9 CULTURE SHOCKS OF LIVING IN ITALY-one year later…

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  • Опубліковано 10 лип 2024
  • FIRST CULTURE SHOCKS VIDEO - • 9 CULTURE SHOCKS OF LI...
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 532

  • @dogedcheems970
    @dogedcheems970 2 роки тому +224

    >In Italy every time you buy something you get a receipt!
    *starts sweating in italian*
    mmmmm si... diciamo di si...

    • @TheQKatie
      @TheQKatie  2 роки тому +6

      🤣 🤣 🤣 🤫

    • @mat3372
      @mat3372 2 роки тому +12

      Yes but actually no 🤣

    • @GiovanniWayneCoach
      @GiovanniWayneCoach 2 роки тому +2

      That is why they do not accept cards... cash does it better!

    • @Nome_e_Cognome
      @Nome_e_Cognome 2 роки тому +1

      It's kind of a compliment. So we learned discipline and tax paying

  • @filipporubino4163
    @filipporubino4163 2 роки тому +186

    About Post Office: you DON'T have to go there as much as you think!! I never do. You can pay your utilities and bills via internet banking or at a tabaccheria (yes! And in some places even at supermarkets). If you really need to go there, like for shipping/sending something, you'd want to use the Poste app to book your turn, instead of waiting in the line! If you have an account there you can use the app for your online banking and withdraw money from their atms, thus never needing to spend time at the post Office. Btw there are online services also for public healthcare, Inps (pensions and social security) and much more. I've forgotten about the last time I physically went to a public office. (Important note: I live in Torino).

    • @occhialcielo.Occhialcielo
      @occhialcielo.Occhialcielo 2 роки тому +7

      True story.
      Però ai vecchietti non dirglielo, se no gli viene una sincope!

    • @amberfur5750
      @amberfur5750 2 роки тому

      Exactly! I never go to the post office: you can do anything online. Maybe it’s Trani…

    • @amberfur5750
      @amberfur5750 2 роки тому +2

      @@occhialcielo.Occhialcielo I vecchietti che devono fare lo Spid? Poverini… chissà come saremo noi alla loro età!

    • @occhialcielo.Occhialcielo
      @occhialcielo.Occhialcielo 2 роки тому

      @@amberfur5750 ma quando mai ho detto che devono fare lo spid??? Forse mi sono spiegata male, ma intendevo dire che se spieghi a un nonnetto che può domiciliare le utenze o ricevere la pensione direttamente sul conto postale, ti rispondono che preferiscono recarsi alla posta... Il cambiamento non è un bene, per loro!

    • @eldiablogmic6760
      @eldiablogmic6760 2 роки тому +3

      @@amberfur5750 Poste Italiane in Trani has no issue! I'm from Trani and I ALWAYS use the app and all the other services! Perhaps she doesn't know.

  • @raid1946
    @raid1946 2 роки тому +134

    As a south Italian born living in North Italy it's quite funny to notice that, after one year spent in Puglia, your culture shocks are almost the same people born in Lombardia experience when they reach South Italy.

    • @HistoryFranz
      @HistoryFranz 2 роки тому +11

      We are not in the 1960s anymore, which culture shocks are we talking about?

    • @lanunna
      @lanunna 2 роки тому +1

      @@HistoryFranz Confermo che rispetto agli anni 60 la situazione è cambiata di quasi nulla
      Sono stata in Toscana la settimana di ferragosto, la sera in giro non c'era tanta gente, nemmeno al Duomo di Firenze; a Grosseto paradossalmente qualche anima in più , ma la movida del sud è un'altra cosa , vedere per credere .mi confermano lo stesso anche parenti e amici di altre regioni del Nord.

    • @lanunna
      @lanunna 2 роки тому +2

      @PL4stik1991 mi dispiace che la discussione non si possa condurre con toni meno esagerati. In ogni caso , da siciliana , ti assicuro che anche ad Enna , Caltanissetta o Scordia (super centrali) c'è tanta gente in giro la sera , a Ferragosto nei paesini dell'interno si festeggia ancora l'assunzione della Madonna , si organizzano moltissime cose . Io vivo tra mare e vulcano , da noi c'è molta gente sul lungomare e altrettanta sulla montagna ,perché al sud fa caldo, per cui l'estate le zone interne e montane più fresche sono prese d'assalto . Sono stata a Venezia , Torino e Padova d'inverno , ripeto , ho molti amici e parenti in altre città del nord Italia , non è una questione di periodo dell'anno. Io ho parlato senza preconcetti ma per esperienza personale o di chi mi è vicino , tu sei assolutamente libero di pensarla come credi , anche di infervorarti. Bye 👋

    • @AlessandroGenTLe
      @AlessandroGenTLe 2 роки тому

      @@HistoryFranz Ah-Ah-Ah. When I've been to Sicily I had the same shocks. Like asking a bus driver if the latest bus was passing and getting "maybe yes... maybe no" (and he didn't... Something I'd have hoped he to be fired as people rely on these services the drivers are paid to do!), like people without clue of how to properly speak in Italian, like zero receipts and so on.

    • @felicepompa1702
      @felicepompa1702 2 роки тому +1

      @@lanunna se giri il nord durante autunno e inverno la gente comune resta fuori fino a davvero tardi. Semplicemente d'estate o si gira di giorno fuori città, o si è al mare

  • @RaffaeleF
    @RaffaeleF 2 роки тому +158

    Hi Katie, in Italy every store owner must issue a receipt by law to help fight tax evasion. In fact, there is the finance police "guardia di finanza" that will even walk around undercover and may ask for you to show your receipt when coming out of a store. Should you fail to show them you and the store owner can receive a hefty fine. My rule of thumb is to ask if the store "forgets" to give you one at checkout and to just toss them when you get home.

    • @bbmcgee33
      @bbmcgee33 2 роки тому +11

      Perfect. In theory. But has anyone ever met anyone who has actually been stopped coming out of a coffee bar or store?

    • @sabinafiorentini3298
      @sabinafiorentini3298 2 роки тому +12

      @@bbmcgee33 Yes.
      It happens.
      Hapoened to me and for work I saw the fines and every time owners had a check.

    • @revengerknight92
      @revengerknight92 2 роки тому +7

      This is actually a legend we were told when we were young, because nobody checked my receipt in my whole life living in Italy 😂

    • @RaffaeleF
      @RaffaeleF 2 роки тому +5

      @@revengerknight92 not a legend at all. Happened at least twice to me

    • @occhialcielo.Occhialcielo
      @occhialcielo.Occhialcielo 2 роки тому +5

      @@RaffaeleF dipende dalle città. Dove abita mia sorella, in romagna, lo controllano anche al mercato, e se non hai lo scontrino sono guai per te.

  • @francoborgia8351
    @francoborgia8351 2 роки тому +88

    Late dinner is more usual in southern Italy.... In northern Italy standard dinner time is from 7 to 8 pm

    • @makeupyourmind2019
      @makeupyourmind2019 2 роки тому +17

      Non credo di aver mai mangiato prima delle 20 nei 30 anni che ho vissuto in Lombardia! 😮

    • @satorarepo6985
      @satorarepo6985 2 роки тому +17

      Milano, a casa l'inizio cena dalle 19:30 alle 20:30 è lo standard. Al ristorante non servono prima delle 19:30, di solito si prenota per le 20:00-20:30.

    • @francoborgia8351
      @francoborgia8351 2 роки тому +5

      @@makeupyourmind2019 io abito in Piemonte e faccio cena sempre alle 20 (se possibile almeno)... conosco qualcuno però che cena prima da queste parti, mentre in Sicilia, dove ho passato qualche estate, l'idea di mettersi a tavola alle 20 è improbabile

    • @David-my2iz
      @David-my2iz 2 роки тому +8

      Qui Verona ✋ In realtà credo sia più un vecchio cliché che vorrebbe noi "nordici" più simili agli abitanti dell'Europa centrale nel vivere le varie fasi della giornata. Con la mia famiglia ho sempre cenato regolarmente tra le 8 pm e le 8.30 pm. Anche con gli amici non mi sono mai incontrato prima delle 8.30 pm per cenare al ristorante. Veneto e Lombardia sono le capitali dell'aperitivo...come potremmo cenare alle 7, se a quell'ora siamo ancora nelle piazze e nei locali del centro? L'austerità e la vita appartata risalgono a un passato che quasi nessun veneto può ormai ricordare...si parla degli anni '50/'60, il decennio del boom economico, quando i nostri padri o nonni erano capaci di lavorare per 15 ore consecutive pur di garantirci benessere.

    • @manuelemariani8188
      @manuelemariani8188 2 роки тому

      Al nord is more From 8 to 9 actually

  • @mihaelaclaudiap..2
    @mihaelaclaudiap..2 2 роки тому +46

    Such a shame that I have to leave Italy for a while and go back to England! But i will be back as Italy will always remain my biggest love!! xx

  • @LiveInItalyMagazine
    @LiveInItalyMagazine 2 роки тому

    Love this video Katie! Happy 1 year in 🇮🇹!

  • @pile333
    @pile333 2 роки тому +13

    The Quinn of Italy!

  • @stevenfalken
    @stevenfalken 2 роки тому +40

    When you find the word "slow" in Italy it 99% refers to a cultural movement carried out by an association called "slow food".
    About 40 years ago, some people relized that the richness of our country is founded on diversity and, expecially in the case of food, that the Extreme heterogeneity of food derives from the heterogeneity of the way of living in the different places you can find in Italy. Like dialects. If you ask how an italian recipe was born, you will probably find that it was born to solve some needs, like eat while moving with a herd of sheeps, or to keep some food for weeks, without fridge or other modernity.
    In other words our food tell us how we are what we are, and is part of our history and identity, like art, architecture, poetry and so on.
    When industry of agricolture ad processed food arrived we lost many of our typical recipes (we have many many recipes, many of them famous in the world, but more many unknown to even other italian regions), our food and our identity and, those people who founded the "slow food" association, began to think that they should engage to keep traditional food alive.
    They founded the "slow food" association, and they call it "slow food" because they saw "fast food" as a symbol of the food standardization that kills our diversity and traditions.
    After that arrived slow cities, slow life, slow wines and so on.

    • @mosquito3651
      @mosquito3651 2 роки тому +3

      Ah, interesting. So.. slow 'actually' means original!

    • @stevenfalken
      @stevenfalken 2 роки тому +5

      @@mosquito3651 original and "something precious" also.

    • @willfifield507
      @willfifield507 2 роки тому +1

      I like the idea of it being called 'slow food' so that it opposes the fast food which isnt original to italy

    • @Sim0sama
      @Sim0sama Рік тому

      If you tell me “slow city”
      I can only think about slow lines in places, slow people in general in a bad way 🤣🤣🤣
      So I like this optimistic aspect of it 🤣☺️

  • @thomasjpuleo8112
    @thomasjpuleo8112 3 місяці тому

    This was cure, and accurate. Really good. Thank you.

  • @theteachingcouple.online
    @theteachingcouple.online 2 роки тому +1

    Love this series ❤️

  • @nermeenkamel8239
    @nermeenkamel8239 2 роки тому +8

    Katie, I love your energy and love love love all your Italian culture videos ❤❤❤keep it quirky ❤❤

    • @TheQKatie
      @TheQKatie  2 роки тому +2

      Aww grazie mille!

    • @tlacorp.3813
      @tlacorp.3813 2 роки тому +2

      Katie is an Italian citizen and embodies Italy in every way!

  • @janetlombardi2314
    @janetlombardi2314 2 роки тому

    I love this video Katie always interesting keep up the great work thanks

  • @giorgiapietracatella8676
    @giorgiapietracatella8676 2 роки тому

    Thank you for sharing true things about Italy!!! Your videos are lovely :)

  • @davide12446
    @davide12446 2 роки тому +54

    L'abitudine di mangiare tardi è più della parte Sud dell'Italia, il sole cala più tardi e le giornate sono più calde. Al nord mangiano presto(sopratutto in montagna) perchè il sole cala prima. In ogni caso sono dell'Emilia-Romagna e ceno intorno alle 20.30/21. E da bambino i miei genitori mi portavano in giro il venerdì e il sabato sera fino all'una o alle due di notte, perciò anche adesso faccio fatica ad addormentarmi prima di mezzanotte😂

    • @federicomorosi6878
      @federicomorosi6878 2 роки тому

      Zio Tom Anch'io sono delle montagne in Emilia Romagna. Te di dove sei? Io Montese, provincia di Modena

    • @amberfur5750
      @amberfur5750 2 роки тому

      Però se si va fuori a cena, anche al nord il week end si può cenare alle 9. Spesso prima non c’è posto…

    • @mgz9999
      @mgz9999 2 роки тому +2

      È interessante sottolineare che negli US questa abitudine è stata portata dalle popolazioni europee che migrarono, soprattutto dagli inglesi, che tradizionalmente cenano molto presto esattamente per quel motivo. Il sole calava presto e la giornata di lavoro finiva...

    • @felicepompa1702
      @felicepompa1702 2 роки тому +6

      Fun fact al nord le giornate son più lunghe d'estate, e in inverno son corte sia al nord che al sud, quindi dire "cala prima il sole" è un po una cagata, d'inverno nessuno cena alle 4.30 di pomeriggio perché è buio, cosi come nessuno cena alle 22 d'estate sempre al nord

    • @EdoardoMarini
      @EdoardoMarini 2 роки тому

      Io raramente ceno prima delle 21:30, ma è un'abitudine che ho preso in Spagna. Prima mangiavo alle 20:00 in punto, che comunque è tardi rispetto alle abitudini del Midwest, a quanto deduco.
      Prima manco mi fa fame.

  • @JF-kv1gm
    @JF-kv1gm 2 роки тому +32

    One of the things that got to me when I moved to Italy 30 years ago (granted, to a small town) was that people would stare at me. I thought they were rude, whereas after a while I realised that it was just curiosity!

    • @elledix3575
      @elledix3575 2 роки тому +4

      I came to Italy about the same time and experienced the staring too, even though I landed in a supposedly cosmopolitan place! Shop keepers used to sit outside their shops on fold out chairs and spectate passersby. It was quite normal to be ogled from head to toe by other pedestrians too; sometimes it would be women checking out your strange attire, or far more alarming the men with their arm straddled over their girlfriend's shoulder, who would 180° turn.

    • @mosquito3651
      @mosquito3651 2 роки тому

      @@elledix3575 😂

  • @crazyforitaly2021
    @crazyforitaly2021 Рік тому

    We moved to a medieval Norman-Invasion era village in Campania. We left 'crazy' and arrived in calmness. Thanks for your video.

  • @danielemilazzo84
    @danielemilazzo84 2 роки тому +9

    8pm is a late dinner? Wait till you find out about the "spaghettata di mezzanotte" when you hang out with friends...

    • @TheQKatie
      @TheQKatie  2 роки тому +7

      We did this at our friends wedding, on the dance floor. It was THE BEST THING EVER!

    • @WalterLoggetti
      @WalterLoggetti 2 роки тому +2

      @@TheQKatie mandatory with Aglio Olio e Peperoncino :P

  • @fabiosoracemaresca
    @fabiosoracemaresca 2 роки тому +4

    Katie the joy-bringer.

  • @asamicat8323
    @asamicat8323 2 роки тому +42

    You really shocked me with the WhatsApp thing, I thought it was also big in USA. We also use it for medical prescriptions (my doctor send me the code for the medicine I need so I can directly buy it) or other formal appointments

    • @iuciubbb
      @iuciubbb 2 роки тому +1

      WhatsApp is a privacy nightmare. Signal is much better, Threema unbeatable.

    • @asamicat8323
      @asamicat8323 2 роки тому +7

      @@iuciubbb we (or at least me) don't know them.

    • @mrianrock
      @mrianrock 2 роки тому +4

      @@iuciubbb Not in Europe. Whatsapp has to comply to EU law.

    • @madisonharrill1935
      @madisonharrill1935 Рік тому

      Its becomming more and more known but it is far from super common

    • @Alexvex1
      @Alexvex1 Рік тому

      in Italy doctors send code for medicines to the farmacies system and you can buy them in every farmacy. yes, it depens on which part of Italy you live :)

  • @danielledesimone7
    @danielledesimone7 2 роки тому

    I love these culture shock videos!

  • @1963manuela
    @1963manuela 2 роки тому +15

    Katie,io vivo in provincia di Milano e qui si cena poco dopo le 19.Nel sud Italia mangiano più tardi :-).

    • @TheQKatie
      @TheQKatie  2 роки тому +5

      🤔 interessante!

    • @1963manuela
      @1963manuela 2 роки тому +4

      @@TheQKatie pensavo lo sapessi. Più vai verso il nord Italia e prima mangi: mezzogiorno il pranzo e 19,30 (quando è tardi) la cena.Ho provato a cenare alle 18 ma ero in vacanza in Scozia,qua a quell'ora ti riderebbero dietro.L'Italia,oltre ai tanti dialetti,ha tante usanze diverse e modi di dire diversissimi.Noi al bar chiediamo la brioche e non il cornetto.Ricordatelo quando verrai su:-))

    • @SirTeo
      @SirTeo 2 роки тому

      Anch’io sono in Lombardia, non troppo distante da Milano, ma la cena si fa tranquillamente anche alle 20. E al ristorante capita anche di andare più lunghi. Di norma comunque, dopo le 21, diventa un po’ tardino 😁

    • @1963manuela
      @1963manuela 2 роки тому +1

      @@SirTeo ,certo.se si esce a cena al ristorante si fa più tardi,verso le 20,30 o le 21

    • @akarem91
      @akarem91 2 роки тому

      @@1963manuela Il fatto è che voi lavorate senza interrompere a pranzo noi invece dopo pranzo ci fermiamo un paio di ore e quindi finiamo di lavorare alle 21:00 ecco perche mangiamo piu tardi.

  • @laurenmoore6670
    @laurenmoore6670 2 роки тому +2

    In one of your previous videos (the video where I found your channel actually!), you answered a question I had always wondered about why my Italian-American family does not eat meat on pasta, and now you've answered another one for me! My family is notorious for LATE dinners, the kind of late where you have to start wondering which places are still open if you're gonna get food out, so now that makes more sense! Well, either it's an Italian thing or my family is just like this for some reason lol.

    • @TheQKatie
      @TheQKatie  2 роки тому

      Haha happy to help! 😉 🤷‍♀️ ❤️

    • @jonlenin9982
      @jonlenin9982 2 роки тому

      the meatballs on pasta is a very old southern thing which made it to the Usa through the great emigration, but which now totally fell into disuse. Most ppl completely forgot and think you italian americans are crazy

  • @petergeorge4415
    @petergeorge4415 Рік тому

    Wonder-full!! Bring on more videos like this one dear Ms Katie! It is really appreciated, helene :))

  • @londontravellers22
    @londontravellers22 2 роки тому +1

    Love Italy. The culture, the food and the people are all nice. Been to Sicily, Rome, Sorrento and The Naples. All beautiful cities to visit. Would love to visit some more once COVID craziness has died down.

  • @francescoarzilli
    @francescoarzilli 2 роки тому +2

    I usually change my dinner time according to the season. I mean in spring or summer when daylight lasts longer than in winter or autumn I usually eat at 8:30pm...in autumn and winter about 7:30.

  • @artryanrock
    @artryanrock 2 роки тому +34

    The dinner thing was a surprise for me when I came here to Italy, 18 years ago. I got hungry around 7 and eating past 8 and usually at 9 with friends was difficult in the beginning 😁 it took me a while to know that I can go do aperitivo at 7 pm

    • @SimonHume81
      @SimonHume81 2 роки тому +3

      I still haven't gotten the hang of aperitivo. Recently tried to get a meal at 7.15 but was turned away as far too early, next evening I went to a pizza by the slice at 7.45, sorry sir, we're closing! Can't win! A few days later I was thinking about getting food at around 6, pizzeria flicks on the 'aperto' lights so I go in and get asked when I want the table....errr now? Nope. Nothing beats last year when I was told to wait outside, waited almost an hour, gave up my seat as busy and I wanted take away then get told they will only serve tables, no takeaway! (sorry for rant)

    • @robertopezzutto5843
      @robertopezzutto5843 2 роки тому +12

      Having dinner so late it is peculiar of the south.. In the north east where I live we have dinner at 7/7.30 pm ( the time we arrive home from work) .. It was a cultural shock for me when in Puglia I entered a restaurant at 8 and it was still completely empty.. But everybody arrived after 9! Anyway it's the same in Spain...

    • @artryanrock
      @artryanrock 2 роки тому +1

      @@robertopezzutto5843 I live in Milan. And when I go dinner with friends we usually start at 8 or 8:30, sometimes even 9. I guess at home with family it's different.

    • @robertopezzutto5843
      @robertopezzutto5843 2 роки тому +3

      @@artryanrock of course going out is different... But at home we hv dinner much earlier.. Anyway in the south even at home they have dinner much later than here!!!

    • @peggyclio1199
      @peggyclio1199 2 роки тому +1

      @@SimonHume81 oh poor you! I'm sorryyyy

  • @cristianasabre3821
    @cristianasabre3821 2 роки тому

    E' davvero bello vedere quanto ti piaccia il nostro splendido paese. Grazie di cuore.

  • @AllYouCanItaly
    @AllYouCanItaly 2 роки тому

    Bel video, molto divertente 🤗♥️

  • @carolinegeorge13
    @carolinegeorge13 2 роки тому +15

    Dinner time actually differs in the North and in the south. 9 pm would be late for people in the north, they tend to eat at around 7:30-8 pm (which, at least from my experience, is still very late for Americans). But yeah, as a general rule, with the exception of elders, none eats before 7:30 in Italy.
    Regarding dog rules I'm kinda surprised lol. From what I've always seen, it's seriously frowned upon to leave your dog's poop on the ground but I've never seen someone splash water on their dog's pee (neither in the north nor in the south tbh). Anyway great video🤗

    • @lauragoreni3020
      @lauragoreni3020 2 роки тому

      I'm from Friuli and sometimes people eat around 19, not many people but sometimes it happened, like if everyone in the house is already hungry we eat at that time. As for the dog pee, I've seen people splashing water on it a couple of times, not often too. It's quite unusual to see dog poo left around, most people pick it up with plastic bags.

    • @simonecavani1461
      @simonecavani1461 2 роки тому +1

      Che stereotipo

    • @carolinegeorge13
      @carolinegeorge13 2 роки тому

      @@simonecavani1461 in che senso, scusa?

  • @ciaociaociao2457
    @ciaociaociao2457 2 роки тому

    my family, in liguria, has dinner at 7.30pm / 8pm. late dining is typical of southern Italy. but in the morning southern workers start later, so the hours are all shifted. obviously it depends on the family, on the event. if it is a birthday dinner, for example, it often takes place later, because it is part of the evening's celebrations

  • @pierangelorusso6419
    @pierangelorusso6419 2 роки тому

    Brava Katie, ti seguo con affetto da Varese

  • @jojosmooth
    @jojosmooth 2 роки тому +10

    😂 😂 😂 Omg! This video is amazing! Great discovery! I'm Italian, but I've been living in the UK for 10 years. I was born in the northern part of Italy, but grew up in Calabria, the toe of the boot. "Cacacazzo" means something different from what you described, though... 🤭 The literal translation of the word is incredibly gross and graphic, but its transliterated meaning is "very annoying individual," "nuisance", "pest", "pain in the butt". It's a more vulgar synonym of "rompiscatole" (or "rompipalle", "rompicoglioni", both quite rude). In Sicily they would say "scassa minchia". 🤭 😂 I'm enjoying this...

  • @meredithvaughn5272
    @meredithvaughn5272 2 роки тому +2

    I can totally relate to the voice memos thing- and the use of WhatsApp! I had to install it on all my relatives' phones before I left to live in Italy the first time, and had to redownload it for the second time!! I am still not used to the late dinners here in Milan- usually I eat some sort or light dinner/snack at 5:30-6 and then eat 2nd dinner with friends around 8:30-9... I just cannot wait that long!

    • @TheQKatie
      @TheQKatie  2 роки тому +1

      We think about it as a bonus... we get TWO dinners. 😂

    • @sabrinasambo7570
      @sabrinasambo7570 2 роки тому +2

      Well it's normal to have a snack around 5 pm, otherwise you don't resist until 8 or 9... 😉

  • @CouchPolyglot
    @CouchPolyglot 2 роки тому +5

    In Spain we eat late too, but now that I live in Germany I got used to eating earlier and it is nice as well :D

    • @ilpisanoit
      @ilpisanoit 2 роки тому +1

      don't know about the rest of the world but in Europe, generally, the southern you go the late you eat.

    • @rscaht
      @rscaht 2 роки тому

      Spain is much more west , you have one hour more sun at night . But yes Spain and Italy have very similar habitudes .(and language)

  • @lyudmilasemenova8444
    @lyudmilasemenova8444 Рік тому

    I love this video I didnt realize eating late is something that is common over there. I have never been to italy i only dream about traveling.

  • @stefaniarosso4588
    @stefaniarosso4588 2 роки тому

    Hi, in the North of Italy dinner time usually is between 7 to 8 pm :) I can't eat that late!

  • @nunziocafagna
    @nunziocafagna 2 роки тому

    ahahahahaha al "CACACHEZZ" mi hai fatto morire dal ridere. Well done KatieYou are setleing down!

  • @simonedylan6581
    @simonedylan6581 2 роки тому +1

    No one go anymore to the postal office except the older or who is not able to use basic internet. Unless you have to do something special, you can do everything online but i know for a foreign its not easy. Commercial shops in Italy usually close at 7:30-8:00 PM, thats why we eat later. Its difficult to find something open in north europe/usa at 7:00 since you are already eating:)

  • @federica5371
    @federica5371 2 роки тому +1

    Hey Katie, did you know that you can book an appointment on the post office website for the time that suits you best? You pick date, time and then you just show up at that time, skip the line and directly go inside

  • @KiAkKiErAlA
    @KiAkKiErAlA 2 роки тому

    Dinner time changes in base where you are. In North of Italy it is about at 7 pm, in Center of Italy about at 8pm and in the South about at 9pm.

  • @Claudio79
    @Claudio79 2 роки тому +1

    Late time dinner is in south Italy only. In north Italy is most likely 7-7.30 PM

  • @SilentBlindDeaf
    @SilentBlindDeaf 29 днів тому

    it’s very similar to Alexandria and Cairo in Egypt. mediterranean culture is amazing❤❤❤

  • @bafio671
    @bafio671 2 роки тому

    Poste Italiane queue is a cultural shock for Italians too

  • @vincenzosplate
    @vincenzosplate 2 роки тому +41

    Omg the voice messages is thr most annoying one. Hope to meet you in person next year when we come to Italy

    • @TheQKatie
      @TheQKatie  2 роки тому

      That would be awesome!

    • @claiar736
      @claiar736 2 роки тому +6

      It's actually the opposit in my opinion (I'm from the north of Italy). It's faster to do, it's more expressive, it makes you feel closer to the person you are communicate with. Personally i love when my gf gives me the "buonanotte" (goodnight) through a voice message, it's sweet and not as cold as a written message

    • @Ubya_
      @Ubya_ 2 роки тому +1

      @@claiar736 eh i hate it, when i get a 5 minutes message i just give up, while on a text message you can get a glimpse of what's importat and what's just useless filling.
      on some occasions i approve it, like let's say you are running late and you can't type and walk, but if you are chilling if you have 5 minutes to record a message you have 5 minutes to type it out. Or in case you really need to talk a lot, just call me, so i can ignore the call because i always have my phone on mute since i hate phone calls xD

  • @Zirumaio
    @Zirumaio 2 роки тому

    Poste Italiane is a shock for us too! 🤣

  • @AB_996SPS
    @AB_996SPS 2 роки тому +3

    Hey Kate, just have to say that I love your videos. I lived in Lecce for almost 6 years (my mom still lives there) and in Torino for another 4 and your observations are hilarious to me becuase they were EXACTLY the same as mine having grown up in the US, even though I have southern Italian roots. It's been really hard to move back to the states and meet people for dinner at 6pm...constantly thinking "what are you, 80??"
    On #9 I can add to comments about age and weight; from May to September you get constant comments on your sun tan (at least where my mom lives) whether its "oh, you're so white...you need to go to the beach" or "wow, you're so tanned already" :)

    • @TheQKatie
      @TheQKatie  2 роки тому +1

      That is so true about the tan comments!!!

  • @intelliGENeration
    @intelliGENeration 4 місяці тому +1

    Can’t be dinner time if it’s not dark for at least 1 hour outside. If it’s day time, it’s time to be running about.

  • @lucazeppegno8256
    @lucazeppegno8256 Рік тому

    Just a suggestion: in reality it's very easy to avoid queues at the postal office if you install and use their App: it's possible to take a precise timeslot for the appointment and you culd pass the queue and be at the desk exactly on time. I do it every time I need an appontment here in Milan, but it's not very reknown.

  • @aRieLchan87
    @aRieLchan87 2 роки тому +10

    Io vivo in Trentino, nord Italia(worth a visit, or ten, or hundred) e anche da noi si cena presto! Gli orari del sud non fanno per noi. È anche vero che in montagna il sole cala molto prima e probabilmente la quantità di luce che riceviamo influisce su queste abitudini. Mi spiace per le domande e le attenzioni verso il peso. Purtroppo è un grande problema, non solo curiosità. Complimenti comunque, i tuoi video sono sempre super bellini!

    • @lauragoreni3020
      @lauragoreni3020 2 роки тому +1

      Confermo. Anche in Friuli si cena presto.

    • @juniopavesi4141
      @juniopavesi4141 2 роки тому

      Ligure, anche da noi si cena relativamente presto, tra le 19:30 e le 20:30 in base alle abitudini famigliari. Tuttavia quello che mi pesa è il fatto che molte persone che vengono in vacanza o a vivere in Italia riscontrano un elevato livello di sporcizia, in particolare al centro-sud. È veramente imbarazzante..

    • @rscaht
      @rscaht 2 роки тому

      La quantità di luce in montagna può essere anche maggiore , dipende dalla posizione ma il calore non si accumula per via della copertura boschiva ed al tramonto fa freschino . Però si sta benone lo stesso .
      Ricordo da ragazzo i boschi erano di meno e più bassi , faceva più caldo d'estate e più freddo d'inverno .

  • @king__caroline
    @king__caroline 2 роки тому

    “So many strollers at night!” Ever been to a brewery in North Carolina, USA?

  • @keysersozefede
    @keysersozefede 2 роки тому

    I love that you have got a little accent from Puglia! The "o" especially :-)

  • @leonardonacci6023
    @leonardonacci6023 2 роки тому +2

    Sono di Bari, ciao.
    Ho riconosciuto l'ufficio postale di via Bovio a Trani. Giusto? Un tempo , poco più in là vi era l'ufficio del catasto. Sei carinissima con i tuoi video.

  • @boejiden1524
    @boejiden1524 2 роки тому

    LATE DINNER IS VERY COMMON IN MANY ASIAN COUNTRIES TOO LIKE INDIA & OTHER SOUTH ASIAN 9:00 PM

  • @occhialcielo.Occhialcielo
    @occhialcielo.Occhialcielo 2 роки тому

    Hi! I can confirm that you did a great job explaining these cultural shocks. I watched other videos on the subject, but they weren't so complete as yours.
    Nobody would tell you that you were wrong on something!
    Exspecially if you live in the south.
    Me, I try to eat earlier (7.30 p.m.),put the children in their beds at 9pm, but it's not easy. And I deleted whatsapp from my phone!
    I don't know if it's the same in the US, but here the daytime is really full: gotta go to work, while taking the kids to school, and the way back in the afternoon around 5pm. The day is stuck with hundred of things to do, so in the late afternoon/evening you don't wanna rush anymore!
    We eat slowly, we talk, we go out for a beer.
    Maybe in a little city like "yours" (btw Trani, Barletta and every spot you showed us seem really enchanting) can be more relaxing.
    Bye bye
    Evita

  • @LeviKlicsu
    @LeviKlicsu 2 роки тому +2

    Please, do much more videos from the Italian lifestyle!! I'm so curious about it. It would be also good to hear how did u moved out, the hardest things and the advices about the moving. :) Grazie mille!!!

  • @cinziatessari3006
    @cinziatessari3006 2 роки тому +2

    I live in North Italy and here it's a little bit different!!!!
    It's not slow, we eat early (at home my family eat at 7pm), I usually go to sleep at 10pm because I get up at 5:30am, and I'm not the only one!....if you go out (I take the dog for a walk at 9:15pm) you don't see very many people around.
    About the poop...some people"forget" to clean....but I've seen the same in USA.
    The post office? I personally don't use it much....I rather use the tabaccheria or internet banking.
    Dialects????
    IT'S TRUE!!!!!
    🖖🖖👋👋😘😘

  • @danielebesozzi3764
    @danielebesozzi3764 2 роки тому

    eating at 9pm is more of a southern thing, in the north we usually have dinner at 7:30/8pm

  • @joncaradies3155
    @joncaradies3155 2 роки тому +4

    Ha !!! Growing up in the US , din-din was 6:00 sharp .... Just in time for 'I Love Lucy' ....... :D

    • @TheQKatie
      @TheQKatie  2 роки тому +1

      Did you call it “supper,” too?

  • @Noname-xi7xi
    @Noname-xi7xi 2 роки тому +4

    Nice video, funny as usual and easy to watch but remember, Italy is very different from North to South, as you probably have already experienced.
    What works down South often doesn't apply up North and viceversa, like meals for example.
    We generally eat late without doubt but in Northern Italy you will see that they tend to have similar habits close to yours, unless you're in a big city which has a rythmn of its own. Usually were it's cold they tend to eat and go to bed earlier, as opposed to Central and Southern Italy were, due to the extremely hot temperatures, things start when it's cooler and more pleasant to move around.
    You would be suprised how different your life would be if you lived in Central or Northern Italy, as much as it is when you change from a small town to a big city and viceversa.
    Keep up the good stuff but try and visit, whenever you get a chance, also other parts of Italy which are so beautifull and rich of culture and excellent food (and wine) as well.

  • @Ace_Hunter_lives
    @Ace_Hunter_lives 2 роки тому

    I basically get a receipt with everything I buy in America. Even if I buy a lemon from the beer store near me they'll offer a receipt. In terms of dinner, I think in the U.S. it depends on where you live and if you have kids. I'm in my forties and grew up in a small town in the South where dinner was around 6:30, but I've spent most of my adult life in large metro areas. The toughest reservations to get are usually 7:30-9:00. Parents and older people tend to eat earlier. Everyone else eats later, though it also depends on how early you get up. Someone who gets up at 6:00 is not likely to be enjoying a large meal at 9:30. In DC, the restaurants are packed (or they were before COVID) from 7:30-9:30 and people often gather and socialize in small parks and and public spaces (at least where it's safe) in the evening if the weather is nice. That latter part is important - maybe more people are out strolling around at night because you live in a Southern area with hotter daytime temps and more pleasant night time temps? People enjoy being outside at night in DC when the weather is nice, but when it's in the thirties with wind chills...not so much. My guess is you don't get months of night time temps in the twenties and thirties where you live in Italy. I guess I'm surprised some of these things were shocking to you seeing as how y'all have said you lived in Brooklyn for a while. Several of these things are perfectly normal in the DC region. As far as WhatsApp, it's just easier to use the native text apps on phones, but it is a very popular app among younger people in the U.S..

  • @Mari-fv4wm
    @Mari-fv4wm 2 роки тому +4

    In the south of Italy is normal having thelate dinner (about 9:30-10 pm) in the north is totally different: for example 7 pm is the regular hour for the dinner. My family have dinner at 18:30 in Veneto (my mom go to bed very soon, probably is not healthy a so earlier dinner)

    • @peggyclio1199
      @peggyclio1199 2 роки тому +1

      It's absoluty healthier!

    • @busterval
      @busterval 2 роки тому +1

      Vivo da sempre al nord: tra le mie conoscenze alle 18.30 cena solo qualche anziano. l'ora normale per la cena è tra le 19.45 e le 20.30, alle 19 i ristoranti sono vuoti.

    • @Mari-fv4wm
      @Mari-fv4wm 2 роки тому

      @@busterval Io Verona. Funziona cosi dalle nostre parti. Se sei di Milano dove vivo da qualche anno si, li si inizia dopo.

    • @busterval
      @busterval 2 роки тому

      @@Mari-fv4wm In Veneto anch'io, qui non conosco nessuno che ceni prima delle 19.30, ma l'orario più comune sono le 20

    • @Mari-fv4wm
      @Mari-fv4wm 2 роки тому

      @@busterval boh io non conosco nessuno con i tuoi orari :) zero.

  • @lola.lola11.11
    @lola.lola11.11 2 роки тому

    6:05 Same thing in Brazil LOL

  • @alessandropirrone7772
    @alessandropirrone7772 2 роки тому +5

    Ciao cara! Volevo dirti una cosa sui dialetti e sugli Italiani che sono emigrati in tutto il mondo , Usa inclusi.
    Quando la maggior parte degli Italiani hanno lasciato l'Italia (fino a 50 anni fa) quasi tutti parlavano SOLO il dialetto e non l'italiano,perciò all'estero tra Italiani , che venivano ognuno da una zona diversa con un dialetto diverso, non era semplice comunicare. È per questo che nei Paesi che hanno accolto gli Italiani non si è mai sviluppato e trasmesso alle generazioni successive l'Italiano comr lingua, ma al massimo , ad esempio in Usa, un mix tra inglese e dialetti. Questo è successo nonostante in alcune zone soprattutto in Argentina e Brasile gli Italiani erano così tanti da essere la maggioranza. Insomma per questi italiani la lingua comune non era l'italiano, ma la lingua straniera che trovavano in quel Paese (inglese, spagnolo o portoghese ).
    Ciao e complimenti per i tuoi video.

    • @mgz9999
      @mgz9999 2 роки тому +2

      Commento spettacolare, grazie per questo aneddoto

  • @vietnamvet4533
    @vietnamvet4533 2 роки тому

    Many great things about my visit to Italy the home of my grandparents. One only language you hear people speaking with the except of English for the most part is well Italian. And the amount of people with cell phones glued to their hands and ears is so much lower then in the US of A.

  • @lorenzoperini-natali3697
    @lorenzoperini-natali3697 2 роки тому +2

    (southern) Italy culture shocks

    • @HeWoNe
      @HeWoNe 2 роки тому

      North Italy is not Italy.
      It's Gaul.

  • @maxxmwindsor
    @maxxmwindsor 2 роки тому

    the dog poo surprised me i was on high alert after a day or two. I was in a small town where my cousin took the time to show us around. In an one hour tour she managed to step in the same poo twice.

  • @festyguy7405
    @festyguy7405 2 роки тому

    Wow; Elderly Americans would LOVE the whole receipt thing!

    • @visitingfromsantafe1329
      @visitingfromsantafe1329 4 місяці тому

      Don't we pretty much get receipts for everything in the U.S.? I'm trying to think where I wouldn't get a receipt.

  • @sofasogood7164
    @sofasogood7164 2 роки тому +3

    The most shocking thing for me is that, while being italian, ALL of the things you mentioned still annoy me (especially late meals, looong mornings spent at the Poste and the fact that many feel entitled to give you their two cents on your physical appearance) and at this point I doubt I'll ever get used to them. That is one of the reasons (together with the near-to-zero birth rate) I pesonally think we seriously need many "new" italians like you guys to start looking at things from a different perspective than just our own. KIQ 💪😉😊

    • @francescoboselli6033
      @francescoboselli6033 2 роки тому +1

      Diciamo che dipende anche dai singoli uffici. Ad esempio in quella del mio paese sono così lenti, che alcuni preferiscono andare a quello del paese accanto 😂.
      Inoltre se puoi ti consiglio di prenotare il tuo posto online, così non devi fare code

  • @sabinorinelli3124
    @sabinorinelli3124 2 роки тому

    Sei davvero adorabile... Alcune delle cose elencate sono molto legate al clima ed una certa flemma del Sud Italia. Io vivo al nord e la cosa può essere vissuta "diversa-mente". Per molti aspetti e ragioni, io adoro il Sud italiano

  • @MauroVictorBarros
    @MauroVictorBarros 2 роки тому

    I can say most of the things you mentioned about Italy apply to Brazil.

  • @andrearegis1356
    @andrearegis1356 2 роки тому +1

    Mio padre era del Canavese , vicino ad Ivrea (lavorava all'Olivetti infatti) e mia mamma é Torinese ( i suoi nonni da parte materna erano immigrati Pugliesi di San Severo, FG). Il canaveseno é abbastanza diverso dal Torinese standard. Io parlo bene piemontese (piú Torinese perché il canaveseno di mio padre non sono riuscito ad impararlo bene) e ora vivo in montagna. Mi piace parlare in dialetto.. 🙂
    My parents always spoke in dialect to each other but with me and my sister in Italian, not without mistakes and a strong piedmotese phonetic accent and cadence which is by the way similar to French.

  • @TheCotton.Candyy
    @TheCotton.Candyy Рік тому

    I live in puglia too :D

  • @iuciubbb
    @iuciubbb 2 роки тому +6

    Cara Katie, posso consigliarti un piccolo approfondimento sui dialetti pugliesi fatto da Pino Campagna (comico di Cerignola).
    Oltre che l'ascolto di "American Puglia" dell'immortale tranese Leone di Lernia.
    Fatto curioso: se cerco il titolo del brano, compare uno dei tuoi video al quarto posto tra i risultati.

  • @gabrieleriva_bboykappside
    @gabrieleriva_bboykappside Рік тому

    I can confirm, strongly pronounced dialects or the ones that are far away from you sound incomprehensible. I live in Milan which is northern Italy and I can understand the milanese dialect pretty well, but dialectal forms such apulian, campanian, Sicilian and sardinian dialects just sound like other languages.
    Plus I think it's a kind of "old generation pride thing" like my grandpa or generally speaking people his age said something in milanese dialect and while I understand them, they ask me if I speak any of that and my answer is always "sadly no, but I'm willing to".
    The understanding thing also applies with nearby dialects. A strong Bergamo accent for example. This city is near Milan compared to many more popular centers and that one sounds incomprehensible as well, typically used by construction workers and farmers (I experienced myself being about to join the farming working world)

  • @thun8015
    @thun8015 2 роки тому

    nice video. i formative. few points…asking personal infos such as age and telling you that you got fat or thin doesn’t only apply in Italy..a world traveller would know. late dinners are common in Europe. Receipts make sense. good luck and thanks for this videos.

  • @witchedwiz
    @witchedwiz 2 роки тому

    I recognized my city, Trani, from the post office 😅

  • @darthvader5802
    @darthvader5802 2 роки тому

    You must try taralli, panzerotti (aka calzoni=big socks) and focaccia (a kind of "bread" with tomatoes and salt)

    • @TheQKatie
      @TheQKatie  2 роки тому

      I love all of those things!

    • @darthvader5802
      @darthvader5802 2 роки тому

      @@TheQKatiecongrats, you have passed your citizenship test

  • @christophereverest4547
    @christophereverest4547 2 роки тому +12

    Excellent video. Thanks. Keeping up with the trend set by yourself and followed by CC below, I'm an Englishman down here in Palermo who is 57, 5' 10" and 175! Of course, in England my weight would be given as 12 stones and 7lbs, just to make things even more weird! Sounds medieval - "stones"?!
    As for the constant use of receipts in Italy, I believe the exchange is required as a matter of Italian Law. That is to say, retailers are legally obliged to issue receipts to purchasers and (this is the quirky point, no doubt) the latter are legally obliged to take possession of them. You could get into trouble as a purchaser if you ignore it. Believe this is connected to the Italian preference for cash over cards and is designed to help the authorities combat tax evasion.
    Anyway, all really good observations! It's 8:13pm and my Italian wife and family are calling me to dinner!!!

    • @TheQKatie
      @TheQKatie  2 роки тому +2

      Hahahah. I never understood stone when we lived in London!

    • @dlevi67
      @dlevi67 2 роки тому

      @@TheQKatie 1 st = 14 lbs
      Not the most convenient multiple, but... then not much of USC or Imperial is about convenience in the modern world where we are all taught decimal arithmetic.

    • @Hastdupech8509
      @Hastdupech8509 2 роки тому +1

      Well tax evasion here is a hot topic so it is compulsory to give receipts so that they can track how much a shop makes in a year and determine the right amount of taxes they should pay. They could declare to earn much less than what they truly do and consequently pay much less than they should. I hope Draghi's government will tackle this down, but you know, it's an issue that involves also the high taxes that could suffocate many businesses and consequently create a fertile ground for social unrest. Kinda like the mafia issue, the State could cancel it but it is a much more complex issue and therefore nobody wants to take risks just for the Southern poor half of the country that ia associated to the "destined to decline anyway" idea by many Italians since like 150 years.

    • @tlacorp.3813
      @tlacorp.3813 2 роки тому

      The Italian dinner time is 8 to 9 pm. Keeps you healthy ...

  • @sallyscrive
    @sallyscrive 2 роки тому +2

    Hi Katie ^_^
    As an italian, I'm shocked too :P I don't like going to the post office either, so I'm with Connor about that :D Fortunately, I have an online banking account and didn't need to go there at all in the last 2 years. Also, I prefer couriers :P
    As for dinner, I eat at 7-7.30 PM tops. I prefer eating early and having more time in the evening to do things I like. And going to bed early too. The rare occasions I have an aperitivo, or "apericena", I always skip dinner.
    I also have a dog and I'm really pissed about the poops too :( Before the pandemic, every day to work was like walking in a minefield :O
    The comments about weight really bother me 'cause everyone seems to be obsessed with appearance.
    I hope that, besides the shocks, you're loving living here ^_^
    Thanks for the video!

    • @TheQKatie
      @TheQKatie  2 роки тому +1

      oh don't get me wrong -- I absolutely LOVE it here. Thanks for watching!

    • @gloriastucchi444
      @gloriastucchi444 2 роки тому

      Che significa an as italian????? Con quel termine dispreggiativo rivolto alla mia terra? Ti faccio notare che la civiltà al mondo ve l'hanno insegnata i romani

    • @sallyscrive
      @sallyscrive 2 роки тому

      @@gloriastucchi444 as an italian nel senso che sono italiana. la mia era ironia 😉 tutta questa acidità di venerdì sera? 🤣

  • @nd493
    @nd493 2 роки тому +1

    North Italy was conquered by Lombards (Germans). That explains some differences between Italy's north and beautiful south.

    • @galgar5660
      @galgar5660 2 роки тому

      Southern Italy too. As a matter of fact southern Italy stayed under Lombards rule much longer than the north

  • @babs546
    @babs546 2 роки тому +1

    Late dinners only happen in the south of Italy.

  • @johnnynaselloyoga
    @johnnynaselloyoga 2 роки тому +1

    I truly prefer to eat at home at 6p then eat out at 9 nearly any day of the week!
    Also, sometimes I contemplate whether it might be worth it to miss out on a message entirely instead of listening to a voice message 😆

    • @TheQKatie
      @TheQKatie  2 роки тому +1

      hahahaha there's gotta be a universal term for "voice memo anxiety"...

  • @marcellobalestieri
    @marcellobalestieri 2 роки тому

    1) That's the Slow food logo. It's a cusine guide. The name is opposed to fast food, it promotes exquisite food.
    2) They are not voice memos they are voice messages.

  • @massimopanza8582
    @massimopanza8582 2 роки тому

    min. 08:04 - When it comes to cheeky childish intrusive curiosity vs taboo subjects, I guess the Italian equivalent of "don't ask me my age" would be "please, stop with your police survey on my bank account". I suppose the different degree of tact depends on what is commonly accepted as "normal" in a culture where curiosity has no special limits apart from those required when you don't want to belittle people on the basis of their low income/lacking affluence at large and a culture full of limits and self-constraint but the good taste limits Italians (like everyone else here in Europe) tend to feel as such...

  • @403000
    @403000 2 роки тому +2

    Some of the things you noticed are related to South Italy. In North par, time of dinner, dog poos and others habits are less or different. But I think you already know that....

  • @airlegs
    @airlegs 2 роки тому +2

    I so very much enjoy your channel! I very much love Italy too. A lot of your experiences mirror what I experienced as an expat in Brazil for 17 years. The weight thing, omg, people who I didn’t know very well and also those I did would always comment that I was magrinha (skinny) or that I engordou (put on weight/got fat-literally 5 kilos). It’s a sensitive subject and really annoyed me! Yes, post office same thing. WhatsApp is my favorite and I think it’s so easy and free I had to twist arms for my American friends or family to get on board and many never did. Long voice messages I am totally guilty of. Love what you’re doing and your beautiful energy. Girl just wait for when you get pregnant there. You have no idea how many people will get involved in your pregnancy and baby/child care OPINIONS. I had old ladies scolding me on the street for not putting socks on my baby in his stroller in 35c weather. Annoying as F. Be healthy and be safe! Love you! 😘🌻🥂

    • @TheQKatie
      @TheQKatie  2 роки тому

      Wow, Brazil for 17 years! Life sure is an adventure!

  • @losnupo2894
    @losnupo2894 2 роки тому

    In your first video, one cultural shock was our loudness.
    After one year here, it looks that your voice volume is louder 😂

  • @Whippets
    @Whippets 2 роки тому +9

    I think 1 and 2 aren't much of an issue in Central/Northern Italy.

    • @Hastdupech8509
      @Hastdupech8509 2 роки тому

      2 is valid for Northern Italy, non è che siano così funzionali

    • @Whippets
      @Whippets 2 роки тому +1

      @@Hastdupech8509 Perhaps, everyone's experiences won't be the same.

  • @jfr7160
    @jfr7160 2 роки тому

    Slowing things down… yyyaaassss! Late dinners every night at my house!

    • @TheQKatie
      @TheQKatie  2 роки тому +1

      cuz you're the coolest :)

  • @TheDelem
    @TheDelem 2 роки тому

    a discovery for you.... before to go to the Posta office you can have an appointment by internet page .... Poste page give you a QRcode to enter into the machine when you arrive there... really quick and smart...most fun when you arrive to the office and comunicate to people that you have an appointment !!🤣 no queue for you

    • @TheQKatie
      @TheQKatie  2 роки тому

      I'll need to try that -- although I've noticed people with appointments end up waiting just as long sometimes 🤷‍♀️ Grazie mille!

  • @natpaler883
    @natpaler883 Рік тому

    I ❤ Italia but post offices omg, they do everything but delivering post😅 You sent postcard directly from the post office and it never gets delivered. Happened three years in a row from South Italy.

  • @desertinutah
    @desertinutah 12 днів тому

    I had to laugh when late nights with families was mentioned. I live in St. George, Utah. There's a popular postcard that is absolutely black. The caption? Utah after 9:00 pm.

  • @ferruccioveglio8090
    @ferruccioveglio8090 2 роки тому

    "Late dinner" is tipical of the south, in the north is very different.

  • @flaviospadavecchia5126
    @flaviospadavecchia5126 2 роки тому

    You can use an app to get in line at the post office before the others hehehe

  • @meggy75
    @meggy75 2 роки тому +1

    Sorry love in the North side of Italy is less common to find dog's poo in the street

  • @jade__1903
    @jade__1903 2 роки тому

    Some of these are also stereotypes of southern Italy, in north Italy things are a little bit different

  • @denisew3917
    @denisew3917 2 роки тому +1

    You summed those culture shocks perfectly. I can attest to the, “what age are you question”. Is this asked in any other European countries?

    • @TheQKatie
      @TheQKatie  2 роки тому +2

      😅😅😅🤷‍♀️

    • @occhialcielo.Occhialcielo
      @occhialcielo.Occhialcielo 2 роки тому +3

      Hi, my husband is french (I'm Italian), and it happens that in France people ask about the age. In my experience it is the same kind of question that in Italy: a way to understand better in which step of your life you are, because nearly everybody passes through the same periods (school, university or work, living alone, then got engaged, then the children, and so on..) and people tend to consider weird if someone is not inside these steps! It's a stupid formal convention

  • @BellaVita100
    @BellaVita100 2 роки тому +2

    One of my favorites is they will openly ask you how much money you make😆The first time I was surprised but now just laugh it off.

    • @elledix3575
      @elledix3575 2 роки тому +1

      I experienced this many times too. I still to this day don't know if they also do this with 'compaesani' or just with expats. I've always wondered if they ask because they want to know if as an immigrant you are working on the cheap/black.

    • @BellaVita100
      @BellaVita100 2 роки тому

      @@elledix3575 possibly so ...but even when they know Im a fireman in America they ask how much I make. They always thank it's a lot until I explain the cost of housing,living,etc.
      Overall some of the kindest,greatest people in the world.

  • @laborsina
    @laborsina 2 роки тому

    Love these videos :) Only, I wouldn't say this is what Italians do.My experience, growing up in Tuscany, is pretty different. My parents and my friends, would normally have dinner between 7.30 and 8.30. People go around with a poo bag for their dog and I have never seen anyone with a bottle of water, ready to dilute their dog's wee :D .. life, also, is not that slow (unfortunately). Re the voice memos on WhatsApp, you are RIGHT!!! What is it with people leaving all those voice messages? I am an Italian living abroad (Ireland), so I'm not used to that.