10 French culture shock moments | American living in France

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Oui In France

Oui In France

Күн бұрын

Let's talk about France culture shock! It's real! Oxford languages describes culture shock as “the feeling of disorientation experienced by someone when they are suddenly subjected to an unfamiliar culture, way of life, or set of attitudes.” Every country around the world has its own way of doing things and France is no exception. These cultural differences in France might make you fall in love with France, laugh, cry, throw your hands up in exasperation or leave you scratching your head. It’s all part of the process as you discover a new culture and adapt. Many might also apply to other areas in Europe, not just France. Let's get into the 10 biggest culture shocks I discovered after moving to France and living abroad for years now. Let me know if you've noticed any of them while traveling in France!
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Salut! I'm Diane, the American behind the living abroad lifestyle blog Oui In France. My channel's focus is "Everyday French life and beyond," so let me know what you want to see! I make videos on French culture topics, food, travel, language, and give you my thoughts about what it's like living in France as an American in the Loire Valley. Thanks for being here and if you enjoy this sort of thing, please share with friends and subscribe!
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#frenchculture #cultureshock #americaninfrance
Pharmacy sign: Shutterstock.com/Lebendigger
Pharmacy exterior: Shutterstock.com/lexandros Michailidis
Pharmacy shelf: Shutterstock.com/Rachel Moon
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French tabac: Shutterstock.com/Sibuet Benjamin
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Dessange: Shutterstock.com/sylv1rob1
Cheek kiss: Shutterstock.com/Undrey
Family eating: Shutterstock.com/Monkey Business Images
Public urination: Shutterstock.com/ Fabio Mayo Belligotti
Public urination 2: Shutterstock.com/Andrey_Popov
Vet sign: Shutterstock.com/gallofilm
Rabbit meat: Shutterstock.com/Philip Armitage
Cow tongue: Shutterstock.com/Studiobravo_kiev
Meat counter: Shutterstock.com/Pack-Shot
Airline credit cards: Shutterstock.com/Jeramey Lende
Card reader: Shutterstock.com/Don Pablo
Shopping couple: Shutterstock.com/ESB Professional
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French check: Shutterstock.com/GERARD BOTTINO

Пікірлер: 1 700
@OuiInFrance
@OuiInFrance 3 жыл бұрын
Salut, tout le monde! Greetings from lockdown. I hope you enjoy this video all about French culture shock. If so, let me know if you'd like a Part 2 and what parts about French culture shocked or surprised you upon visiting France! Merci. ;-)
@jeandrumm5025
@jeandrumm5025 3 жыл бұрын
Yes, definitely a part 2 would be great!
@dudehere1981
@dudehere1981 3 жыл бұрын
Maybe cars and driving in France. I felt French driving was scary and they were very impatient. Perhaps not having to tip. Maybe dating too.
@OuiInFrance
@OuiInFrance 3 жыл бұрын
@@dudehere1981 I made the driving video this summer ;-)
@Nemesis64710
@Nemesis64710 2 жыл бұрын
i may have found why some people pee in public : there is no public toilets in france (or really few).
@megannurse4034
@megannurse4034 2 жыл бұрын
What surprised me A LOTTT was spitting on the streets! Eww!!! At least this was quite prevalent a few years ago when I lived there XD
@thedavidguy01
@thedavidguy01 3 жыл бұрын
Last year when I was in France I dropped in to a pharmacy to buy some sunscreen expecting it to take 3 minutes and ended up in 15 minute conversation with the pharmacist about my skin type before being allowed to choose a product. It was interesting, and I was impressed by how seriously the pharmacist took even the simplest things.
@ThePixel1983
@ThePixel1983 3 жыл бұрын
Or you can buy some at the supermarket. 😁
@caroll6261
@caroll6261 3 жыл бұрын
Less waste, so actually the French people are going green in this area. Viva la France👍👍
@Siegdrifa
@Siegdrifa 2 жыл бұрын
Every supermarkets sell sunscreens, and i'm pretty sur it's cheaper too (and not so great), but the pharmacy will sell you quality product for the use you need.
@thedavidguy01
@thedavidguy01 2 жыл бұрын
@@Siegdrifa The supermarket I went to did not have the kind of sunscreen I needed. The selection was very small compared to the pharmacy.
@Siegdrifa
@Siegdrifa 2 жыл бұрын
@@thedavidguy01 i don't doubt that, the product in supermarket is often mainstream, and not as specialised as pharmacy.
@lyneka
@lyneka 3 жыл бұрын
As a French who has lived in different parts of France, I've NEVER seen a restaurant closed until 8pm... usually they open at 7pm.
@pjschmid2251
@pjschmid2251 3 жыл бұрын
For an American it would still feel odd. Restaurants typically are open for dinner by 6PM at the latest and often earlier. Having dinner at 8 PM would be considered quite late and anything after that downright continental LOL.
@lohphat
@lohphat 3 жыл бұрын
I could understand that in as pain or Italy as they tend to eat later, but tourists aren’t used to eating a meal too late. So it depends if we’re talking a dense urban area or not.
@hztm
@hztm 3 жыл бұрын
If 8pm is late, don't go to Spain, it's 10pm 😁
@pjschmid2251
@pjschmid2251 3 жыл бұрын
@@hztm oh I visited Spain a number of years ago and I was blown away by how late those people stayed up. I think it was the midst of some sort of festival and I’d be getting up in the morning and people were just rolling in from the night’s festivities it was insane. I was traveling alone so I tend to not eat sit down dinners so much as pick up food that I can eat in a park or have a picnic with on my own. I just feel awkward sitting alone in a restaurant. Given their nocturnal ways that’s probably best. Sleep deprivation must be a national epidemic.
@valerieneal2747
@valerieneal2747 3 жыл бұрын
@@pjschmid2251 Since I'm a night owl....Spain would be perfect for me😆
@IRACEMABABU
@IRACEMABABU 2 жыл бұрын
French butchers are highly skilled and trained. They can cut an prepare in numerous ways each small different part and/or muscle of all the animals they work on. It's an old tradition. Parisian butchers always been ones of the best butchers worldwide. It takes many years to learn properly french butchery and it's directly linked to french gastronomy, meat cooking being 90% of french best recipes. It's a high level art when done properly.
@francinesicard464
@francinesicard464 2 жыл бұрын
I fully agree with you. And the quality of meat is really excellent. I have travelled extensively in Europe and only in GB and F did I find top quality meat.
@antoinemozart243
@antoinemozart243 Жыл бұрын
@@francinesicard464 you meant in UK !
@DorianeRoars
@DorianeRoars 11 ай бұрын
You said it. Butchery is an art, Parisian butchers used to have their own private language (le Louchebem), which was mostly ununderstandable if you haven't been trained by a Parisian Butcher.
@jlucdalmasso
@jlucdalmasso 3 жыл бұрын
Keep in mind that in France it is not as acceptable as in the US to enter a restaurant or a bar just to use the bathroom. There is a great probability that the owner/waiter may tell you that the bathroom is only for the clients.
@mmarques2736
@mmarques2736 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, Jean-Luc, that's no excuse for this kind of uncivilized behaviour. In Paris, you have public toilets everywhere. You even have an smartphone app to tell you where they are. And still we see people peeing everywhere and don't care to shame them. You go to any other European capital and albeit they have the same problem you've mentioned - can't use the restaurant / bar toilet - you don't see this public pissing culture happening anywhere else in the civilized world. And you don't have all those freely acessible public toilets everywhere around other cities. Just to finish - I have never ever been denied access to a toilet in a bar or restaurant anywhere in France, but it happened to me in Graz, Austria, where I have never seen anyone peeing on the street. We have to acknowledge there is a problem of lack of civility in France, and that this is one of the several ways it manifests itself, because if we don't, if we keep looking for excuses the way you are doing right now (and pretty much everyone does about the biggest problems in France), this will never change, and we will still be seen as the gross disgusting neighbours by our European fellows...
@oakhauser
@oakhauser 3 жыл бұрын
Yes, right, but also, it is not only in France that most of the restaurants wouldn't let men pissing in their toilets without consuming, at least in every western european country
@HF06
@HF06 3 жыл бұрын
Just enter in a bar without saying anything, I do it all the time when I'm in France, they don't even spot you.
@johnrambo5407
@johnrambo5407 3 жыл бұрын
I don’t even know that france have per culture maybe because you stay too much in paris 😂
@ixlnxs
@ixlnxs 3 жыл бұрын
@@mmarques2736 Curb your assumptions. Jean-Luc didn't say it was an excuse. That's all in your head. Perhaps you are not happy in France anymore. Portugal welcomes melancholy misers. ;)
@MG-nr9dt
@MG-nr9dt 2 жыл бұрын
As a french vet thank you very much for that compliment about us :) it is true that it's much cheaper than in the US or even UK, but not always for the best: vets in France are not very well paid (in general) for the work they do. They have lots of pressure especially concerning shifts, and sadly many young vets give up on their job, and it is currently very difficult for employers to find new vets for their clinics. And people are not ready to pay a little more, mainly because they have no idea of the price of medical care (due to our healthcare system where you do not receive the bills). But clients like you make us think we chose the right job anyway :)
@OuiInFrance
@OuiInFrance 2 жыл бұрын
I appreciate you taking the time to comment and the work that you do. I know how demanding your patients are (and their owners!) and I would absolutely pay more because you do such important work. French vets have been outstanding and my dog has received amazing care, both from her regular vet and in an emergency situations. I always buy Christmas gifts for the staff at my vet practice because they mean everything to me and it's the least I can do. xx
@MG-nr9dt
@MG-nr9dt 2 жыл бұрын
@@OuiInFrance aww thank you so much! Not all vets are perfect but most of us try their best and we get rewarded with people like you 😊
@mariewelsh1487
@mariewelsh1487 2 жыл бұрын
Sounds hard
@bayonaverdolaga2822
@bayonaverdolaga2822 Жыл бұрын
France culture plus à vous tous des bisous et à bientôt bises de nous faire une demande à la recherche d'un emploi je ne sais si c'est possible pour vous deux je suis à vous deux pour vous deux je vous remercie pour vous deux je vous remercie pour vous deux pour le cas échéant de la recherche d'une personne intéressée immo à bientôt bises de me confirmer que vous allez bien je ne sais pas trop de la semaine prochaine pour votre réponse rapide je ne sais pas trop tard pour vous avez reçu une réponse rapide et de la maison de la recherche d'une entreprise qui me confirmer que vous allez recevoir un mail pour vous deux je suis à la maison de retraite et à bientôt
@misterthemad994
@misterthemad994 11 ай бұрын
​@@MG-nr9dt gaffe avec le terme "vet" en anglais, c'est aussi une abréviation très courante du mot "veteran" (pas besoin de le traduire je pense), à utiliser avec "prudence" pour éviter tout quiproquo.
@RobertSmith-up9rz
@RobertSmith-up9rz 2 жыл бұрын
French pharmacies are hands down the best in the world. Amazing products and amazing support from the pharmacists. Only problem is that (old) people love them so much that they even kind of hang out there and make waiting times often quite long. Bonus point: it always smells amazing in them.
@jeannecaribou
@jeannecaribou 2 жыл бұрын
So true about the elderly chitchating for ours, the pharmacist usualy even knows their name.
@alexthomson7465
@alexthomson7465 Жыл бұрын
True but eye wateringly expensive
@Imaginexall
@Imaginexall Жыл бұрын
But we usually don't say a thing because most of the time those old people are lonely and the pharmacist might be their only real conversation of the day
@benoisette9418
@benoisette9418 Жыл бұрын
@@alexthomson7465 dude we have free healthcare, unless you want some aspirin or vitamins you just have to pay the doctor 20€ and the meds are free
@mikesmith8313
@mikesmith8313 Жыл бұрын
If you're a Pharmacist you may have to smell piss from disturbed customers, like I had to for a 1/2 hour late one night in the UK. Spare a thought for the Pharmacist.
@armadefuego5907
@armadefuego5907 3 жыл бұрын
I am a veterinarian. I graduated in 1976. I went home to practice in my home area. It was rural, economical depressed, and already staffed with enough veterinarians. I made so little money; I had no employees. After 11 years, I couldn't take it anymore. I became a USDA Public Health Veterinarian supervising meat inspection. It was gainful employment. I finally had the money to enjoy life and retire. In the US, I have heard veterinary student debit on average is 3 years of gross income. It is just another example of how the education system is victimizing young people.
@nathanangelus
@nathanangelus 3 жыл бұрын
To all foreigners, please notice the large majority of French finds men peeing on the pavement or on buildings (it's tolerated in the grass on the side of a road) absolutely disgusting and gross ! ^^
@yallarelosers
@yallarelosers 3 жыл бұрын
C vrai 😅
@mmarques2736
@mmarques2736 3 жыл бұрын
Sure, but no one does nothing about it, no one shames the one pissing, we parisians just got so used to see it that we don't care anymore, so this culture ain't going away anytime soon, therefore, don't expect foreigners to feel less disgusted by us just because the majority (I doubt we have the right to claim it is a large majority, no way to quantify it but surely not the case in Paris or Marseille) condemn it...The true is that you will walk in any other European capital, and you won't see such behaviour passing without being shamed. We have a serious problem of civility in France.
@yumyummoany
@yumyummoany 3 жыл бұрын
I have spent many months in France in many different areas and I have never seen this!
@mmarques2736
@mmarques2736 3 жыл бұрын
@@yumyummoany You surely didn't spend a lot of time in Paris...
@yumyummoany
@yumyummoany 3 жыл бұрын
@@mmarques2736 you are right.
@angiebee598
@angiebee598 3 жыл бұрын
Here in California, where marijuana is legal, the stores all display a similar green cross like the French pharmacies. I wonder if any French tourists have experienced culture shock by walking in to a cannabis dispensary thinking it was a pharmacy?
@bangchanswebbrowsinghistor5145
@bangchanswebbrowsinghistor5145 3 жыл бұрын
As a French person, I indeed confused a cannabis dispensary for a pharmacy once, before quickly realizing that I wasn't going to find any paracetamol in there!
@emjayay
@emjayay 3 жыл бұрын
@@bangchanswebbrowsinghistor5145 We call it Tylenol or generically acetaminophen in the US, and you can buy it at any supermarket or other kind of smaller food store, or at any drug store. Like in the UK.
@alexae1367
@alexae1367 3 жыл бұрын
@@bangchanswebbrowsinghistor5145 🤣🤣 sorry
@dara_1989
@dara_1989 3 жыл бұрын
yup .. walk in , buy maruana and a gun 😂😂💀
@lyneyra
@lyneyra 3 жыл бұрын
@@bangchanswebbrowsinghistor5145 Well, to be faiiir, that could also lessen pain quite well. With also some stunn...ehm stoning side effects x)
@SandraPenelope1000
@SandraPenelope1000 2 жыл бұрын
I'm always interested to hear about French culture shock. I was born British and have been living in France since 1983. I also have French nationality since 1992 and consider myself more French than British.
@christianjambou8208
@christianjambou8208 3 жыл бұрын
The pharmacist will also inspect any mushrooms that you are not sure off.
@sergeblanc799
@sergeblanc799 3 жыл бұрын
Indeed, either you found the mushrooms in the forest as well as on your feet!
@christianjambou8208
@christianjambou8208 3 жыл бұрын
@@sergeblanc799 Sorry I prefer mine on cheese!
@gordondavies7773
@gordondavies7773 3 жыл бұрын
It is part of the training of French pharmacists to learn to identify mushrooms. Prevents a lot of problems.
@gordondavies7773
@gordondavies7773 3 жыл бұрын
You can ask for advice in an Irish pharmacy as well.
@isabellelaval7294
@isabellelaval7294 3 жыл бұрын
They are also very kind about removing splinters and disinfecting the spot afterwards for free
@susanbartone1347
@susanbartone1347 3 жыл бұрын
You are extremely good at presenting new information in a very pleasant way! Thank you.
@OuiInFrance
@OuiInFrance 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you, so sweet of you to take the time to tell me that.
@luannboegle4247
@luannboegle4247 3 жыл бұрын
I love how you say that your dogs health is just as important as yours . I couldn’t agree more !
@ludoviclagouardette7020
@ludoviclagouardette7020 Жыл бұрын
I am French. At some point in my life I found myself with 3rd degree burns and the specialist that treated me in the hospital was actually a pharmacist that was specialized in treating burns
@margaretleboeuf6765
@margaretleboeuf6765 3 жыл бұрын
I was born and raised in Louisiana. My dad was French, and it's interesting seeing the similarities in French culture. Thank you for sharing this!
@sierrachoco5271
@sierrachoco5271 3 жыл бұрын
Was your Dad French Canadian, big difference from European French?
@davidmorrill2943
@davidmorrill2943 3 жыл бұрын
French Canadians & Louisiana french are of French ancestry but parted company in the 1700's.
@johngore7744
@johngore7744 3 жыл бұрын
@@davidmorrill2943 yup I’m an English Quebec who speaks French too. The Cajuns were a miss pronunciation of Acadian who where kicked out of Acadia (Canada’s maritime region) by the British in the 1700s. They wound up in Louisiana
@johngore7744
@johngore7744 3 жыл бұрын
America never let the French keep their language. I’m glad in Quebec we’re protecting it (there’s 8,000,000 of them) it’s often turned into an English vs French here but being born in Montreal in 1961 and still here I’m pretty used to it and I try not to let it ‘ ruffle my feathers’ a lot of my friends who were English left long ago. Some of us stayed. Vive la difference.
@nikkil764
@nikkil764 3 жыл бұрын
Me too. I love visiting Nova Scotia and Paris. They are extremely different but then so is New Orleans. We do have a French attitude when it comes to our independent ways. My parents lived in France when they were young and totally loved it. The only part they didn’t love was being harassed by the Communists because they were American. But that may have been a function of the times. The other French people were just lovely.
@trojanlol
@trojanlol 3 жыл бұрын
Funny thing, we often call bank cards "carte de crédit" while they actually are "carte de débit" indeed
@cepahreinholt8710
@cepahreinholt8710 2 жыл бұрын
I call them "carte bleue"
@nikkiscott4341
@nikkiscott4341 2 жыл бұрын
Indeed. Many French in people come unstuck when they rent a car and cannot be pay the deposit as their card is a direct debit card and not a "credit" card. For that, you need a "deferred debit card", (carte à débit différé). To get that, your are likely to have to demonstrate a regular monthly income, otherwise the default card will be the direct debit card. On the subject of "credit cards", France is nowhere nearly into revolving credit facilities as in North America and the UK. Revolving permanent credit lines with cards to make payments do exist in France. They are horrendously expensive though. To the French, the idea of paying for ordinary shopping by credit is not so big culturally as in the US and the UK. The average amount of household debt in France compared to the US and the UK is a lot lower.
@jeanpierreragequit1726
@jeanpierreragequit1726 3 жыл бұрын
4:00. a french owner pharmarcie is a " pharmacien". He/she has to study 6 years long to get a diploma. U will get the best medicine advises even u have just to buy Advil or Paracetamol... the number is fixed by the french government no to have competition between them.
@plain2plain
@plain2plain 3 жыл бұрын
Same in Greece
@davidkasquare
@davidkasquare 3 жыл бұрын
Same in Finland as well
@fusadiluna
@fusadiluna 3 жыл бұрын
Same in Italy, everything you said
@mar-cin
@mar-cin 3 жыл бұрын
Same in Poland
@isabelmiguel2955
@isabelmiguel2955 3 жыл бұрын
Same in Portugal.
@stephen10.
@stephen10. 2 жыл бұрын
in a french pharmacy the owner has almost the same study than a doctor. They are very competent.
@skyblue3263
@skyblue3263 3 жыл бұрын
Everything that is said in this video perfectly applies also to Italy, like literally everything. Who knew France was so similar to Italy!!!
@simonaca468
@simonaca468 3 жыл бұрын
You can actually apply it to whole Europe.
@johnrambo5407
@johnrambo5407 3 жыл бұрын
Is there beckery everywhere in italy ?
@heliedecastanet1882
@heliedecastanet1882 3 жыл бұрын
@@johnrambo5407 Plutôt, oui. Vous n'y êtes jamais allé ? Il y a quelques petites différences avec la France, évidemment, mais on trouve énormément de boulangerie (panificcio, paneterria), qui fabriquent également tout ce qui est foccacia, etc ; bref, énormément de nourriture à base de pain, excellente, et qui fait que l'Italie a résisté à la malbouffe, contrairement à la France, qui compte en Europe le plus de Mc Donald's… Dommage pour nous :-)
@Goudlock
@Goudlock 3 жыл бұрын
@@heliedecastanet1882 You are still well up in the mcdo thing haha i think you are 5 in the thing with mcdo? aha
@saadetisildar2951
@saadetisildar2951 2 жыл бұрын
I’ve been to Italy so many times, (actually studied there) but I haven’t seen public urination as common as in France. Maybe once or twice late weekend nights some drunk men would relieve themselves behind a wall or something , but no..it’s not typical in Italy.
@floirlanda
@floirlanda 3 жыл бұрын
Hello, I am French and I have been living abroad for many years. I find your video very interesting as it gives the perspective of a non native French on France, and you say things that I didn’t really notice since it seems normal to me. In regards to peeing in the street, I don’t find it that common, but as mentioned above maybe I don’t notice anymore. What I can say is that in the other countries that I lived in (Spain, Ireland, Germany) or travelled to, I find it much easier to find public toilets “clean “ than in France.
@midlifeandnailingit6342
@midlifeandnailingit6342 3 жыл бұрын
To an American just seeing one person do this would be shocking. If our children are with us we would think they were in danger. I’m not exaggerating. We would get the heck out of there fast.. Maybe even call the police. 😂
@KP-vg3zn
@KP-vg3zn 3 жыл бұрын
@@midlifeandnailingit6342 It is illegal in every state.
@aymerickschneider7312
@aymerickschneider7312 3 жыл бұрын
@@KP-vg3zn Well, in theory, it's illegal in France too, plus, you'll only stumble upon this in big cities and almost exclusively in Paris + the surrounding areas.
@trorisk
@trorisk Жыл бұрын
I know that when I was a teenager and we spent our nights outside everyone peed in the street. Girls and boys.
@VS-yk3gu
@VS-yk3gu Жыл бұрын
Hi Florent, Wer do you live now - those 3 countries + France were the countries I have been looking @.. .Out of these 4 which one did you like the most??
@sylviec9843
@sylviec9843 3 жыл бұрын
I love your video. I was born in the USA but both my parents were born in Mexico and I see the cultural similarities between France and Mexico. I love the bakeries, pharmacies, late night meals and veterinary care in both countries. Unfortunately, I have to say that in Mexico, it is also common to see men urinating openly in public and I find it absolutely disgusting. When I visited Mexico I even saw men urinating on churches and other public buildings and monuments, which I thought was terribly disrespectful. I'm glad I did not see that in France.
@L.Spencer
@L.Spencer 9 ай бұрын
I lived in Mexico for many years and don't recall men urinating in public to be a common sight. See it more here in San Diego. Here, downtown smells like urine, but despite the huge homeless problem I think it's from all the dogs being walked.
@dereklambe
@dereklambe 3 жыл бұрын
The debit/credit card thing is common across much of Europe, not just France. Most people have credit cards, but use debit cards for daily small purchases.
@ThePixel1983
@ThePixel1983 3 жыл бұрын
Or rather, people have Visa/MasterCard, but they work as debit cards.
@ixlnxs
@ixlnxs 3 жыл бұрын
True. I know people from a billionaire family and most of them have only prepaid credit cards: the kind you top up with a few thousand to use on a faraway vacation and if you lose it, meh, no big deal. Debit cards for everything within the EU.
@carpelinguae9097
@carpelinguae9097 3 жыл бұрын
People have been using debit cards in France since the early 1990s for even McDonald's. I thought it was so odd (I am from Québec but studied and worked for 8 years in France) that people were using credit cards to buy BigMacs!!! But they were debit bank cards.
@flirtinggracefullplatypus8496
@flirtinggracefullplatypus8496 3 жыл бұрын
but something is getting lost in translation here coz carte de crédit and carte de débit are not exactly the same but they can both be delivered at your bank (and it's a paying service contrary to checks which are free and we are fighting really hard to keep them and all the advantages they offer) whereas "revolving" credit card(carte de crédit à crédit?) can be obtained at a credit agency (not banks). also some stores like fnac for exemple in link with some credit company let you have a "revolving" credit card to use with them.
@camicri4263
@camicri4263 3 жыл бұрын
Yes, much healthier to not strch more than you can handle.
@francoisederocher
@francoisederocher 2 жыл бұрын
Whenever I go back to France, I look forward to a trip to my local pharmacie: soft lights, soft music, delicious fragrance, fresh flowers on the desk, and the feeling you are in an elegant boutique, even if you are buying wart remover! Last time, the pharmacien was wearing black leather pants and red clogs. I wanted to give him a "bise"!
@lechatel
@lechatel 3 жыл бұрын
I am a Brit living in France....Calvados, Normandie....and I frequently see men peeing beside the road in broad daylight. In the UK men do pee outdoors but is generally under cover of darkness and behind a bush. lol I have had three occasions where workmen have actually been caught 'tackle out' peeing in our garden. The telephone man, water supply man, and an electrician. All they had to do was to ask to use the toilet....but no. They do not wash their hands and i remember the electrician who I'd almost walked into while he was peeing in a rosebush then proffered his had to shake when he left. I just looked at it, aghast. The one thing I bless Covid for is the end of feeling pressured to shake hands with random people.
@ybreton6593
@ybreton6593 3 жыл бұрын
A ces français , ils ont tous les défauts ,! les britanniques sont parfaits ?sauf , quand ils sont en vacances en France ou Espagne ; ils boivent comme des trous , pissent n'importes insultes les forces de l'ordres ou la Guardia civil , ont des comportements , qu'ils n'auraient jamais sur leurs îles
@vavabeille
@vavabeille 3 жыл бұрын
A French living in France, and seriously, I've never seen this in my life, never heard about anyone experiencing it or doing it. I don't know if you think this is a cultural thing, but it definitely isn't. It is gross, and literally everyone thinks this way in France. I hope I brought you a little relief regarding the mental status of the average French lmao. Stay safe.
@aviyahchaverim9388
@aviyahchaverim9388 2 ай бұрын
I think that's disgusting, sorry but there it is
@kartingman5961
@kartingman5961 2 жыл бұрын
I just discover your channel and I love the fact that you explain how things work in France *and* how things work in USA for us French viewers as well
@dandrespruill1165
@dandrespruill1165 2 жыл бұрын
If France is known for something, then it has to be the bakery (food). It is a great attraction and african-american people enjoy this. You need to also need to check out the cafe and the French people are so outgoing.
@martinabsolom2231
@martinabsolom2231 3 жыл бұрын
As a frequent visitor to France, I am always surprised that a small village will have a florist. On further investigation I found it was much more common than the UK to take a floral tribute to the cemetery or have flowers as a table decoration.
@Imaginexall
@Imaginexall Жыл бұрын
That's because we like to bring flowers to our parents when we visit them, or when we're invited at the house of people we love. It's also a nice gesture for your lover.
@aixucruc
@aixucruc 3 жыл бұрын
Very well explained and with a lot of respect! Great video
@janicevass4551
@janicevass4551 3 жыл бұрын
Love your channel - I moved to Bordeaux (from California) in 2015 and absolutely love the life here, however it does take some adjustment. The pharmacies are all different so I have fun checking them out....although only 2 pharmacies in town are open on Sundays, so it’s always good to stock up on what you need in advance!
@amyspeers8012
@amyspeers8012 3 жыл бұрын
Janice-I am about an hour away from Bordeaux...and we love our life here too!
@fablucia
@fablucia 3 жыл бұрын
Wow, from Cali to rainy Bordeaux Talk about some weather shock! Glad to know other people agree that Bordeaux is really a special place :)
@DevRel1
@DevRel1 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah and this makes for a very tough time to get COVID test if your flight is on a monday, ask me how I know lol
@hztm
@hztm 3 жыл бұрын
When I went in a pharmacist in US, I was shocked to be able to buy sodas, candies and CIGARETS ! It's suppose to be a place where you buy cure ! I have never urinated in public. It's OK in nature, not in a town. I barely never see men peeing in the street. And it's "pissotière" (a familiar word) or "urinoir" not "pissoire" (unless pissoire is a local term) 😁
@SCGMLB
@SCGMLB 3 жыл бұрын
Most pharmacies make their profits by selling all of the non-medical products. If the only sold medicines they oils not be able to stay in business. One major pharmacy chain, CVS, made the decision to stop selling tobacco products in 2014.
@Julia-nl3gq
@Julia-nl3gq 2 жыл бұрын
Vous ne pouvez pas acheter de cigarettes en pharmacie, ici au Canada. Eh bien, peut-être dans une province - en Colombie-Britannique - mais nulle part ailleurs.
@ckzf1842
@ckzf1842 3 жыл бұрын
Really enjoy your videos here in serious lockdown in London , thanks !
@foreverlearningfrench
@foreverlearningfrench 3 жыл бұрын
Bonne vidéo ! J'ai appris beaucoup de nouvelles choses.
@almahammond6405
@almahammond6405 2 жыл бұрын
I live in the south of France since right before COVID (wow that sounds like a translation from French). I love your vids. So helpful, and I can sooo relate to a lot of it.
@amyspeers8012
@amyspeers8012 3 жыл бұрын
I remember going to my first big Saturday market in Rennes and seeing the meat display. Quite shocking! I loved my pharmacy there but I also love my pharmacy here in Gensac too. They are super sweet and helpful. As far as eating late, I noticed this when my friend visited. She has children and they have to be in bed by 7. So...no going out for dinner since the restaurants near me don’t start serving until 7! Thanks again for another lovely video. Much love from Gensac!
@rhondacrosswhite8048
@rhondacrosswhite8048 3 жыл бұрын
I absolutely love the meat markets in France. Seeing poultry,fish or game with the head and feet still on is a sign that the meat is fresh as the head will be the first part to start going bad. The vendors are showing you that their meat is fresh. The butcher will remove and dress your purchase before you take it home.
@joannets3835
@joannets3835 3 жыл бұрын
Veterinary care. I can only agree with you. I experienced the vet care in Alberta and it's nothing in comparison to France. Prices are horrible in Alberta, care and attention to the animal is really not that great. I am traveling with my cat and we needed to go to the vet in France. It was awesome. Totally liked the way they handled the situation. Bottom line, I was worrying for nothing but they checked all angles. Handle my cat with such care I almost believe she was in china. Even my cat barely noticed she was examined, no rough flip. They let her a few minutes to explore the room... Delightful.
@leewest356
@leewest356 2 жыл бұрын
Here in México, our meal times, at home, are quite different. The largest meal is called “comida” and is usually eaten between 2 and 4 pm. Often, the meal later in the evening is quite light in comparison, perhaps just some fruit or sweet bread (pastries) with coffee or chocolate. I just returned from having a meal with friends and we ate between 2:30 and 4:30 pm. The only time we eat a large dinner later is when we are out with friends at a restaurant for a social occasion.
@Hummingbirds2023
@Hummingbirds2023 2 жыл бұрын
I like to eat the dinner meal about 4pm too. Better for the digestion too!!!
@the.hard.truth123
@the.hard.truth123 Жыл бұрын
No en Oaxaca ni comida tenemos
@worldtraveler2020
@worldtraveler2020 11 ай бұрын
Same in Georgia and other eastern European countries
@frederic6998
@frederic6998 10 ай бұрын
same in Spain. I'm french and lived in Madrid 2 years but eating at 2pm is to late when you start working at 8am.
@georgina3358
@georgina3358 3 жыл бұрын
I'm from the UK and have been living in France for decades! I don't like hugging as a greeting so la bise suits me better! I know what you mean about men peeing in public, 'beurk' as the French would say. I love French pharmacies and baguettes too.
@loussis8584
@loussis8584 2 жыл бұрын
« Beurk » c’est exactement cela 😉
@jacquibruce-yokoyama2478
@jacquibruce-yokoyama2478 Жыл бұрын
Good detailed information and tips for everyday living in France! I’ve recently started my research for planning to move to France from the US. Some Expat sites are entertaining,, but yours is both entertaining and informative Thank You For Sharing 😊
@OuiInFrance
@OuiInFrance Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much!
@user-uc6up8em9v
@user-uc6up8em9v 2 жыл бұрын
Awesome video. Informative and well paced!
@OuiInFrance
@OuiInFrance 2 жыл бұрын
Glad you liked it! Merci
@ym8854
@ym8854 3 жыл бұрын
Hey, nice video! As a French living in the US, I can mirror your experience. I'm quite lost with the credit history system and I basically stick to the debit card provided by an international online bank. I miss for sure my baguette and I slowly switched diner time earlier to fit the schedule. The pharmacy in the US is indeed quite different and we have to acknowledge that medication in France is perhaps more relying on physician's prescriptions since most of the medicine purchase happens over the counter. For the pissing thing, well... I think you'll find it mostly in Paris and other big cities (Lyon, Marseille, Montpellier..). Be sure it annoys everyone. Could be either people that do not have the choice because they live in the street and sadly they are many in the capital. Otherwise it would be some drunk or disrespectful folks but I would definitely not bring this in among the 'cultural specificities of France' ;)
@avalerie4467
@avalerie4467 3 жыл бұрын
Joliment dis, chere
@ybreton6593
@ybreton6593 3 жыл бұрын
Au tout début les français appelaient : cartes de crédits ; mais c'était une fausse appellation ? maintenant ,depuis plus de vingt ans nous les appelons : cartes bancaires ; le paiement est débité immédiatement de votre compte .
@SenorJuan2023
@SenorJuan2023 2 жыл бұрын
I don't understand why people would eat dinner at 8pm or so when you're going to bed at 10 or 11.
@Malanu00
@Malanu00 2 жыл бұрын
Because usually in france, people mostly get off work around 6pm ?
@SenorJuan2023
@SenorJuan2023 2 жыл бұрын
@@Malanu00 It could be their dinner is VERY light. That I could understand.
@martine2u
@martine2u 3 жыл бұрын
What a cute little dog! Adorable :-)
@simonhawksley817
@simonhawksley817 3 жыл бұрын
My favourite anecdote is, when my friend visited her doctor to confirm her third pregnancy (the first two were in UK) he admonished her to 'abstain from all alcohol, and to only drink one glass of wine with each meal'. Wine is considered a staple food, not an alcoholic beverage!
@OuiInFrance
@OuiInFrance 3 жыл бұрын
Wow, that must have surprised her!
@martijnspruit
@martijnspruit 3 жыл бұрын
My father was in hospital in a small town in the south of France (we're Dutch but speak French). He was served a quarter of wine with lunch and dinner.
@ybreton6593
@ybreton6593 3 жыл бұрын
bizarre ; une femme enceinte responsable ne boit pas d'alcool pendant sa grossesse , même les française ? elles ne sont pas plus débiles que les anglo-saxonnes . non , le vin n'est pas considérer comme une boisson de base , la boisson de base est l'eau . le très bon vin est réserver pour les repas de familles ou de fêtes .même a ce moment là les femmes enceintes n'en boivent pas
@killerdragunov3184
@killerdragunov3184 3 жыл бұрын
@@ybreton6593 honnêtement si tu es dans une région avec une tradition viticole plutôt forte, le vin est considéré comme boisson de base et beaucoup de gens en boivent à au moins un repas par jour, c'est courant. Ceci dit oui, les femmes enceintes n'en boivent pas
@mandorlap8091
@mandorlap8091 2 жыл бұрын
Even my 15 year old daughter has noticed that in the States they drink to get drunk but in France and Europe you drink wine to enjoy and cherish the moment …
@stevegrimes5105
@stevegrimes5105 3 жыл бұрын
thank you for the video! your dog is so sweet
@loydjenkins2241
@loydjenkins2241 3 жыл бұрын
Wow. So much of this reminds me of my childhood in the sixties. The hands on pharmacy, no credit cards (debt), smoking, even the cuts of meat. It would be strange to visit, and enjoyable.
@ogivecrush
@ogivecrush 3 жыл бұрын
I've had a medical condition which caused me to urinate in public....it's called "being drunk."
@fabolvaskarika7940
@fabolvaskarika7940 3 жыл бұрын
@@LoganRaven WTF?
@LoganRaven
@LoganRaven 3 жыл бұрын
@Matricx700 explain ?
@Chris-oo7lr
@Chris-oo7lr 3 жыл бұрын
@@LoganRaven Yes, in your dream France, no White French people urinate in public. Never. It's a sight you just never see. LOL
@-Zakhiel-
@-Zakhiel- 3 жыл бұрын
@@LoganRaven Mec... tous le monde a déjà pissé dans la rue, je compte plus le nombre de fois que je l'ai fait.
@MeekouOmuraAMK
@MeekouOmuraAMK 3 жыл бұрын
@@-Zakhiel- *tous les hommes
@philippebruno8039
@philippebruno8039 Жыл бұрын
@Diane, regarding public urination, keep in mind that free rest rooms are not necessarily as common in France as in the United States or Canada. Either one has to pay one or two Euros, or hit a lock door with a sign saying it is for patrons only. I also saw many restaurants with combination locks on their restroom doors that can be unlocked with a time limited code printed on the receipt.
@adgn2422
@adgn2422 Жыл бұрын
certes, cependant les femmes se débrouillent pour ne pas pisser dehors, les hommes peuvent donc le faire aussi.
@Monchu-nh5ex
@Monchu-nh5ex 7 ай бұрын
And why aren't woman peeing in tbe strees? The problem is not the free restroom please, is just male feeling entitled to get their dick put and pee all over the street because they own it
@Devintandy
@Devintandy 2 жыл бұрын
Great video thank you for sharing. Would you do a video on what type of music is popular in France and what what TV shows of music may be common.
@aidancoyle246
@aidancoyle246 2 жыл бұрын
Hi Diane, I moved here to France from Ireland a couple of years ago and lots of what you talked about are very familiar to us in our home country. But two things stand out as radically different , peeing in public and the poor quality of meat compared to Irish butchers. My wife and I were driving on the outskirts of Carcassonne about a year ago when a military Jeep in front of us suddenly stopped, the passenger soldier jumped out with a full toilet roll in his hand and sprinted across a busy road narrowly missing cars and dived into a bush, a bit gross but really funny to watch.
@beneditocrispim9554
@beneditocrispim9554 3 жыл бұрын
I laughed a lot over the urination in public. Good presentation of shock culture. One more subscribed.
@rettab6925
@rettab6925 3 жыл бұрын
Doesn’t all this urination publicly cause bad smells that the public has to put up with.
@loustic59vda
@loustic59vda 3 жыл бұрын
It is strictly forbidden to piss on walls of buildings in France, you risk to be fined if you are caught of course.
@noneofurbusiness5223
@noneofurbusiness5223 3 жыл бұрын
English grammar- gotta love it. Caught not catched. ;)
@im-pn3ug
@im-pn3ug 3 жыл бұрын
RUN!
@loustic59vda
@loustic59vda 3 жыл бұрын
@@noneofurbusiness5223 Yes and more the worst, I know it
@miguelangelsandoval9850
@miguelangelsandoval9850 3 жыл бұрын
I'm new to your channel. Love your videos.❤️ Thank you!
@OuiInFrance
@OuiInFrance 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for subbing & welcome!
@christystrike4751
@christystrike4751 3 жыл бұрын
I live in Montreal Québec Canada and the things that you said about France explain a lot about what I see here!
@thebiggusdonnus8453
@thebiggusdonnus8453 3 жыл бұрын
Yes!
@sinews9578
@sinews9578 2 жыл бұрын
In France we generally finish school at 5 or 6 o’clock so we eat later because we come back from school then do homework and then eat
@IRACEMABABU
@IRACEMABABU 2 жыл бұрын
But it's founded on an old tradition from the Gauls. Light breakfast, normal lunch , late and big dinner
@jeandrumm5025
@jeandrumm5025 3 жыл бұрын
Wonderful video! I live in Germany, the peeing in public happens here but usually they are standing beside a road/car.
@ixlnxs
@ixlnxs 3 жыл бұрын
I'm from Belgium and Spain, where peeing is very much ok in a park or other grassy area where you can turn away from people who are looking for an opportunity to be offended.
@HappilyEverAfterinFrance
@HappilyEverAfterinFrance 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you, I'm enjoying the comments add much as I enjoyed the video! Bisous from another American woman living in the Loire Valley!
@rebeccaofpollywogflatts8976
@rebeccaofpollywogflatts8976 2 жыл бұрын
Since following you the urge to travel to France has grown stronger. Thank you
@charmsurprise
@charmsurprise 3 жыл бұрын
haha I stumbled on this today. :D Ive lived in south east France for nearly 12 years. Near Grenoble. Everything you've said is spot on...and the peeing thing is totally true. My husband, who is French, did this when we first met one another in San Francisco. I broke him of that particular nasty habit. haha...anyway thanks for the confirming video.
@mariebambelle7361
@mariebambelle7361 3 жыл бұрын
Just a little precision : 'la bise' is not a kiss on the check. Actually, the cheeks are touching side by side and the lips are "kissing the air". When people actually kiss the cheek and are not from your close family, they are seen as perverts.
@unlimited971
@unlimited971 3 жыл бұрын
or making a move. but kissing on the cheek is real as with family. the whole side by side was made by bourgeois to give themself contenance. also popularise by les inconnus. "salut! TU ! VAS! BIENNN!"
@ultima3542
@ultima3542 3 жыл бұрын
Very old people are the only ones doing it these days.
@glossyncap
@glossyncap 3 жыл бұрын
@@ultima3542 thank god..I dont want anybody to feel my oily ass face 😫
@jessicawu8054
@jessicawu8054 3 жыл бұрын
My family members who did college in the US used la bise until covid started
@unlimited971
@unlimited971 3 жыл бұрын
@@glossyncap careful...american may come for you then.
@roote4k154
@roote4k154 2 жыл бұрын
THANKS YOU FOR SHARING THIS Video
@owencrofford9152
@owencrofford9152 Жыл бұрын
As a Canadian I would lose it if someone pissed in public and I find it shocking bc I thought that the French where shy and not that open but I’m going to assume that that’s more of a pairs thing. I see it as a uncivil thing to do and that if you do it that you should be ashamed and yelled at
@lohphat
@lohphat 3 жыл бұрын
Bank checks were common for in-store/grocery payment in the US until the late 1980s when point of sale terminals had a wide enough availability.
@hztm
@hztm 3 жыл бұрын
There are less and less checks used in France. 3,1 billions in 2009, 1,9 billions in 2017. I remember my mother using checks for groceries in late 80's, start of 90's but debit card use was not as massive as today. Today, almost nobody pays with a check in supermarkets, and it's always an elder person. More and more places do not accept checks because of frauds. Banks wants to stop the usage of checks, because their processing is expensive for them. I have a check book. I use it maybe once or twice a year. Sometimes, you have to because you need a bank record and you can't pay with a card. I had to pay my rent of my appartement by check every month, the owner did not want a transfer.
@jimjungle1397
@jimjungle1397 3 жыл бұрын
There are private pharmacies in America that are only pharmacies and not drug stores. They are usually small and sometimes expensive or if not, have discount, generic drugs. They are usually open to the public, but have deals with certain local care groups, home nursing, hospice, etc., for most of their business.
@fadelmuthana
@fadelmuthana 3 жыл бұрын
Interesting video. France has always been my get to go country because of its romantic and brave history. ❤️🤍💙
@TheMVCoho
@TheMVCoho Жыл бұрын
My first experience in Europe was visiting Paris and literally in less than 5 minutes of arriving in town a man walked into the street directly facing my bus and began peeing in the middle of the street, again facing us. What level of 'middle ages depravity' is France operating on that this is a thing? While it left a lasting impression of France, I had choked up it to being unlucky timing and that he must be a drunk or mentally unwell but, no its just the culture, so much so that it gets a mention here. Come on France, civilization moved on from this sort of behavior centuries ago.
@40bpaula
@40bpaula 3 жыл бұрын
I love these kind of videos. I'm new to your channel and i think I'll stick around awhile. The pharmacys in France sound great, like what a pharmacy should be. France has universal health care, right? So the professional pharmacy is a great way to keep the public health system from getting boged down with minor medical issues. Plus, I'd love to get advice from my pharmacist about the meds and supplements I take. The vet care...yes, crazy expensive in the states. i just had an issue with my kitty. He had a liver infection. He's a senior cat and I was told that this is something that happens to older cats. The whole visit and treatment costed me $623.00!!! But, I love my kitty. Like you say, he's my child...fur baby.
@abrahamcusters2987
@abrahamcusters2987 3 жыл бұрын
I am Dutch and I live for nearly thirty years half time in France, I have never ever seen somebody peeing in the street.
@OuiInFrance
@OuiInFrance 3 жыл бұрын
Consider yourself lucky! ;-)
@prenomnom9413
@prenomnom9413 3 жыл бұрын
I'm french and i Can tell you that it's a cliché
@im-pn3ug
@im-pn3ug 3 жыл бұрын
u should see an ophthalmologist
@abrahamcusters2987
@abrahamcusters2987 3 жыл бұрын
@@im-pn3ug Difference might be that you live in the gutter and I don’t.
@im-pn3ug
@im-pn3ug 3 жыл бұрын
@@abrahamcusters2987 perfect clarification
@loreemackay9960
@loreemackay9960 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you Oui en France. Such pleasurable memories (at least I don't cry anymore😂). I love listening to your videos. I was expatriated to Lille for awhile. Culture shock...still fresh memories & funny now.
@OuiInFrance
@OuiInFrance 2 жыл бұрын
So happy you enjoy my content!
@netfun8087
@netfun8087 2 жыл бұрын
What an excellent video. Thank you.
@OuiInFrance
@OuiInFrance 2 жыл бұрын
You're very welcome!
@LBPL300
@LBPL300 3 жыл бұрын
Im french and I’m in erasmus in Spain haha what shock. Dinner is at 10 hahaa love it
@larabelle78
@larabelle78 3 жыл бұрын
French here... regarding the pharmacies, to open a pharmacy, you need a diploma (PharmD) and a licence, there are attributed depending the number of inhabitants, so it prevents the installation of pharmacy chains (but some exists, they are not as big as cvs or walgreens though). So if you have just graduated and want to open your own pharmacy, you have to buy it from a retiring pharmacists for example, it is a relatively regulated job, it is not a business like others...
@youpihat
@youpihat 3 жыл бұрын
"pharmacy chains (but some exists, they are not as big as cvs or walgreens though)" = you are confusing of "ParaPharmacy Chains" in France !
@larabelle78
@larabelle78 3 жыл бұрын
@@youpihat the examples I had in mind : Pharmacie Lafayette or Gifar are pharmacies, not only parapharmacies, are organised in chains but operate differently from CVS
@VersedNJ
@VersedNJ 3 жыл бұрын
My daughter just got her PharmD, 6 years at the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy (University of the Sciences) and is doing a one year residence in Oncology pharmacy. She has little desire to work in a pharmacy and prefers hospital pharmacy. And yes she has taken and passed her boards and licensed in Pennsylvania she going to take the New Jersey Pharmacy law test to get her licence in her home state. Each US state licences their pharmacists, the main pharmacy boards are the same and transferable at this time. She went to her University right out of high school. When she graduated, NJ and Pa. removed her pharmacy tech licence which she got at 18.
@youpihat
@youpihat 3 жыл бұрын
@@larabelle78 Tiens, tiens, c'est nouveau ! Depuis quand la loi a changé ? Accepte elle La CMU en ligne ? Merci beaucoup "Iarabelle78" ! Très bonne journée !
@ninatran7714
@ninatran7714 2 жыл бұрын
Great info thank you!
@OuiInFrance
@OuiInFrance 2 жыл бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@susanw.4970
@susanw.4970 11 ай бұрын
I love❤ your fun and very informative KZbin videos. You mentioned living in Loire Valley. Could you profile what your life is like in Loire Valley? The history is remarkable, but the guide books are all about wine, wine caves and chateaux. I’ve read about the Grand hiking trails and wondered how to find them, where to park and how challenging they are to hike. Maybe you have discovered a place in the Valley that is somewhat off the tourist trails? Thank you for sharing ❤
@sarahpuglisi1324
@sarahpuglisi1324 3 жыл бұрын
Would love to see you do a review of Netflix’s Emily in Paris in terms of how they depict her experience of an American women moving to Paris.
@cepahreinholt8710
@cepahreinholt8710 2 жыл бұрын
For me (as a french person) it had some funny moments but was mostly annoying because she was kind of a mary sue. Even when she did mistakes or bad things (like having sex whith a teenager!!!) there where almost no bad consequences. And I felt like it depicted the american way as being the good way for a lot of things. Like she was some kind of hero here to teach french people how to do things...
@Melissa-sx9vh
@Melissa-sx9vh 2 жыл бұрын
Then you should watch Friendly Space Ninja's video about Emily in Paris! He is French but his video is in English
@archangel20031
@archangel20031 3 жыл бұрын
You could easily solve the urination problem by simply putting an electrified mesh around the base of bushes and every time somebody lets loose they get a 240 volt surprise
@CleopatraTelevision
@CleopatraTelevision 3 жыл бұрын
No. You would go to jail.
@abdallahduker9184
@abdallahduker9184 3 жыл бұрын
You spot on. From someone who lived in 🇺🇸 and France. Your new subscriber.
@OuiInFrance
@OuiInFrance 3 жыл бұрын
Welcome aboard!
@user-mh6ik7sr1o
@user-mh6ik7sr1o 11 ай бұрын
French don't have dinner at 6pm because most of them are still at work at this time. The normal time for the beginning of the dinner in France is between 7.30pm and 8.30 pm, depending if you have young children or not. Later in restaurants in city centers. Thank you for all the videos about my country. You have choosen an original way to compare our both countries. It's interresting ang sometimes very funny.
@nicolas_-_-_
@nicolas_-_-_ 10 ай бұрын
Hello! I am French. Well, some start to eat at 7pm. Generally, I have dinner between 5 pm and 6 pm. But most of French people are not like me.
@athanase6613
@athanase6613 3 жыл бұрын
Hello ! Wonderful video as usual. Very interesting topics. About urinating in public, I live in the Yvelines in the Paris region and I come from the Bourbonnaise countryside. In the countryside, urinating in the middle of nature is no problem. We think we are like the cows in our meadows. A tree, a hedge, a ditch; hop! In the city, it is more embarrassing because there are less and less "aids", of public urinals available. So people, the crowd are relieving themselves as best they can. Regarding smokers, there are still too many people addicted to tobacco but more and more places are becoming smoke free; restaurant, enclosed public places, etc. The countryside is less observant on this subject than the city. Pour ce qui est du pain !!! Bien sûr ! un français sans pain dépérit vite. Alors nous prenons du pain tous les jours ou tous les deux jours. C'est facile de se ravitailler de pain frais en ville. A la campagne, on privilégie souvent les pains de garde (restent frais pendant 1 semaine. Voila Encore bravo Prenez soin de vous
@shinyshinythings
@shinyshinythings Жыл бұрын
The peeing on the street thing is common in Spain too. It’s not a matter of laziness or illness. I’ve seen parents with boys around 5 to 7 years old, walk them over to the bushes at a busy urban corner to have them pee, if they have to “go” on the way home from school. No one takes any notice or cares. I think that the boys, having grown up with the habit, don’t think anything of it as adults either.
@galespressos
@galespressos 3 жыл бұрын
When a kid in the USA, 6PM (5:30-6PM) was considered late, normally it was 4:30 to 5PM fo dinner . In the countryside and Sunday 2-4PM. So it is funny to hear 6PM as being early. We would have a supper between 7-8PM (9PM for late people).
@theYogachannel0035
@theYogachannel0035 3 жыл бұрын
liked and hug from your new friends in France - wishing you a very Merry Christmas
@OuiInFrance
@OuiInFrance 3 жыл бұрын
Merry Christmas to you as well!
@deadtonk5527
@deadtonk5527 3 жыл бұрын
No hug ! La bise instead ;)
@michelbeauloye4269
@michelbeauloye4269 3 жыл бұрын
Hi Diane! On the subject of credit/debit cards in Europe, I like to point out that the extreme situation is in Germany, where so many people prefer to pay in cash due to the private life question. Indeed, nowadays, the bank, the police, the tax administration aso know, or at least could find out, how much you earn, how much you spend and where. Historically, it seems fully justified in Germany and in countries of the ex-communist countries. Due to Covid-19, many stores invite the customers to pay with a card instead of cash. I wish to congratulate you for your clear and precise presentations. Take care and stay healthy, with greetings from Luxembourg.
@germangarcia6118
@germangarcia6118 2 жыл бұрын
I'm pretty sure the use of debit/credit cards for everyday shopping skyrocketd all over the world with Covid. I honestly haven't returned to the ATM since. Before Covid I used to feel "guilty" of paying anything below 10€ with the card, but now I just don't care anymore.
@melissabauernfeind9381
@melissabauernfeind9381 3 жыл бұрын
I have culture shock when I drive to middle America and the rural areas. 🤣
@OuiInFrance
@OuiInFrance 3 жыл бұрын
Oh yeah, very different than NYC! We definitely don't have to travel far to experience it. Thx for watching ;-)
@louismart
@louismart 3 жыл бұрын
I have a culture shock every time the American president addresses the public.
@melissabauernfeind9381
@melissabauernfeind9381 3 жыл бұрын
That too but thankfully not for much longer.
@VersedNJ
@VersedNJ 3 жыл бұрын
@@louismartMore like traumatic shock followed by PTSD.
@ashotinthedark3182
@ashotinthedark3182 3 жыл бұрын
@@louismart Presidents tend to like the sound of their own voice more than I.
@lesedigololo7485
@lesedigololo7485 3 жыл бұрын
Love love love your accent
@dianepopnick5850
@dianepopnick5850 10 ай бұрын
So happy to know the veterinary care is so good. That is so important to me .Like you my dog is my child.
@txoumin707
@txoumin707 3 жыл бұрын
As a frenchman, I'm shocked about this peeing outside kind of thing. Always been taught and seen it as rude and can definitely confirm it's not just me but all people around me. Like it's fine in the woods, or being hidden from view if the urge is pressing, but heck. that's gross, I rarely ever saw that too, both in paris and most of france wherever I went across the country. Side note, very interesting video and quite a few different and interesting perspective that changes from what you usually read or hear about between US and France, I'd be very interested in seeing a part 2 :)
@tiggergutt70
@tiggergutt70 Жыл бұрын
public urination?!? this one really took me by surprise. I never really experience this issue unless it s saturday evening and party people get drunk. But since alcohol is not known to make you smart, I guess that this can happen not only in france but wherever you can find drunk people.
@marilynel-multipotentielle3937
@marilynel-multipotentielle3937 11 ай бұрын
I am a French native and I find the urinating thing absolutely revolting . Thanks for your videos by the way ☺️
@tatjanameyer4022
@tatjanameyer4022 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your very interesting and informative channel. I live in Finland and our pharmacies are much like yours. To become a pharmacist you have to study for 3 years in the university to get your Bachelor of Art. Only then you can work in a pharmacy. I feel very safe with this system because the pharmacist knows the medicines and how they react to other medicines. You get a very detaileb information about your medication.
@KathysFlog
@KathysFlog 2 жыл бұрын
Hello. It is illegal in France to write a cheque without sufficient funds in your bank account to back it up and there can be quite serious consequences for doing so.
@A_Canadian_In_Poland
@A_Canadian_In_Poland 3 жыл бұрын
Debit cards are common and popular in Canada as well in addition to credit cards. An increasing number of businesses accept debit cards as the sole method of payment.
@robertrobitaille320
@robertrobitaille320 2 жыл бұрын
Debit cards very common.
@Nadelina_kb
@Nadelina_kb 3 жыл бұрын
Interesting to have your views on things that seem usual to us.
@jd3422
@jd3422 2 жыл бұрын
I love your insights. I am a Californian who has been to France 11 times and I love it. We concur with the things that we have noticed. Above all, the bread! In France it is very definitely a human right!
@OuiInFrance
@OuiInFrance 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, bread is huge and definitely not a stereotype about French people. You definitely do see people with baguettes under their arm. Glad you enjoy my content. Thank you!
@leehargreaves7473
@leehargreaves7473 3 жыл бұрын
If only the whole World didn't have a credit culture.
@emjayay
@emjayay 3 жыл бұрын
You can of course pay them off every month like a debit card, check, or cash. But it's painless to use and people go nuts.
@ybreton6593
@ybreton6593 3 жыл бұрын
@@emjayay en France ce ne sont pas des cartes de crédits , mais des cartes bancaires le paiement est pris directement sur votre compte en banque . si vous n'avez pas suffisamment d'argent sur votre compte bancaire le paiement sera refuser .
@johnlafever3162
@johnlafever3162 3 жыл бұрын
How about you imagine the whole world acting responsible with credit.
@cepahreinholt8710
@cepahreinholt8710 2 жыл бұрын
@@johnlafever3162 but why do you absolutly need to "pay later" even for small things? Why not use the money you have when you have it? I can understand credit for a house a car or something expensive but for clothes or food I don't get it. It makes no sense to me.
@ghostofreagan3181
@ghostofreagan3181 3 жыл бұрын
I'm American and I'll take a piss outside but only if I can get where nobody can see me. Cause when you gotta go , you gotta go.
@robertcuminale1212
@robertcuminale1212 3 жыл бұрын
It's especially bad for those of us with bladder and prostate issues. Ever since my prostate was removed my urge comes suddenly and forcefully. Any trip outside the house takes planning so I can stop somewhere and go discreetly. As quickly as I find a place I still have some leakage. I also have issues with my bowels because a foot of my large intestine was remove due to diverticulitis. That's difficult to deal with but it's not as bad as the urination problem. Don't get caught pissing outside. My Uncle did after foing in some bushes off of a highway going to Long Island. He got a heavy fine and was listed as a sex offender for exposing himself in public.
@mikesaunders4775
@mikesaunders4775 3 жыл бұрын
Same with English people.
@vavabeille
@vavabeille 3 жыл бұрын
Same with French people, if you see someone peeing in broad daylight, he's probably drunk. No sober-minded French would expose itself peeing without any cover.
@chucku00
@chucku00 2 жыл бұрын
Credit cards are quite common in France but they're mostly linked to specific shop chains, with a few specialized consumer credit companies like Cetelem, Sofinco, Cofinoga... and there are also some problems of overdebt even if they're less usual than in the US.
@mochalattemiss
@mochalattemiss 4 ай бұрын
I love the French Pharmacies, myself. The Pharmacists were exceptional, caring and very competent. Many a time I was saved by a Pharmacist who had more experience and expertise than even the doctors I saw. We need more professionals like this. I was prescribed a cough medicine made of pine tree bark (yes…tasted terrible) that worked better than anything that I have had before or since. He was a “compounding pharmacist”, which are in very short supply in the US…usually a person in an old-fashioned and very expensive pharmacy in large cities in the US, and not at your local CVS or Walgreen’s.
@lujack913
@lujack913 3 жыл бұрын
I was shocked by the public urination in Rio too !
@MrAlsachti
@MrAlsachti 3 жыл бұрын
I am French, lives in France, and the last time I have seen someone pissing in public was several decades ago. I think this is not something specific to France but something specific to Paris or some areas of Paris. To be fair, Brussels is even worse: there, public urination is a tourist attraction! ;-)
@OuiInFrance
@OuiInFrance 3 жыл бұрын
I see it all the time in an around a park where I live in the Pays de la Loire unfortunately. But certainly not JUST a French thing by any means.
@kenrehill8775
@kenrehill8775 3 жыл бұрын
Really? I’ve lived here 17 years and I see someone pissing on the side of the road every time I leave the house.
@HappilyEverAfterinFrance
@HappilyEverAfterinFrance 3 жыл бұрын
Me too, I see it a lot in the Loire Valley - one man in a Mercedes stepped out of his car and peed next to it, even though he was parked at a rest stop with a toilet!
@mikesaunders4775
@mikesaunders4775 3 жыл бұрын
I've seen it in Denmark.
@creuvette29
@creuvette29 2 жыл бұрын
I see it very often too ! And I live in Finistère. When I lived in Rennes it was the same, and wherever I go I think I can see men piss on the bushes or a wall.
@mohamedsosseyalaoui4141
@mohamedsosseyalaoui4141 3 жыл бұрын
Dinner at 6 pm!! That's a culture shock for me, normally it should be around 9: 30 or 10 sometimes even at midnight
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