got plowed like an Iowa corn field.
MediumJohnSilver When we were driving our Spanish exchange student back to the airport to go home after living with us for the school year I asked him what he would miss most, surely he would me, of course! His lighting fast response was “ice!, how am I ever going to go back to drinking anything without ice!.
She went to England, then to the French Riviera. Did her dobermans survive by eating Follett? I've watched that movie many, many times. I taped it off of cable, then purchased the official videotape, then the Criterion Collection version on DVD.
@@teemusid I watched the DVD a few days ago, and it still is delightful. As for the doberman, I suppose she phoned someone to take care of the dog sometime after she got away.
I live in Oklahoma and it's normal for people here to have iced sweet tea 365 days a year! It doesn't matter what the temperature is outside and I don't usually drink water unless that glass is full of ice. I really enjoy your channel, because it's nice to see someone pointing out our uniqueness for everyone to appreciate.
I'm generally a water-ordering person in restaurants, but I have to say that if you do order a soda they will very likely fill your glass to the very top with ice before pouring your drink, so getting a refill isn't actually like having a second serving. It's more like actually getting one full serving.
I HATE when people do that. I was at a wedding once, and I asked the server for a sprite with no ice. He gave me LESS ice. IT JUST MAKES IT SO THAT THE SODA GOES FLAT IN 2 SECONDS, I WILL FIGHT EVERY SERVER WHO DOES THIS.
I hate ice in anything that isn't water. Waste of space, waters it down, and just a nuisance while drinking. It's still a nuisance in water, but it keeps water cold (the only way I like drinking water) and when the ice melts, more water. Somehow, it's the only way it makes sense in my brain
The Flag! Basically it's this: The British were going to invade the city of Baltimore and take Ft. McHenry once the flag (atop that Rampart) came down. The Americans who gave their lives to keep said flag from "hitting the ground," are represented in each of us to this day. Most of us don't actually think of "those who gave their lives," but somewhere in our collective consciousness, we know the story (it's right there in our National anthem..."and the flag was still there.") and we pay our respect by flying the flag whenever it suits us as a reminder that as long as that flag flies, no one will put us under their rule.
Our American Nation anthem is based on a war we started. Lol. Americans were the bully in this fight. The war of 1812 was all about try to conquer peaceful Canada and failed. What stupid way to get a National Anthem.🤦♂️
@@ateam388 The US is the one which initially declared war, but the annexation of Canada was not the primary reason for the declaration of the war. It is still up for debate if it even contributed at all for the to the decision to go to war.
@@Spiff99 Don't respond to trolls. Nothing about his comment is supported by historical record. For a war as "forgotten" as the War of 1812, A Team's version is certainly a new theory!
About the buying bags of ice thing, it's important to remember that the US is a very big very rural country and refrigeration did not become adopted uniformly. In hot rural areas, buying bags of ice was important for cellars and non-electric freezers i.e. ice cabinets.
In the distant past there used to be ice trucks that would deliver to homes for the ice boxes in vogue at the time. In fact they used to differentiate natural ice cut from lakes/ponds to artificial ice made in the newly developed refrigeration containers.
Your channel is GREAT! I am an Englishman married to an American(we live in the UK) and I love the differences in the way we say things. It does cause confusion between us at times even though we have been married 20 years! My in-laws have trouble understanding me but perhaps that's because I'm a Southerner! PLEASE keep up the good work! and we like the fact that you have cats! (We have four) . Cheers (saying "cheers" amuses my in-laws no end!) Tony
Usage: I watched a Nigerian student get his face slapped by our departmental secretary because he asked if he could "Knock her up." Queen's English speakers do it all the time but in America (Although we "look-up" or "call up") "knock up" means to impregnate. Bubba knocked-up his old lady again.
I went to college with a couple of Brits. I was funny how we spoke the same language but at times could not understand each other. Love your videos keep coming
I once was having an online conversation with an Australian, typing text at each other, and she used what I assume was a very common Auzzie slang term (I have since forgotten... it was almost 20 years ago), and I had to have her go back and explain the term to me. After we both had a bit of a laugh over it, I said something to the effect of, "How can we have a language barrier when we're speaking the same language?!"
I have a few American friends and I went to the states last summer to visit them. I popped to the petrol station opposite my hotel to get a few essentials. Anyway, the woman who served me went 'any gas?' to which I replied 'steady on love it isn't even time for dinner yet' lol.
I think the free drink refills is a fairly modern concept in the U.S. It seemed to pop up in the late 1980s-1990s. I remember going out to eat as a child, and my mother would tell me that if I was really thirsty to drink the complimentary water, since she wasn’t going to pay for a second glass of whatever beverage I’d ordered.
When I was a kid I recall that you only got free refills on certain beverages; iced tea (which was NOT pre-sweetened) and coffee (hot; if you'd asked for an iced coffee you would have gotten some VERY strange looks) generally had free refills, sodas usually did not.
@@ptorq That seems to have been the custom all my life in my neck of the woods. Places that give free refills on cold drinks exist, but they're very rare.
When I lived next door to my Grandmother, we had VERY cold well water, and it would have been rare for us to use ice except when it was very hot. Always used ice when making Kool Aid, but we'd make 1/4th of the cool aid in hot water (to melt the sugar), ice it down, then fill it up with water.
I went to Starbucks the other day ( Drive thru only of course) & ordered an iced tea & while Ice is kind of the the point of iced tea,half of my drink was just that which was annoying since there was barely any drink..😕
Many years ago, when I was a younger man, having the family over for a celebration, my father gave to me this advice: As he was making 2 scotch/rocks, he paused, turned to me with a look that said "this is really important" and said "son" (he almost never called me son) and here he bordered on solemnity, "when the ice is gone, the party's over". It was a magic moment.
@@wessexdruid5290 As someone (American) that prefers scotch on the rocks, it's the evolution of flavors as the cold scotch warms in your mouth and the volatiles slowly release. I even keep my scotch in the fridge. Some people like scotch and soda, or water, and as the ice melts it approaches those styles also. I'm not too picky about how it's served, especially if someone else is pouring.
@@tubularfrog Have you ever drunk a single malt properly? i.e. without ice and with just a splash of Highland spring water, to unlock it? Compare the two, then come back and talk about which has more flavour - and aroma.
What is it with Brits and their reluctance to say "Hello" to people? It's not hard. It doesn't cost anything. It's not a commitment to Sunday Brunch. It's just polite. Just do it. I promise it doesn't hurt. If that's too much for you, a simple nod will do. Some way to say, "I see you and acknowledge that you are there and a member of my species." But don't say that. That would be weird. Actually, on second thought, go ahead and say that. It will be funny.
"I also see you and acknowledge you and recognize you as a member of my species. I am however more excited to see your canine companion and will desire to be more affectionate toward it."
Rowynne Crowley It's only in the larger cities we don't acknowledge others. We would be nodding and smiling every ten seconds. In less populated areas of course we acknowledge each other.
To be fair to the Brits, I'm from Seattle and there's a similar tendency with the "Seattle freeze". I've also observed it in other large/busy cities and public places like airports, mass transit, etc. This is speculation, but I think it stems from the idea of "respecting other people's space/privacy". That may seem odd, but think of it in terms of not wanting to seem too forward or intrusive...
Wearing pajamas out to the store etc is a new(ish) thing. The older generation thought of it as very trashy and uncivilized. Now you see it at Walmart (but there is no telling what you might see at Walmart these days). It’s a newer thing. Perhaps it will have caught on next time you go back to the UK. Personally I don’t like it, but I don’t honestly have a good reason to not like it other than it just seems wrong (probably because my parents wouldn’t let me do it when I was a child so no one else should be allowed to do it either?).
I really enjoy water being super cold, even if its winter. That may be because I live in California and I'm used to filling all my cups half way up with ice.
I live just about as far north in the continental U. S. as one can. In winter it is common for me to draw a glass of water to drink later after it warms up some. The pipes freezing is a real and constant danger.
I was born and raised in New Jersey which typically gets pretty darn cold in the winter. If I'm drinking a beverage from a tumbler I'll put ice in it so it stays nice and cold, even in winter. There's nothing worse than warm soda, iced tea, or lemonade.
4:10 I'm a veteran, and so i've learned to write the date in the day, month, year format. 💯👍 For example, today is my birthday, 05APR2021. 😎 I know it may look weird for non-military folks, but I joined the military in 1996 right before my 18th birthday. Writing the date in this format is quite normal for me. I never knew that it was also a British thing 😊
I really hate the public pajamas thing. Even when there were these "Pajamas day" at school, i would not participate, because it's just weird for the obvious reasons most non-americans think so.
Laurence, People buy bags of ice to put in their coolers. Place canned or bottled beverages in the bottom of the cooler, pour ice from a bag over said beverages and take the cooler to a tailgate party.
So like… do British people not like cold water? Who the heck wants to drink room temperature water? Even if it’s 0 degrees outside I still want ice in my water
Yes. I've never been aware of encountering anyone wearing pajamas in public, sweatpants, yes, but not pajamas. But if I were to see someone in pjs, I would definitely find it trashy. Also, I've never been to a tailgate party and I've lived in the U.S. for my entire life (over 66 years), so you don't need to feel that you're missing out on a major part of American culture, Laurence.
Can tell you lived in Anderson. I only wore my pj's that were capris and matching shirt so looked like an outfit/ sweats in public after surgery for cancer. Or stretchy pants. Jeans hit at surgical site.
@@mariateresamondragon5850 he lived in Anderson, Indiana. Regular site at Walmart. Even at doctors office. A grandma with her grandson who she brought to his appointment. I had cancer and put on elastic waist pants under my belly with 41 tumors!
I think we Brits are pretty friendly actually outside of the big towns and cities. I live in Somerset and strangers smile at each other and talk to each other in queues a lot. It's the same when I go back to Wales where I was born and brought up.
tiamotzz Yes, it’s a newer thing. More in the last 10 years and the rise of Walmart. I don’t remember ever seeing anyone in pajamas in stores in the ‘90s. Unless they were a small child.
Oh, fun fact about being asked "How are you?" I'm a bit of a weirdo and I like to test limits and really find out how much people are paying attention to what they do. So, I got in the habit of responding with an assortment of nonsense syllables. I'll say stuff like "Yobetsen" and "Ahlseeis yamee" and other just completely gibberish phrases like that. What I've found is that as long as you say it in a generally pleasant tone, they don't notice. It literally isn't an inquiry, they're just acknowledging your existence and expect some acknowledgement back. The funnier part, though, is that if you actually say something intelligible that doesn't correspond with a greeting or track logically with the question - like, for example, if you say "Eukaryotes are a form of life" - they get really weirded out. I find it amusing that complete gibberish is accepted as a rational response in this instance, but an intelligible non-sequitur scares them.
People notice you are saying gibberish. How unintelligent are you that you think you are tricking everybody around you? Your opinion of yourself is too high and your intelligence is too low to understand this fact. They just accept that you are a mentally impaired person and move on with their life because they got the general idea of what you were trying to do from your body language and tone.
Yeah I never liked the idea of that, especially when I was in school seeing people in pajamas in class. I’m not a fan of wearing pajamas outside the house
PJs... I think that really depends on what the PJs are. So many are nothing more than what used to be sweatsuits from the 70s and before that in those times, people wore outside anyway. That being said, there are things that people wear in public that give me pause as well. lol
I’m British, and I have seen this twice.... I had to stare in amazement! It seems to be so lazy and slobbish... what does it take to spend 5 minutes getting dressed, and to drag a comb through your hair? It also gives the impression that they are going to go back home and straight to bed again... yuk!!! 🤮
Regarding the US flag there are generally two main reasons for its reverence here. First is that it is a sort of living memorial to all the men and women who have served this country either in the military or civilian law enforcement or firefighters or any other emergency services. Many people have worn that flag on their shoulder while making the ultimate sacrifice to protect their fellow Americans. And even more of us have family and friends who have made the choice to serve this country. The flag is a symbol of our greatest heroes. Second is the ideals and values that America is supposed to represent. We look at that flag and imagine the best possible version of our country. Equality, justice, democracy, and courage. That flag is a symbol of everything our founders and greatest leaders spoke and wrote about. It reminds us we're part of something bigger and more important than any individual.
In America, acknowledging the presence of a stranger is pretty much required. The rule is, if you make eye contact, you must acknowledge their existence at least non-verbally, with a smile or a nod. If you don't, you're being rude.
Exactly. Couldn't have said it better myself.
That's my take on it. If someone else doesn't, then try to keep some distance, because something isn't right with them and distance is what they want anyway.
It's like tipping your hat. A civility.
I'd rather ignore people, but I'm programmed to acknowledge strangers, or the awkwardness would get me.
@
Rowynne Crowley - I worked at a particular hotel near me from 1990 till just recently. I worked outside in the golf grounds department, but all of us had to go inside the hotel to use the employee cafeteria on a daily basis. In the early days there, anytime one of us passed an employee on the sidewalk who worked inside, we would smile or say a greeting, and 90% of the time the person who worked inside would either look away or otherwise pretend not to see us. It was very disconcerting.
The biggest reason we buy bags of ice is that they come in greater quantities than people can typically make at home. They are often simply poured into coolers to keep the food and/or drinks cold. They are also great for serving large groups of people, especially if the event lasts for a few hours.
Very good explanation that makes a lot of sense. In Argentina, we usually get them at petrol stations. Americans tend to be more imaginative and practical than the Brits.
Exactly
I like this!!!
Also for keeping fish cold when out fishing
We keep a few for power outages- keeps freezer good for longer
I love it when your wife explains something to you from off-camera. In this one she’s explaining why people buy bags of ice. She voices something that many Americans viewers are doing - sort of shouting out (in their heads) why something in America is the way it is. Any away, just a suggestion. You might do more of that. I think it works well.
And yet I see plenty of people who shout out constantly how America doesn't matter and how what they do doesn't matter, it's weird how many people come into a video about America first and then I'm not saying this one but there are plenty of videos out there about America and people will tell you how stupid it is to do with that way and how they don't do that in their own country.
Kind of like Drachinifel's wife voicing sea mines in his videos, just before The Big Embrace. She's the happiest mine EVER 🤣🤣🤣
America sounds alot like Australia. People go out in PJ's . Often with no shoes. We often smile at strangers and randomly chat to each other in queues.
I've never seen anyone in PJ's in public.
Unfortunately, American women smile at British men. It is interpreted as a come on. Had a friend who got sexually assaulted and she was slut shamed for having smiled at him at their first encounter. Thank you for calling this out. It is a mere formality to smile, not an invitation for sex.
Though in NYC it's usually a forced lips pressed together, and not a smile. It's more of a "oops, we looked at each other." moment.
@@garycamara9955 Seeing Americans outside in PJs would be exceedingly rare, although it's not so rare, in my experience, that you might see them dressed very, very casually outside within their own neighborhood. Personally, I often walk around my neighborhood like this just for exercise or to visit neighbors, when I'd dress up a bit more to go into town. It's also not all that uncommon to see Americans walk barefoot outside within their own property (not on the sidewalk), as long as it's well kept.
Sort of. A bunch of years ago when I was still in school, I remember one incident in America when a couple of Australian tourists were riding the city bus, and were very disappointed that no one would just casually converse with them. They even complained about it out loud for everyone to hear. 😆 I happened to get off at the same stop in downtown (on the way home for me, on a connecting bus afterward), so I told them that in Southern California, where public transportion is pretty much a last resort (or you're a student saving money like I was) rather than a standard means of travel, most who ride public transportation probably aren't the talkative, publicly social type, and that they'd most likely have much better luck elsewhere, especially if they're visiting a local attraction, like the zoo or the Midway Museum or the Maritime Museum (this was in San Diego, and these are some of the must-visit world-class attractions there).
Generally, it shouldn't be hard for them to find Americans to strike up a spontaneous conversation with, especially if they're visiting from somewhere like Australia. Americans generally like Australians and are usually more than willing to speak to anyone visiting from another country. These blokes just weren't in the right place/situation for that. I remember this little incident so clearly because they sounded so disappointed. Even I didn't speak with them on the bus, though (I was seated far from them). I waited until we got off the bus, because, I don't know, I didn't feel comfortable speaking with anyone on the bus. Outside, it was no problem, and we had a nice chat. I wanted to make sure that they felt welcome. I didn't realize that Aussies were quite this gregarious. In contrast, most Europeans (depending on the country) are more standoffish, at least in my limited experience (and that's OK, of course). Americans are kind of in between, I suppose, depending on the location and situation, but probably more like Aussies overall. This is a very broad generalization, of course, but that's part of the topic at hand.
I sat in a five guys at a mall in London and there were free refills and it made me smile to no end to see the British reaction. Some people responded with physical anger, “why would anyone need that much pop?” Others, especially teenagers, so much happiness!
They don't realize you can just NOT fill your cup up again.
@@kyungrix1112 Or buy the smallest size pop and then refill it. At least in America they usually have three or four sizes (usually about 250ml, 500ml, 600ml, and sometimes 1L or larger) you can buy--but with free refills, why buy anything but a small?
@@curtisa3069 absolutely, I never get a large drink of I'm in the place with free refills. even then, I don't refill the drink when I'm done. there's no point unless you got alcohol to put in it 😉🤣🤣🤣
I don't think I've ever taken advantage of free refills beyond just refilling as I'm leaving. One cup to drink with my meal, one to sip on as I go about my day. The second one I'd rather have with no ice so that I can put it in the fridge at home and later add my own ice.
@Beware the Lily of the Valley yeah people like to say Americans will just sit in the restaurant constantly drinking the free refills, but most people do what you just described or don't get a refill at all.
I blew the mind of a hotel desk clerk in Swindon when I told her that every hotel in the US had an ice machine and every room had an ice bucket. Her response was, “Why?”
I brought my own Yeti style insulated Ice Bucket to this hotel I'm living in for 3 months. The ice machine is only a few doors away from mine and I fill that bucket up every day. I GOTTA HAVE ICE! 😅
Yeah, as a Brit myself it is just weird to hear about. I guess it's down to cultural perspective!
@@theparanoidandroid3583 No, it's climate. In England 70°F is a "ghastly heat wave." In Alabama, we call that "a mite chilly."
@@richardfabacher3705 I get why you would want more ice in a hotter climate (especially as I myself lived in Saharan Africa for four years) but it's the actual idea of an "ice machine" that seems weird to me... is it like the reverse of a kettle?
@@theparanoidandroid3583 Much more complicated. There are basically 2 types of "ice machines: Laurence notes the refrigeration units found in stores that sell ice in large bags. The ice is made in a factory, bagged, and transported for sale. The other type, found in motels and hotels as well as restaurants and snack bars, makes ice in trays/molds by trickling water in, freezing it, then dropping it into the refrigerated hopper to be scooped-out as needed. Most home refrigerators in the US have built-in ice makers which may include dispensing crushed or cubed ice by pressing a paddle/bar/tab/lever (varies widely) or they drop cubes into a hopper inside the freezer. All forms involve a water line filling a tray which freezes the "cubes" then when they freeze, a small motorized device pushes them out and the process repeats. All testaments to our addiction to carbonated drinks. But seriously, have you ever tried to drink a 105° F Coca-Cola? Don't!
Clarification on why people buy bags of ice: they're handy for when people need lots of ice at one time. Usually, people will buy them for parties such as barbecues or to fill coolers for trips and the like.
There are more steps involved using ice trays: pull out trays; twist trays then ice flies all over the counter w/some cubes falling onto the floor; carefully pouring water into trays so it doesn’t spill (I don’t use tap water); & carefully walking to freezer. If water spills on the floor it has to be wiped up. With a bag of ice: reach in, put in glass DONE!
Its necessary for the tailgate party!
I live in storm country (southern Louisiana) and I've learned to keep four big bags of ice in the freezer for when the power goes out. It keeps the perishable food cold enough that it won't spoil if the power is restored that day. My power has gone out for 8-12 hours FOUR TIMES since February 1 (a little over three months) so this is not an idle concern.
@@trixie9777 there's also the step of picking the ice up off the floor, throwing it in the sink, having it bounce off the side of the sink, and landing on the counter or, if the universe is being a particular b**ch that day, back on the floor.
As an American, this will amaze non-Americans. I buy bags of Ice, because I like the shape of the ice done by various brands. I can just make rounded cubes, but if I buy ice, I can have disc-shaped, hollow tube shaped, or broken shard-shaped. Ice is a key component of cocktails, and ice matters. That's why we BUY ice !!
When I was visiting London, I went to the post office to purchase stamps. There was a woman in front of me who had a baby in a tram. I commented to her about how beautiful her baby was. She looked at me with a sheer state of horror and ran out of the post office. It's not like I said I wanted her baby to sacrifice in a demonic ritual!!
I don't blame her
@@hello-cn5nh oh boy, must be UK
I’m from the U.K. and do that often, no problem. Is there something scary about you? Do you carry knives visibly about your person? Or were you wearing a balaclava at the time? 😂
@@nigelwylie01 I don't think its an American v. UK thing. I think it is an Rural v. Urban thing. I remember watching a UK skit that was a faux news broadcast about a man from a rural county moving to London and terrifying everyone by saying 'hello' on the tube.
I'm an American and I'm fine with interaction with strangers like this ,but there was an incident in a doctor's waiting area some years ago that was very awkward and annoying.
I was sitting there and this lady I didn't know started talking to me about her family's troubles 🙄
All I could do was occasionally nod and say " yeah " and give a fake look of concern. I couldn't wait to get out of there.
If my drink isn't cold enough to freeze a Mammoth for thousands of years it's undrinkable.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I 2nd that.
Same xD couldn't agree more
100% agree especially since I'm in South Florida and it does get warm here from time to time. Yes it gets cold here in Florida sometimes it's quite cold when my friends come from the north they are suprised.
I can drink much faster, if the drink is not too cold. And the stomach is not getting a shock and the body it not turning on heat production to compensate the ice. A cold drink gives you a fresh feeling in the mouth, but that'ts about it.
As a Floridian, I can confirm we put ice in nearly all of our drinks. The only exception would be if the drink is suppose to be hot, like hot chocolate or some coffees or teas. There might be less ice in the winter and more ice in the summer, but there is always ice in the drink. It feels wrong without it.
I'm 52, lived in FL since 2000. Prior to living in Florida, 20s 30s I rarely added ice to cold drinks, soft drinks. Up to 30, I'd have ice in a tray for weeks, unused.
Here in New hampshire it's a little rarer, but we have frozen coco and iced or frozen coffee drinks we drink up here all year around.... -10f some days out and we still drink an ice coffee.
@chemp231 that's what I like to do even when it's cold asf outside I need me some iced coffee
Prepared iced drinks, such as iced coffee, I do drink, but otherwise I drink room temp drinks..room temp as in, air conditioned room. I'm a Floridian and prefer my drinks this way. My husband, on the other hand, is literally an ice hog.
I live in Michigan. I rarely use ice in anything. Water and soda during the summer when it is above 90 degrees. But most days if I put ice in my drink I might start shivering.
A lot of places will offer free refills on more than just sodas. Tea, coffee, lemonade, etc are also common options.
I remember when tea and coffee were the only two things that came with refills. Sodas you had to buy one at a time.
I would agree with everything but the lemonade. I find most places I've been to charge for additional glasses if its real lemonade
@@ArmyGray in Ohio lemonade is pretty much considered as a poo, so free refills are common.
Especially black coffee at diners
Also sometimes you can get unlimited mimosas at brunch :)
As an American, I find these videos fascinating. I think it’s very interesting to see how people from foreign countries experience new things in other countries like America
Same
lol yeah, since Americans are very well known for not knowing shit about anyone elses cultures. lol
Let’s be clear, flying the flag was exponentially more post 9-11-01. They were sold out for months and months and months for the first time since 1941.
FYI, we Americans don't call it "iced water", we call it "ice water".
Water with Ice
"Ice residing in water" 😉
Frozen water resting in melted ice
Semi cubed water
Ice-adjacent water.
The one time I’ve been to London I was seeking ice. Please give me ice! Why isn’t there ice in my ice tea? Da Heck
When I visited I always had to ask for ice in my beverage. I usually got 1 small cube.
I said the same thing! I missed my ice on my trip. That and my own bathroom. Community bathrooms at our hotel?
@@crystalrose8210 that must have been a very cheap hotel because that’s not standard in the uk
Calling it iced tea when there's no ice? Damn those Brits and their ironic sense of humor:)
Why would you want a watered down drink and a reduced amount off drink?
There are two acceptable drink temperatures:
1. Ice cold
2. Hot (think coffee, or tea)
Anything else is an abomination.
Exception: Iced tea. Some like iced coffee too but I hate that. Do love the tea cold though.
Unless you're getting a fountain drink. I paid for a whole cup of soda, I'm getting a whole cup of soda.
Where I live has a similar climate to the UK and I still can't stand tap temperature water. Ew, it's like drinking spit.
laserwolf65, please tell Tevye the Milkman and his family (Golda, Tzeitel, Hodel, Chava, Bielke and Sprintze) hello for me the next time you're in Anatevka. Mazeltov! : ))
I mean I like my water like 50 Fahrenheit where fridge temp is like 33 and room temp is 75 so kind of in the middle
I recently moved to the UK from the US, and smiling in public thing is what has gotten me in the most trouble just while out for a walk. Even had a mom clutch her small child close to her after I said "good morning" while passing by.😅
I didn't realise greeting people would creep people out when I first got here. So getting all these confused and worried looks from people really confused me.😂 Still learning!
How strange! I can't imagine NOT speaking to the people I see. And we wave at our neighbors, too. No wonder my forebears left. 😅
We DO greet each other believe it or not! You were most likely (being American), being overly friendly, not with any malicious intent obviously, but it does raise our suspicions when someone is "too cheery", like what are you hiding?
I’ve encountered something similar in my time in New Zealand. I’ll be out for a walk and will smile, nod, or say hello to someone and half will ignore me or purposefully look away. Makes me feel like I’m weird or something 😅 Is always a bit awkward but so is ignoring the person and/or they initiate the hello so it’s just a gamble either way haha. Definitely miss American’s more consistent openness to talk to passerbys.
Its an overhang of status thing. Unless you've been introduced you do not approach another. The higher status person is allowed to address lower status people. Thus, on average most general people would not start conversations with strangers.
@@Reece-Mincher3601are we overly friendly or are you guys friendly deficient?
"It gets very hot in Chicago and Indiana"
Me in Georgia: "ha that's cute"
Me in southern Louisiana: y'all are adorable.
MDStallings7 y’all want eggs I’m cooking some on the Arizona sidewalks
Me in Florida also laughed at that. It can get up to 100 degrees there, but down here it stays 100 degrees in the summer 😂 Plus the humidity makes it worse.
Joshua Ebanks 100 is nothing try 120
@@shmarlo3203 100 + humidity is worse than dry heat. It feels like your in a sona 24/7
British people do smile and say hello to each other. Especially in the north. The only place I've been where it hasn't happened is in that London.
ua-cam.com/video/PT0ay9u1gg4/v-deo.html
"you can actually buy BAGS of ice" 8:22 🤣❄️We are obsessed with ice. We also have preferences for size and shape of ice cubes, crushed vs square vs round. My favorite ice cube is cylindrical with a hole. And then there are icy treats like snowballs aka snow cones (somewhat regional) which consists of shaved ice with sugary syrup over it. Comes with toppings too!
My local supermarket in England has sold bags of ice for years.
U can buy bags of ice in the UK. They have sold them since I can remember which is late 80s early 90s
@@tweetypie1978 Yeah, but can you get ice from rando, pop-up ice dispensers everywhere 24/7? I never understood the economics, but they wouldn't exist if they couldn't make $ off it. Super small towns have these and I can only think they're for keeping game harvested cool enough to transport home.
@@danielwade9487 90% of that "dispenser" ice goes into ice chests for chilling drinks and keeping food from spoiling while camping, boating, having a large bbq, etc. Those super small towns are frequently near camping/boating/swimming areas.
Comes in hand for keeping drinks stored in coolers cold, too. I'm surprised Tara didn't elaborate a bit more on that for Laurence.
Also people who go out fishing 🎣 for leisure keep the fish fresh with ice bought at the store.
Helps, too, when the fridge and or freezer dies and you don't want perishables to go bad quickly while getting it fixed or replaced.
You’re hilarious, and you speak of differences without negative judgment.
I’m loving your content.
Bags of ice are used in coolers of soft drinks or beer too in summer-for BBQs, camping, tailgating.
And hurricanes when you know it's over a week with no power. Went 12 days in Houston after Ike.
And for making cocktails. I put it in my wine. Has to be crushed, tho. None of this cube bullshit.
Or if your ice maker breaks and it takes you 4 years to order a new one.
in pajamas no doubt
Making ice cream as well
When I was walking in Paris with my friends ,a couple stopped us and said “ You are Americans ,right ? “ I asked them ...how did you know , and they said because you people are smiling at everyone .😂😂😂😂
Carline Pergola- DeFeo That’s so nice!
Carline Pergola- DeFeo LOL!!!! I LOVE that!!! Thank you for sharing that!!
I'm genuinely curious about why others don't.
now I know to frown overseas, thank you
Craig Benz I don’t know why ,but they are so grouchy looking walking around .
Thing that bothered me when i was in europe was having to pay for water at restaurants. Like they dont just bring u water when u sit down u have to ask for it, and they usually ask you what you want to eat before u get a drink its odd
I lived in Germany for 6 years. You learn quickly not to ask for tap water. There water is very hard and has a lot of minerals in it. Most of the Americans living on the army base had to give their cats and dogs bottled water, or they would get kidney stones.
@@maryrichardson1318 lucky I live in the mountains of North Carolina, Asheville literally sells their city water in bottles, I’ve always drank from the creek and tap as springs are common here. But going to Florida, nah man, I’m good I’m not drinking tap water from the plains and swamplands.
@@chowderwhillis9448 I know how you feel. I live in central Kentucky. We have an underground spring in a cave near us that bottles the water and sells it. High Bridge Spring Water. It is DELICIOUS.
You dont pay for tap (fawcet) water, just bottled water.
@@chowderwhillis9448 Pennsylvania, at least my area of it is pretty much the same way. I remember an actual local civil conflict that got next to zero media coverage happened because nestle tried to but the rights to all the springs .
I chuckled so much when he was shocked people go out in their pajamas and sweat pants, and then he mentioned Walmart 😂
It is a terrible reflection of society. It shows that people have no pride in themselves and dont care about others. This mentality bleeds into all aspects of the culture and if you dont care about others or even your own image why on earth would you care about the country or anything associated with it... and you wonder why things are going down the toilet.
Once upon a time in America, that wouldn't have been acceptable anywhere. I'm not that old, and I never did that.
I'm glad that I can go shopping in my jeans and t-shirt. That's casual enough. I don't even wear shorts because I have a mirror.😊
Of course, Walmart is a completely different dimension. Sure, you'll get people in pajamas and sweats, but you'll also get that guy wearing a full suit of plate armor and his friend in a damp wetsuit eating a raw eggplant like an apple.
@@thomgizziz Such a stupid thing to be mad about, THEY'RE STILL PANTS. The only thing different is the material. IT DOESN'T MATTER. My wardrobe has nothing to do with anyone else. I want to be comfortable not squished into an uncomfortable outfit.
@@thomgizziz land of the free to wear whatever we want. Frankly, my idea of success is being able to spend every day wearing a bath robe like The Dude if I feel like it.
My dad back in either the late 60s or early 70s made a business trip to London. At some after work function he was served a glass of scotch with an ice cube. Then the guy serving him said “oh, I know you Americans like your ice” and promptly added a second cube.
Yes we love our ice..but I at least would never water down my whiskey. That is why we have whiskey stones here!
Scotch on the rocks is what it's called.
They don't dilute the whiskey much at all since you usually finish it before the cubes have melted down all the way
What a madlad that waiter was!
Ice in whiskey or scotch. Just wrong!
omfg so he just adds another cube without even asking first, wow, lol
I died laughing when you brought up the pajamas 😂😂😂. Btw for me, I'am an american that will never leave the house in my PJs 😊👍
Deedric Kee yes!! Nor will I!! Lol
I purposely by pajamas that I'm not embarassed to wear outside. Just in case I need to make a late night run to the store. I'm not getting dressed just to pop out for smokes. Or in case of fire.
I only wore pjs at school on spirit days lol. But in winter I will wear sweat pants when I walk my dog at night.
I definitely think there's a generational divide between who will and won't go out in public in pajamas. 😂
Bee Aye xD Yep 😂😂😂. I’m a Zoomer and I would probably go out in public in my PJs to be honest with you. 🤣🤣🤣
Sometimes, it gets over 100 degrees! Sometimes! (People in Arizona burst into hysterical laughter.)
People in Australia- 😒🙄🤦🏻♀️
In AZ it's dry. In GA it's humid. I live in NJ and you notice 100° more when it's humid.
I live in Mesa Arizona....
Freaking over 110degrees, for a minimum of 3months every summer
doesn't Phoenix get hot enough to fry an egg on the sidewalk? (I think I saw a video of someone doing that like ten years ago)
@@elizabethsohler6516 The humidity also makes cold worse.... much worse.
I ordered a drink in the US (I'm Australian) and asked for no ice and the guy was shocked and said most people ask for MORE ice. I want more space for the drink I'm paying for! Not frozen water thanks. (this wasn't a free refills place).
I also ask for no ice for that same reason, but that does include free refill places so I can go longer before needing a refill and it's usually cold anyways. Also, I hate that watered down taste when the ice melts.
A certain large fast food chain in the US has calculated the delution of the ice so the drink has a standard of sweetness to the finish. The drink might be sweeter than liked if it comes without ice.
@@jrt818bless those chains, the drinks always end up tasting so much better when they account for the ice
I recently moved to a classic American suburban neighborhood, and it’s honestly just like “in the movies and tv shows”. Everyone’s out working on their lawns or their cars in the garage, and when I walk my dog I always get roped into a conversation with a stranger. People are just so genuinely friendly which I think is nice...most of the time.
as a suburban American, it's great when you're bored/social but definitely annoying when you're super tired and just want to go home!
They are usually nice but if they don't want to talk to you they will tell you to f off
Sounds like Pleasantville or Stepford.
Move into the small crack towns those are lit asf
@Dalmaen Actually they're just trying to figure out if you're a neighbor or someone from outside the neighborhood. It's like when the salesperson in a store says hello the moment you walk in - they're just letting you know that they know you're there. In the store's case, it's to make it more difficult for people to shoplift; out on the street, it's a way of keeping tabs on strangers vs. neighbors.
Smiling at strangers is just a silent "Have a nice day, fellow human!"
“Im smiling so you know I won’t kill you and hope you don’t kill me”
"look I don't have fangs like those other monkeys! I'm not a threat! dont attack me" lol
and yet you beat and kill each other for the most meaningless of things
@@cplcabs says the guy with a Union Jack as his pfp. How many centuries did Europe spend suppressing the entire world?
@@cplcabs Brit’s when they realize they’re brutal ways of killing eachother with knives is just as bad 😮
I can tell you have been living in the Midwest, calling carbonated beverages “pop”.
It's soda
(I'm from Tennessee)
I'm from Western New York. We say pop. But to me I know the lingo and might change it up with soda. Or soda pop. It's the same thing. I don't know why people get offended.
its pop from northern ohio
I've called it pop all my life (I live in MI a stone's throw from the Canadian border). One time I in TX at a festival and asked for a pop, and the guy looked at me like I had three heads. I then said Coke and got what I wanted, the concession guy still giving me a weird look. Later on, I was told a 'pop' meant a hit of meth.
Agent Red Fox
Lots of brits call it pop
It's also common in the US to keep a flag flying in front of your house if you have a family member actively serving in the military.
Or in general. It's amazing how much we display our flag.
Fun fact: displaying American flags was an act of protest in Texas, as they were against the withdrawal of forces from Vietnam.
Lawrence, your wife is right. Shopping in PJ's is relatively new.
They were doing this in the UK until about ten years ago when shops started putting up signs saying it wasn't allowed. This video is all wrong!
But it is still wrong!
Isn’t it ghastly. So glad to be missing this.
@@adrianlambert7130 most of his videos are complete lies, he either lived under a rock in the UK or is just an idiot just blatantly lying about things.
They've been going to supermarkets in PJ's for over a decade in the UK. Sometimes with their slippers on and a dressing gown as a coat too.
Cooler + bag of ice + cans of soda
A thing we do for picnics and grilling parties.
Larry Davison same for us here in Australia! If you go to someone’s house and they offer you a drink and there is no ice it’s considered almost undrinkable!
A cooler full of beer being cooled by ice is eye candy. It just looks so inviting.
I love how your wife clued you in - right there - about why bags of ice are useful.
She's right about the PJ thing starting in the 90s. I find it tends to be location specific though. Drive throughs, Walmart, and universities ( especially during midterms and final exams).
Colleges and universities in the USA for the first two classes of the day. 8 am and 9 am. IIRC we were also allowed to bring in coffee.
Some of us took a long time to wake up properly. I had classes at 8 am for the first two years.
PS I *chose* that time. Enough to go back, get a proper breakfast in the dorm and do my foreign language homework immediately as far as possible. (I had a shower at 7 am and got ready). Then off to other classes 10 am, 11 am, then lunch, 2-5 pm....
my wife and I went to Manhattan in like 2003 or something and took the style to the streets. After that, we started to notice people wearing PJs in public a whole lot more... could it be that we were looking for it, or that it was happening more...? I don't know.
If I am just going to the corner store down the street then my pj's are good enough. But anywhere else i will get dressed to go.
As soon as I get back home I'll get my comfy PJs back on😊
As an American born and raised, i will never go into public in pajamas.
well done 😐
I would sooner bring back streaking than go out in public in pjs (I don't own any anyhow).
Same. My sister and I dared each other to do it once, but we put on the nicest/newest PJ's we owned and then we couldn't work up the nerve to go anywhere except Waffle House at 11 something at night. And the five people there stared at us the whole time. Ugh! It was pretty funny though. We felt like idiots.😂
I'm with you.
@@laurenblachford1501 Except at WalMart....
In this strange time of “quarantine” I make even more of a point of smiling with my eyes and being even friendlier when out in the world. And I notice others doing the same. We all must do our best to show more kindness all around.
I’ve taken to drawing a smile on my masks with a Sharpie. Takes the work out of being around others.
I visited the UK back in 2010 and while out to dinner in London I was served a room temperature Coke. I asked for ice for my drink and they were puzzled but brought me a bowl of ice. 😂
That's called "The Yank Bucket" back in the kitchen, but they have gotten less rude about it, now. In the 1990s the staff would do a little public shaming ritual of you.
Why would anyone want warm soda? It's not like it can be a preference because It objectively tastes worse. why would people in England want room temperature drinks?
room temperature coke? That shouldn't have happened at all
I've had the reverse... You ask for ice and they bring you ONE cube. 😐🧊
Then they hand it to you as if they had flown to the artic circle and chipped it off a glacier themselves. 😐🧊
It's ice. 😐🧊🧊🧊🧊🧊🥤
Warm beer is one thing, but warm Coke? Yuck.
As a Floridian, winter here is just cold summer. The humidity makes the cold sting, but it doesn't usually freeze for more than a couple days a few times a season
I can't imagine not having ice in my water. Of course I am a Floridian beach dweller but when I lived in Wisconsin during the winter I still put ice in my water. Lol
It’s funny because when we Americans go to Europe (or most of the world for that matter), and we are served water or drinks without ice, it can feel a little as if we’re being handed uncooked food. 😂. At least at first.
DeAnne Paris myself included. I think I tend to fill my glass with ice not only because I live in Texas but also because it’s something I watched my mother do her entire life. That’s one thing I really can’t part with. At least fill my glass HALFWAY with ice if you’re rationing it. 😉😊😉
I lived in Florida long enough to be surprised and delighted when I moved back to Michigan to get cold water from the cold tap. I had forgotten completely about that.
@@StamfordBridge I wouldn't touch any water that didn't come out of a bottle in Europe. Their rivers are filthy.
Where were you from? I'm in West Allis. #OnWisconsin
In Ireland we smile and say Hello to everyone 😊 🇮🇪
Glad to hear it! I hope to make it to there someday, I might not live in Ireland, but I'm damn sure I'm Irish!
People typically buy bags of ice for large coolers. If you are going camping or taking a cold dish or drink a distance or even to chill drinks for a party, you would load the cooler with ice which is hard to do with just ice trays. You can consume the ice if you are having a large party and don't have enough ice for your guests, but typically it's used to cool bottles/cans.
I had visited the UK, specifically Scotland, in the 90s. I remember two instances that still make me chuckle. I was at a cafeteria-style restaurant and was asked what I would like to drink. I asked for iced tea. The lady looked at me like I had just arrived from Mars. Apparently, at the time, iced tea was a foreign (as I was) concept. I don't know if that's changed. On another occasion, I visited a pharmacy in search of a bottle of isopropyl alcohol. Once again, my antennae must have been showing, but I was able to come away with a box of isopropyl alcohol wipes. I thoroughly enjoyed my trip and I hope to go back one day and also explore a bit of England as well. 😃
I had similar experiences.
@@TDI-87 If you want isopropyl alcohol, at the chemist's (pharmacy), you should ask for surgical spirit.
We generally view iced tea as an abomination. You can buy cans and bottles of iced tea (Lipton's etc) in shops. But you will be judged for buying it. You'll rarely see it being served in a restaurant or cafe.
Isoprop is usually called surgical spirit.
No, iced tea, is not a thing, never will be.
When my daughter was 8 months old she had a fever of 108f and they had to ice her (dip her in a bath of ice water) to bring her temperature down. She screamed the most horrific scream a parent could even imagine. So yes there are people who, per se, have cold baths. (Btw she is almost 18 and is doing much better now)
They don't recommend the ice bath anymore. Not for years, because it's too shocking to the system, but definitely cold water, or cool water increasing the coldness gradually.
Yeah, Margret Thatcher aka The Iron Lady our former Prime Minister used to take ice baths with an electric current running through the water (true). Maybe why she had that massive hair that stood up lol.
Free refills are a must when a place charges $2-3 for a drink that costs them $.05 for one fill.
I friend of mine who managed a few Taco Bell’s told me soft drinks were so cheap that a customer could buy a regular drink and refill it and drink as much as humanly possible al day and she’d STILL be ahead.
@@Heavywall70 used to work in the restaurant industry, this is so true. Even worse with alcohol. One drink out of a bottle will cover the whole bottle so only the first drink is no profit, the rest is gravy 😂😂
Yes. I was hoping he might mention the cost of a drink in England. I bet it is extremely low. But you are right, when you are paying so much, you want to "try" to get your money's worth. (of course our plan backfired because now we are overdosing on sugar and our waist lines are enormous!)
Someone told me that restaurants have main profit from overpriced drinks, not from food, maybe that's reason why it is so overpriced. In KFC they hare "neverending drink" but also that cup has only 0.4l and cost almost like 2 2l bottles of pepsi and you mostly can't drink more than one or two cups in such short time, so they know what they doing, it's not actually valuable for customer. :-D
But in western europe or USA it's crazy, they want for example 5 eur for beer in restaurant, but same brand cost 1 eur in bottle. Here in Czech Republic beer in restaurand cost cca double price of bottled same beer.
Based on the way fast food is produced, you could demand free refills for burgers as well - seriously, how much can it cost to produce a BigMac?
In Germany, the calculation of a restaurant usually bases on the assumptions that drinks have to fetch a high margin because the food often does not. And free refills would kill that mechanism.
Lawrence: "Is it even winter in Florida when it's winter here?"
Tara: "Yes, but no..."
Frostprove, Florida is not a northern town.
Winter for Floridians, fall for basically anyone else.
Florida has two seasons. Summer and fall. You can experience temperatures from anywhere from 20°, 85°, in fall. In summer, you're pretty much between 85° and 120°. If you come to Florida, there are tailgates at both seasons' sporting events. In Jacksonville, we even have a ice skating rink. If you get a chance, every major city in Florida has the best of every cultures' festivals, at least once a year. And, all the government websites for each is found through the state's website, www.myflorida.com.
Last time I was in Orlando was late November. 85°f at 07:00... 98° at 16:00 when these thunder storms sweep through like the armageddon.
I don't know how people without air conditioning in every room manage to survive there. Only thing I liked were the little lizards and snakes, everywhere.
@@mmercier0921 ah, I miss my hometown.
We have "iced tea" in the South and it's usually very sweet tea also; but that's not very common in some places in the US. I've been to some restaurants in the mid-west where the server looked at me weird when I asked for ice for my glass of tea, which they brought to me freshly brewed I'm sure, and still warm. They brought me a few cubes of ice in another glass; those cubes didn't stand a chance against that tea. I'm just glad they didn't stand there and watch to see how many packets of sugar I put in the glass.😄
I have lived in the Midwest for most of my life and the only way I see this happening is if you don't specify iced tea.
@@bcaye I've seen it here in the midwest when asking for "tea" instead of "sweet tea". I rarely hear "iced tea" around here.
You did it backwards. You're supposed to add the sugar while hot, THEN cool it. Trust me. I'm a professional.
It blows my mind that people STILL get confused about the different types of iced tea. Like, cold tea is a pretty simple concept. It's been in parts of America for centuries. You'd think that an American, despite not living in the South, could still become aware of the concept of deliberately cooling down tea. It's just so odd to me that it's even a conversation anymore.
@@SeeJayPlayGamesfor sure! Gotta raise that saturation point so that more sugar can dissolve!
Actually, public PJs are odd to NORMAL Americans. Also odd are the idiots that wear their pants around their knees. Reminds me of the movie The Jerk.
Exactly. Never in public. Ever. Not even to walk the dog. Or take out the trash.
Yes I don't understand why people think it's ok to go out in their PJ's. It's the epitome of laziness.
I bought a pair of sweatpants years ago and won't even wear them around the house... I live alone.
@@susanholl5994 Maybe to take out the trash... But that's about the only exception.
Terry Davis and most of the idiots who wear their pants like that don’t realize where that moronic practice came from, the prison system! It was how sex-starved male prisoners signaled how far they were willing to go, the lower their drawers were, the more they were willing to do!
Many, if not most Americans would find wearing pajamas out in public as strange as Brits do.
Winter in Florida just means I put on a long sleeve shirt.
I moved back to southern Louisiana last fall (I was born here and grew up here) and I didn't even bother with a coat for the entire winter. I think I needed a sweater five or six times. If I need a sweater, it's usually in the summer and someone has the AC cranked too low. (I always brought one with me to the theater, back when we could go to theaters. Sigh.)
Same for me in TX. I have never owned a coat. I have only ever owned jackets and hardly ever wear them.
And you only need the long sleeve every once in a while because sometimes it’s 85 degrees on christmas😂
As someone who lived in Minnesota....I don’t even have words.
Winter in South Florida means i put on a long sleeve.... sun shirt. The same long sleeve sun shirt i wear in the summer because with out it i would get skin cancer.
I am from the US and the date format that we use in the company I work for is yyyy-mm-dd, such as 2023-06-29. In many of our documents and files the date is included as part of the file name and having the year identified first makes it very easy to identify when they were created and to group them together.
That's what I got used to working as a civil servant at a naval hospital, because it made the dates sort properly, and it's crept into my private usage, simply because it's come to feel 'right'.
The bags of ice are also for filling coolers. (Like if you're having a tailgate party! ;-))
Exactly. Or to fill the cooler with if you're having a big back yard summer party to make sure your cans of soda, beer, whatever stay cold, so you don't have to run back and forth into the house. Family reunions where you might all meet up at a park. If there is a disaster where the power goes out, a quick run to a local 7/11 or similar for a few bags of ice to fill a cooler with before the ice melts is a good thing. Stuff that you really can't afford to have spoiled like expensive meat can be saved rather than become dangerous to eat.l
...or if you're someone that has to work outside, i.e. construction workers. Most of America is rural so for many people it's often not simply a matter of popping down the shops on one's break. Cheers!
Also things like camping and the beach to keep food from spoiling.
Hell yeah
Dude u come here u will get my fully big ass invite to a kcchiefs tailgating it the best in the county of USA!
At my hotel on my first trip to England I called room service for a bucket of ice. There was confusion on both sides of the phone. But when they knocked on our door what I received was a soup cup with 3 ice cubes. This was 30 years ago and this confusion happened often. Maybe it’s different now. I was at restaurant, the manager was finally called to figure out why I would want an extra glass of ice. The funniest was many workers peeking to see what was happening (with the crazy ice lady). Anyhow, we began looking for fast food restaurants when we wanted a drink with enough ice.
I went for a two week tour of Scotland in 2018. No ice to be had.
@@randzopyr1038 oh I'm sure they have ice in the winter. I wanted ice in my cup. Makes you realize how things you think are completely normal are completely bizarre somewhere else. Fun though.
They'll bring you three to six cubes, with tongs, and handle them like perscription opioids, looking around furtively.
@@randzopyr1038 Billy Connolly once joked that Scotland has two seasons, winter and June.
The thing is, any commercial kitchen should have an ice maker for practical cooking purposes. They have access, they're just being weird about it. Like, to treat a request for ice like some kind of freak show curiosity is so silly. You're telling me those cooks and servers haven't gotten way more demanding requests from customers?? Nah. They just decided to be jerks about the ice for some reason.
The going out in public in pajamas thing only really started during the last decade. I would be embarrassed to walk around in public in my pajamas (unless it was a Halloween costume), and I don't understand why so many people are okay with doing it.
Because people are slobs now. Look at photos of people out and about in the 1950s and you will quickly realize that we've become lazy, fat, depressed people.
The other day, I saw a young woman at the store who was wearing pajama bottoms, but with a stylish blouse, jacket, and shoes, all of it coordinated. She was cute, and the outfit was attractive, so, I don't know, I guess I give up.
I'm 40, and when in high school I remember the girls starting that trend, usually on test days. Not sure if that was the beginning of it generally but it was the start of it in my part of the world.
It's not so much literally going out in pajamas, it's more just the casual nature of American attire. Like a previous commenter pointed out, many people will go out in "pajamas," but it's still "coordinated" and meant to be a style.
I'd also like to point out many places in the US are much hotter than the UK. This is especially true for any state in "The South," but also areas like Southern California, Arizona, and so on. Both those states have big cities in warm climates. (LA and Phoenix respectively.)
Um would scrub pants count, I have to admit I gone to sleep in scrub pants, no I don't work in the medical field, and gone on errands in the same scrub pants, just like the feel of scrub pants, being their made of basically bed sheet material.
A grin and a nod or a "hello" in passing seemed pretty universal to me when I was in Northern England and Scotland for a few days. I felt like I blended in. Amsterdam though, It took me a day or so to break the habit of seeming like a weirdo and just averting my eyes just the left and right of a person once eye contact was made.
As a Canadian planning on a move to Scotland this brings me comfort, this is how we usually greet people and Lawrence had me worried I'd be confused for a predator if I didn't break that habit!
The north of Britain is very friendly compared to the south. Smiling at strangers or saying hi when passing is completely normal.
I’m Mexican and you are right about at least wear blue jeans, in México is very uncommon to see people in their pajamas, we are very peculiar about that and how we present ourselves in public, but I think Americans do it because they want to feel comfortable, I love your channel is very good and well made, I laughed so much ,specially the part when you explain about the bags of ice for you is very rare, we buy bags of ice too , love everything about UK, I would love to one day visit your country , good luck on your channel, I subscribed already
No it has to do with a downfall in standards and a lack of pride. It is causing the downfall of the US, if you have no pride in yourself then that bleeds into all parts of life and everything starts falling apart and rotting because nobody cares.
In the south we greet everyone with ,’ hey’ ( which is perky and sounds more lik haaaayeee) we aren’t calling you, just acknowledging you. And yes, we love our flag.
i come from a small village in england so saying hi or nodding when you pass someone on the pavement isn’t completely foreign but i will never understand the flag no matter how much i try 🤔
We say hi how are you... but nobody expects an answer. Utahns are weird. We also thank you a lot.
Ice bags are not typically used to put ice in drinks. They are more often used to fill coolers.
You then put your soda and beer in the cooler to keep it cold. This saves you from having to use the refrigerator.
I have ice in my drinks 365 days a year. I live in the low desert of Arizona so of course ice most of the year is lovely but I just generally prefer cold, cold drinks. We buy bags of ice here in AZ A LOT! You can even buy bags of ice at fast food drive throughs which is super convenient if you are going there anyway. Also something that is everywhere here are stores that sell water and ice. Seriously, selling water is very big business in AZ. Love your videos!
Honestly, it could be blizzarding and I would still want cold water. I live on the transition between Rockies and Canadian prairies, so it gets damn chilly. But it doesn't matter when I need a drink of water. If it isn't at least cooler than room temperature, it simply doesn't feel right.
I live in the South and like no ice in my drinks ever. I don't even refrigerate my beer at home. Everybody that knows me tells me that I'm weird.
🤔🤓🍻
Don't they sell bottles of water everywhere?
@@alsaunders7805Thats because you are weird!
@@garycamara9955 Yep, I know and I don't care. 👍🤓🍻
I go out in sweatpants/hoodies but it depends on what store I'm actually going to. Definitely not full on pajamas though, that's a bit much.
When I first moved out of my parents’ house (about ten minutes away, lol), sometimes I’d forget my medicine over there and if I didn’t have any in my apartment, my Dad would bring it to me. I still remember the first time I opened the door. He was wearing his pajamas and robe over them, *and* his moccasin slippers. “‘Suitable for indoor and outdoor surfaces,’” he quoted, grinning. The next day my mother told me, “I can’t believe he wanted to wear that! What if something happened? What if he’d been pulled over!?” She was so scandalized. 😅
Whenever I needed something when it was late, like if I needed an anti-nausea injection (second best shot giver I’ve ever dealt with), he’d arrive in his pajamas. He’d flourish the medication vial. “See, the [breast] pocket is useful!”
He’s also gone through a few drive thrus in pajamas, lol. We always joke about him continuing his PJ addiction and where he might go next. And since he can fall asleep just about anywhere, it’s good thinking to be prepared for that eventuality in his clothing choices. 🤣
Well, see, that's cause leggings always look hot on you girls, :)
I don't even own any PJs. Most I ever wear to bed are socks, and rarely ever even that.
4:30 - The One True Way™ to write dates and times is in ISO-8660 format: YYYY-MM-DD TZ HH:MM:SS. It's always largest-to-smallest increment and it works regardless of cultural or linguistic differences, can be automated by practically anything, and is supported directly by just about every piece of electronics that can even handle dates/times.
The pajamas in public thing is fairly recent and most Americans think it’s asinine.
really dude and those Americans who still have self respect.
People who go out, especially to work, in pajamas might as well just wrap themselves in plastic garbage bags and be done with it.
My roommate does this shit all the time and it drives me fucking nuts... can’t figure out why he can’t get a girlfriend, I have told him that going into public looking like a slob isn’t helping his case
I'll go in my pajama bottoms, but I will wear a t-shirt, lol.
Agree
Flag flying in the UK has increased over the years. When I first lived in the UK, back in 1970, it seemed that the Union flag, or the England flag, was never flying. But here in Sussex, England, one sees these flags far more frequently these days.
Cool glasses dude! And I always smile at strangers and always will. I'm a nice person. 😁
The pajamas thing is weird. Millennials & younger only find this acceptable. I am not included in the group of ppl that find it acceptable or would be caught dead in my pjs in public.
Also, bc I don't actually wear pajamas.
I never understood pajamas outside or inside the house either.
@@craigbenz4835 I was taught that only babies wear pajamas in the daytime.
Main dif between sweats and pajamas is that in the latter the pee slot is relatively unguarded.
@@davidbeaulieu4815 : On that basis I could, but only 25 years ago or more. :-0
If you don't think older peeople do it you need to spend an hour or two in walmart lol
You call it “pop”
You are in the Midwest.
It's "pop" in Buffalo (western NY) as well. Soda is pop with ice cream in it here.
@@darkharlezucreek my grandma always called it sodi-pop. But I find pop trashy sounding and wonder why people use it. We say club soda, cream soda, soda water, replacing any with pop sounds crazy.
My husband's family says POP and we Southern folk call every drink a Coke.
Pop here in Ontario, Canada as well.
Pop in Pittsburgh
Laurence, just watched this three year old video. You are funny as F! You really make me laugh and smile! Thank you soooo much for being you!
Since “We the people” are the government, we show our connection with each other with the Flag. There is no one person (not even the President who changes) who represents all of us. That’s what the Flag says - We’re all in this together. We can do this
Tracy Zielke Hear-Hear , Nicely Said 🇺🇸🇺🇸
That’s a very nice, very optimistic take. Not the kind of rhetoric I hear from a lot of adamant flag wavers.
The Brits (Canucks & Aussies too) have the queen and so there is a symbol to focus on that unites everyone. Tho Canadians like Americans tend to fly the flag. Keen observation about the representative role of a neutral & common symbol.
I think it even goes deeper than that. The flag doesn't represent the government of the United States. It represents the people, our common desires that come along with self-determination, and thus the nation as a whole, regardless of government.
Yeah but that smells of fascism. Nothing good ever came from behind a flag. Flags and other nationalist symbols are wholly divisive. “This is our thing that makes us better than the others.” Patriotism (the doctrine of pride in something you had no hand in, ie being born somewhere, and the achievements of others) and nationalism are pure poison, an affront to humanity. Like religion and other superstitions, these are things we should have left in the Iron Age.
If you think going out in pajamas is weird, check the website, People Of Walmart. You'll have a stroke!
My brother was lucky enough (and naturally gifted enough) to graduate from a university that’s pretty respected in the area. A semester’s tuition is around 20k for in-state students. Even with scholarships my parents ended up getting a second mortgage (unknown to us at the time) to allow him to keep going there.
There were, however, some students that felt it was appropriate to go in their pajamas. Sometimes in slippers!!! And of course if it was a girl, it was accompanied by a messy bun, and sometimes smeared eye makeup from the day before.
When I went for a few semesters, I was shocked! It was such a difficult school to wrangle, with strict codes in other areas, and some people just... slouched through it all. And it’s not like, “it’s so early, I’ve not had my coffee yet.” My classes tended to be in the afternoon and these people kept shuffling in like that.
Meanwhile, I kept up my homage to my mother by wearing blouses, never t-shirts, and if I wore jeans, dark wash only, and since I can wear heels without discomfort, slingback heels. Hair in a ballerina bun and light to moderate makeup.
When I asked a girl I admired for her intelligence why she tended to wear PJs, she said, “It’s different. People notice. And I’m cute enough to get away with it.” She tilted her head with a big smile and left, slippers shuff-shuff-shuffling along. 🤦🏻♀️
I know the website. But what shocked me most was that people took their pets inside the store. I’m Dutch, and here it’s forbidden to do that.
@@SunflowerSpotlight ''And of course if it was a girl, it was accompanied by a messy bun, and sometimes smeared eye makeup from the day before''. She just got plowed like an Iowa corn field.
Jannette Berends this seems to be a new thing here and many of us do not like it
Why? Because people do things differently than you, and you refuse to accept it?
"An American without ice in his drink is unthinkable, if not unconstitutional!" - Glenda Jackson in Hopscotch (1980)
MediumJohnSilver me too and I’m Australian!!
MediumJohnSilver When we were driving our Spanish exchange student back to the airport to go home after living with us for the school year I asked him what he would miss most, surely he would me, of course! His lighting fast response was “ice!, how am I ever going to go back to drinking anything without ice!.
@@richsimon7838 haha
She went to England, then to the French Riviera. Did her dobermans survive by eating Follett?
I've watched that movie many, many times. I taped it off of cable, then purchased the official videotape, then the Criterion Collection version on DVD.
@@teemusid I watched the DVD a few days ago, and it still is delightful. As for the doberman, I suppose she phoned someone to take care of the dog sometime after she got away.
I live in Oklahoma and it's normal for people here to have iced sweet tea 365 days a year! It doesn't matter what the temperature is outside and I don't usually drink water unless that glass is full of ice. I really enjoy your channel, because it's nice to see someone pointing out our uniqueness for everyone to appreciate.
Public pajamas are for people that have given up on life.
That's almost a quote from Karl Lagerfeld.
Even pyjamas.....
Or a middle of the night snack run. Or a pandemic.
@@ginar369 :Neither one of those have anything to do with it.
@@kathleenmuchka2559: Once again, I'm not included in "the group" (lol).
I'm generally a water-ordering person in restaurants, but I have to say that if you do order a soda they will very likely fill your glass to the very top with ice before pouring your drink, so getting a refill isn't actually like having a second serving. It's more like actually getting one full serving.
So true.
Try ordering water without mc-ice. It's still cold.
I HATE when people do that. I was at a wedding once, and I asked the server for a sprite with no ice. He gave me LESS ice. IT JUST MAKES IT SO THAT THE SODA GOES FLAT IN 2 SECONDS, I WILL FIGHT EVERY SERVER WHO DOES THIS.
@@not_zippyno means no!
I hate ice in anything that isn't water. Waste of space, waters it down, and just a nuisance while drinking. It's still a nuisance in water, but it keeps water cold (the only way I like drinking water) and when the ice melts, more water. Somehow, it's the only way it makes sense in my brain
The Flag! Basically it's this: The British were going to invade the city of Baltimore and take Ft. McHenry once the flag (atop that Rampart) came down. The Americans who gave their lives to keep said flag from "hitting the ground," are represented in each of us to this day. Most of us don't actually think of "those who gave their lives," but somewhere in our collective consciousness, we know the story (it's right there in our National anthem..."and the flag was still there.") and we pay our respect by flying the flag whenever it suits us as a reminder that as long as that flag flies, no one will put us under their rule.
I love the anthem. I get such a kick watching the Olympics and the athletes on the podium singing along. (Seeing a bit less of that lately.)
Beautifully said, Watson.
Our American Nation anthem is based on a war we started. Lol. Americans were the bully in this fight. The war of 1812 was all about try to conquer peaceful Canada and failed. What stupid way to get a National Anthem.🤦♂️
@@ateam388 The US is the one which initially declared war, but the annexation of Canada was not the primary reason for the declaration of the war. It is still up for debate if it even contributed at all for the to the decision to go to war.
@@Spiff99 Don't respond to trolls. Nothing about his comment is supported by historical record. For a war as "forgotten" as the War of 1812, A Team's version is certainly a new theory!
About the buying bags of ice thing, it's important to remember that the US is a very big very rural country and refrigeration did not become adopted uniformly. In hot rural areas, buying bags of ice was important for cellars and non-electric freezers i.e. ice cabinets.
In the distant past there used to be ice trucks that would deliver to homes for the ice boxes in vogue at the time. In fact they used to differentiate natural ice cut from lakes/ponds to artificial ice made in the newly developed refrigeration containers.
Your channel is GREAT! I am an Englishman married to an American(we live in the UK) and I love the differences in the way we say things. It does cause confusion between us at times even though we have been married 20 years!
My in-laws have trouble understanding me but perhaps that's because I'm a Southerner!
PLEASE keep up the good work! and we like the fact that you have cats! (We have four) .
Cheers (saying "cheers" amuses my in-laws no end!)
Tony
Usage: I watched a Nigerian student get his face slapped by our departmental secretary because he asked if he could "Knock her up." Queen's English speakers do it all the time but in America (Although we "look-up" or "call up") "knock up" means to impregnate. Bubba knocked-up his old lady again.
When it said Date Format at first I thought he was talking about how people go on dates in each country.
Me, too. We do it the British way in the military.
We write it the way we say it.
@@valerielutter7921 we do too.
I went to college with a couple of Brits. I was funny how we spoke the same language but at times could not understand each other. Love your videos keep coming
Famous Churchill quote, “English: the common language that divides us.” So. True.
@@danielm5535 two countries divided by the same language.
I once was having an online conversation with an Australian, typing text at each other, and she used what I assume was a very common Auzzie slang term (I have since forgotten... it was almost 20 years ago), and I had to have her go back and explain the term to me. After we both had a bit of a laugh over it, I said something to the effect of, "How can we have a language barrier when we're speaking the same language?!"
Two countries separated by a common language...
I have a few American friends and I went to the states last summer to visit them. I popped to the petrol station opposite my hotel to get a few essentials. Anyway, the woman who served me went 'any gas?' to which I replied 'steady on love it isn't even time for dinner yet' lol.
I think the free drink refills is a fairly modern concept in the U.S. It seemed to pop up in the late 1980s-1990s. I remember going out to eat as a child, and my mother would tell me that if I was really thirsty to drink the complimentary water, since she wasn’t going to pay for a second glass of whatever beverage I’d ordered.
When I was a kid I recall that you only got free refills on certain beverages; iced tea (which was NOT pre-sweetened) and coffee (hot; if you'd asked for an iced coffee you would have gotten some VERY strange looks) generally had free refills, sodas usually did not.
@@ptorq That seems to have been the custom all my life in my neck of the woods. Places that give free refills on cold drinks exist, but they're very rare.
I don’t want to live in a world without ice in my drink .
Surely it is dependent on what the drink is ? No sane person, American or British, would put ice in a beer for example.
Maybe not, but it's nice to have the beer in ice.
When I lived next door to my Grandmother, we had VERY cold well water, and it would have been rare for us to use ice except when it was very hot. Always used ice when making Kool Aid, but we'd make 1/4th of the cool aid in hot water (to melt the sugar), ice it down, then fill it up with water.
I went to Starbucks the other day ( Drive thru only of course) & ordered an iced tea & while Ice is kind of the the point of iced tea,half of my drink was just that which was annoying since there was barely any drink..😕
Jack Miller I prefer more ice than pop in my drinks.
Many years ago, when I was a younger man, having the family over for a celebration, my father gave to me this advice: As he was making 2 scotch/rocks, he paused, turned to me with a look that said "this is really important" and said "son" (he almost never called me son) and here he bordered on solemnity, "when the ice is gone, the party's over". It was a magic moment.
Truth!
Ice in scotch? Utter sacrilege... The idea is to allow you to taste the complex flavours, if the scotch is anything decent.
@@wessexdruid5290 As someone (American) that prefers scotch on the rocks, it's the evolution of flavors as the cold scotch warms in your mouth and the volatiles slowly release. I even keep my scotch in the fridge. Some people like scotch and soda, or water, and as the ice melts it approaches those styles also. I'm not too picky about how it's served, especially if someone else is pouring.
@@tubularfrog Have you ever drunk a single malt properly? i.e. without ice and with just a splash of Highland spring water, to unlock it?
Compare the two, then come back and talk about which has more flavour - and aroma.
Have you tried scotch frozen bullets or stones instead of ice to chill your drinks?
What is it with Brits and their reluctance to say "Hello" to people? It's not hard. It doesn't cost anything. It's not a commitment to Sunday Brunch. It's just polite. Just do it. I promise it doesn't hurt. If that's too much for you, a simple nod will do. Some way to say, "I see you and acknowledge that you are there and a member of my species." But don't say that. That would be weird. Actually, on second thought, go ahead and say that. It will be funny.
Brits can be really neurotic and formal.
"I also see you and acknowledge you and recognize you as a member of my species. I am however more excited to see your canine companion and will desire to be more affectionate toward it."
davincent98 😆😆😆😆🐶🐶🐶🐶🐶
Rowynne Crowley It's only in the larger cities we don't acknowledge others. We would be nodding and smiling every ten seconds. In less populated areas of course we acknowledge each other.
To be fair to the Brits, I'm from Seattle and there's a similar tendency with the "Seattle freeze".
I've also observed it in other large/busy cities and public places like airports, mass transit, etc.
This is speculation, but I think it stems from the idea of "respecting other people's space/privacy".
That may seem odd, but think of it in terms of not wanting to seem too forward or intrusive...
Wearing pajamas out to the store etc is a new(ish) thing. The older generation thought of it as very trashy and uncivilized. Now you see it at Walmart (but there is no telling what you might see at Walmart these days). It’s a newer thing. Perhaps it will have caught on next time you go back to the UK. Personally I don’t like it, but I don’t honestly have a good reason to not like it other than it just seems wrong (probably because my parents wouldn’t let me do it when I was a child so no one else should be allowed to do it either?).
I really enjoy water being super cold, even if its winter. That may be because I live in California and I'm used to filling all my cups half way up with ice.
I live just about as far north in the continental U. S. as one can. In winter it is common for me to draw a glass of water to drink later after it warms up some. The pipes freezing is a real and constant danger.
I was born and raised in New Jersey which typically gets pretty darn cold in the winter. If I'm drinking a beverage from a tumbler I'll put ice in it so it stays nice and cold, even in winter. There's nothing worse than warm soda, iced tea, or lemonade.
@Expo Scotland it will end up flat one way or the other, and its not watered down til the ice melts
Right?! Do NOT serve me an "iced" tea with 3 sad little half-melted cubes bobbing around in a lukewarm beverage. Gross.
I want it c.o.l.d.
My dad used to drink warm Mountain Dew. Blech.
I'm in north west Passaic county, and it doesn't matter how cold it is. Hubby always walks around with this mega cup of ice tea with tons of ice in it
Oh hell yeah, ice is a necessity in most drinks!
4:10 I'm a veteran, and so i've learned to write the date in the day, month, year format. 💯👍
For example, today is my birthday, 05APR2021. 😎
I know it may look weird for non-military folks, but I joined the military in 1996 right before my 18th birthday. Writing the date in this format is quite normal for me. I never knew that it was also a British thing 😊
Happy Birthday! I spent some time in Air Force blue.
Happy Birthday Lonnie
Hey happy birthday! Also I was born in 1996 so I automatically assume it must have been an amazing year
I work for a Canadian company. We write the date as year/month/day.
Military does year first now
I really hate the public pajamas thing. Even when there were these "Pajamas day" at school, i would not participate, because it's just weird for the obvious reasons most non-americans think so.
This man needs a Tv show. His voice is amazing and his comedy is awesome.
Yes! As Ricky Gervais
Stunt double! Lol
I know right!!??? I’m addicted!!
You should watch the old show titled An Idiot Abroad, created and starring Ricky Gervais
Laurence, People buy bags of ice to put in their coolers. Place canned or bottled beverages in the bottom of the cooler, pour ice from a bag over said beverages and take the cooler to a tailgate party.
“Public Pajamas” is the same as British people wearing tracksuits all the time.
literally no one except teenage neds wear tracksuits here
@@emilycampbell6375 .....eastern Europeans in the UK love a track suit with a man bag.
I associate track suits far more with US than UK. I’m certain that it’s the obligatory uniform in Florida.
@@amberfouche5252 I saw it a lot when I was in the UK.
In utah people will wear gym clothes to work. Not everybody.. but it's a super odd trend.
So like… do British people not like cold water? Who the heck wants to drink room temperature water? Even if it’s 0 degrees outside I still want ice in my water
The pajama thing is fairly new. And trashy.
Yes. I've never been aware of encountering anyone wearing pajamas in public, sweatpants, yes, but not pajamas. But if I were to see someone in pjs, I would definitely find it trashy.
Also, I've never been to a tailgate party and I've lived in the U.S. for my entire life (over 66 years), so you don't need to feel that you're missing out on a major part of American culture, Laurence.
Agree.
I wear pajamas one day a year on Christmas. Anyone who wears them in public is either a baby or really trashy
Can tell you lived in Anderson. I only wore my pj's that were capris and matching shirt so looked like an outfit/ sweats in public after surgery for cancer. Or stretchy pants. Jeans hit at surgical site.
@@mariateresamondragon5850 he lived in Anderson, Indiana. Regular site at Walmart. Even at doctors office. A grandma with her grandson who she brought to his appointment. I had cancer and put on elastic waist pants under my belly with 41 tumors!
You're obviously from the south of England - we always talk to strangers and smile at people in Newcastle!
He's from the Midlands (Lincolnshire) but somehow he sounds way more posh than he should.
Like Raoul Moat.
I think we Brits are pretty friendly actually outside of the big towns and cities. I live in Somerset and strangers smile at each other and talk to each other in queues a lot. It's the same when I go back to Wales where I was born and brought up.
That’s ‘cos we’re canny in Geordieland!!! 😊
What about Sunderland where George Clarke the luscious architect comes from?
She's right....going out in your jammies hasn't been done for that long...it's weird.
tiamotzz Yes, it’s a newer thing. More in the last 10 years and the rise of Walmart. I don’t remember ever seeing anyone in pajamas in stores in the ‘90s. Unless they were a small child.
Oh, fun fact about being asked "How are you?"
I'm a bit of a weirdo and I like to test limits and really find out how much people are paying attention to what they do. So, I got in the habit of responding with an assortment of nonsense syllables. I'll say stuff like "Yobetsen" and "Ahlseeis yamee" and other just completely gibberish phrases like that. What I've found is that as long as you say it in a generally pleasant tone, they don't notice. It literally isn't an inquiry, they're just acknowledging your existence and expect some acknowledgement back.
The funnier part, though, is that if you actually say something intelligible that doesn't correspond with a greeting or track logically with the question - like, for example, if you say "Eukaryotes are a form of life" - they get really weirded out. I find it amusing that complete gibberish is accepted as a rational response in this instance, but an intelligible non-sequitur scares them.
People notice you are saying gibberish. How unintelligent are you that you think you are tricking everybody around you? Your opinion of yourself is too high and your intelligence is too low to understand this fact. They just accept that you are a mentally impaired person and move on with their life because they got the general idea of what you were trying to do from your body language and tone.
I’m American & I don’t get the whole going out in PJs. Do they not care how they look?
Jessy Schaffer in my house 😂 no never
Yeah I never liked the idea of that, especially when I was in school seeing people in pajamas in class. I’m not a fan of wearing pajamas outside the house
PJs... I think that really depends on what the PJs are. So many are nothing more than what used to be sweatsuits from the 70s and before that in those times, people wore outside anyway. That being said, there are things that people wear in public that give me pause as well. lol
That'd be a "no."
I’m British, and I have seen this twice.... I had to stare in amazement! It seems to be so lazy and slobbish... what does it take to spend 5 minutes getting dressed, and to drag a comb through your hair? It also gives the impression that they are going to go back home and straight to bed again... yuk!!! 🤮
I am so guilty of Smiling at people as we cross paths. Even in my dang mask lol.
Regarding the US flag there are generally two main reasons for its reverence here.
First is that it is a sort of living memorial to all the men and women who have served this country either in the military or civilian law enforcement or firefighters or any other emergency services. Many people have worn that flag on their shoulder while making the ultimate sacrifice to protect their fellow Americans. And even more of us have family and friends who have made the choice to serve this country. The flag is a symbol of our greatest heroes.
Second is the ideals and values that America is supposed to represent. We look at that flag and imagine the best possible version of our country. Equality, justice, democracy, and courage. That flag is a symbol of everything our founders and greatest leaders spoke and wrote about. It reminds us we're part of something bigger and more important than any individual.