American Reacts to Weirdly Nostalgic British Adverts

  Рет қаралды 18,992

Reacting To My Roots

Reacting To My Roots

11 ай бұрын

👉 Support my journey at ko-fi.com/reactingtomyroots
In this video I react to weirdly nostalgic British adverts. There is no denying it. Brits have the most creative and funny ads I've ever seen. It would be a lot of fun watching tv in the UK just to catch the adverts.
Thanks for watching. If you enjoyed this reaction please give this video a thumbs up, share your thoughts in the comments and click the subscribe button to follow my journey to learn about my British and Irish ancestry.
👉 Original Video:
• Weirdly Nostalgic UK a...
👉 Subscribe to my channel:
/ @reactingtomyroots

Пікірлер: 429
@gavinhall6040
@gavinhall6040 11 ай бұрын
These must be nostalgia for people who are about 20 because these are quite recent, i didnt see any from my era and im only in my 30s.😂
@coot1925
@coot1925 11 ай бұрын
How do you think I feel, I'm 61 😂😂😂
@samuel10125
@samuel10125 11 ай бұрын
28 I remember everyone of these.
@pem...
@pem... 11 ай бұрын
@@samuel10125 point proven!
@MrNifts
@MrNifts 11 ай бұрын
Agreed , I not even watched MS TV for years so none of these I know
@more-reasons6655
@more-reasons6655 11 ай бұрын
29 and I remember the majority of these
@RichSouthend
@RichSouthend 11 ай бұрын
As others have said, Walmart used to own Asda, but doesn't anymore. Yes, we had/have McDonalds Monopoly in the UK. Generally, any chips that are thin and long like McDonalds ones would be called fries or French fries here and Crusha is a syrup that you add milk to to create a milkshake.
@doobiedootwo3517
@doobiedootwo3517 11 ай бұрын
Very recent ads … see if you can find maynards wine gums ‘Hoots mon’ ad - its a classic 🤣
@andyjohnson4907
@andyjohnson4907 11 ай бұрын
I differentiate between biscuits and cookies, and fries and chips. Biscuits snap, cookies bend. Chips are thick and cut from a potato, fries are skinny and often put through a Play-Doh Fun Factory.
@CubejamF1
@CubejamF1 11 ай бұрын
"Frosted Flakes" are usually the name of the cheap store brand version of Frosties in the UK.
@vezhopkins714
@vezhopkins714 11 ай бұрын
the UK christmas adverts are usually really good and I love the Lloyds bank adds especially the 250 anniversary one (watch the longer one if you can find it ) it has nice music and horses so my kind of adverts :)
@scottwebb1978
@scottwebb1978 11 ай бұрын
Action Man would of been our version of GI Joe here in the UK
@corringhamdepot4434
@corringhamdepot4434 11 ай бұрын
For my generation the "Tiny Tears" doll would have been the nostalgic one. Introduced in 1965 and still sold today. A doll that would cry and wet itself when you gave it a bottle of water.
@johnp8131
@johnp8131 11 ай бұрын
Sounds like me now I'm in my sixties, after a few beers when I reminiscing?
@tracyholliday2200
@tracyholliday2200 11 ай бұрын
I had the original Tiny Tears doll that did not pee or cry, parents got it for me in 1968. The pee cry version came out decades later to suit the time. I also had Teeny Tiny Tears which was a smaller version.
@AndrewwarrenAndrew
@AndrewwarrenAndrew 11 ай бұрын
My sister had several tiny tears over time, she always poked their eyes in....
@miaschu8175
@miaschu8175 10 ай бұрын
I adored my Teeny Tiny Tears! I was given her for my 6th birthday in 1973.
@clarestewart877
@clarestewart877 11 ай бұрын
Not that old most of them The Cravendale cats is my favourite👏🏻👏🏻
@coot1925
@coot1925 11 ай бұрын
Biscuit boy is a derogatory term we use for a man who "crumbles" under pressure.
@susanashcroft2674
@susanashcroft2674 11 ай бұрын
I guess if you are in your late teens early 20's these may be nostalgic but to me they look like more recent adverts. I was thinking of say pre or 70's/80's/90's where there are some adverts where you only have to say for example; A finger of fudge is just enough...and I bet someone will sing the rest of jingle that we know for a Cadburys Fudge Bar. Or Just because the lady loves...Milk Tray (The iconic James Bondesque Milk Tray chocolate adverts), or Only the crumbliest Flake is chocolate...again some will be able to automatically finish the jingle to the advert. Last one 'It's The Milky Bar Kid'...the Milky bar kid is strong and tough. Let's see if any aspiring Milky Bar Kids of yester year are singing that advert in their head. 🤠⭐🍫
@beccaboo3040
@beccaboo3040 11 ай бұрын
Oh i love the cravendale biscuit boy advert i miss it 😂😊❤
@orwellboy1958
@orwellboy1958 11 ай бұрын
These are very modern adds. I grew up in the sixties, we had Lego, (not legos), Action man (G.I. Joe), Thunderbirds models, Match box and Corgi cars, Chopper bikes and Airfix models.
@marktennant7223
@marktennant7223 11 ай бұрын
Agree. Properly Lego should be called Lego bricks. So calling them 'Legos' would be like calling house bricks 'houses'.
@Ryotbh
@Ryotbh 11 ай бұрын
Yeah, hardly a selection of 'nostalgic ads'... only one I remember is 'crushr'
@sameebah
@sameebah 11 ай бұрын
You forgot our Dinky options :)
@saf99999
@saf99999 11 ай бұрын
Oh dear you’re around the same age as my dad!
@AndrewwarrenAndrew
@AndrewwarrenAndrew 11 ай бұрын
@@sameebah and Tonka.
@dizzydiana73
@dizzydiana73 11 ай бұрын
Crusha is a brand of concentrated syrup meant to be added to milk to make milkshakes. We over here seem to love concentrated extracts to add to other liquids, most likely as its relatively cheap over buying cans or bottles of fizzy juice(soda).
@paddylee86
@paddylee86 11 ай бұрын
You should react to British Christmas adverts.
@Jill_SmokeandMirrors
@Jill_SmokeandMirrors 10 ай бұрын
Especially John Lewis Christmas ads around 2010 onwards.
@paddylee86
@paddylee86 10 ай бұрын
@@Jill_SmokeandMirrors that and the sainsbury's WW1 xmas advert
@paddylee86
@paddylee86 10 ай бұрын
scrap that, he's already reacted to it haha.
@Lizzie4676
@Lizzie4676 11 ай бұрын
I'm 40 and don't even recognise these ads. I think a lot if them may even be from the 2010s. My guess is someone under 25 put this list together
@Jill_SmokeandMirrors
@Jill_SmokeandMirrors 10 ай бұрын
I only recognised a couple of them (first two Cravendale ones) and I stopped watching TV around 2018. Nostalgic ads to me are from the 80s and 90s but I'm in my 40s.
@johnt8998
@johnt8998 11 ай бұрын
Crusher is a concentrated flavouring. You pour a little drop into a glass and add milk for a flavoured milk shake. I'm not sure how many flavours there are, but the strawberry is nice.
@yonsilomigiry
@yonsilomigiry 11 ай бұрын
Add milk, or I'll crusha
@andybaker2456
@andybaker2456 11 ай бұрын
Those are all fairly recent! If you really want to see nostalgic ads, you need to look at some from the 70s, 80s and 90s, many of which had jingles and tag-lines that many of us of a certain age still sing or quote to this day! Interesting to see that Shaker Maker ad though. We had Shaker Maker when I was a kid in the 70s, but it was completely different from the one in that ad! Ours consisted of moulds that you filled with water and a plaster powder. You shook it to mix the powder and water, then when it had dried, you painted it. The figures you ended up with were based on popular Disney and cartoon characters of the time.
@saralowe5306
@saralowe5306 11 ай бұрын
Jadora Kiora....or lilt with a totally tropical taste....0r the red car and the blue car had a race but all red woukd do is stuff his face milkybar advert, my favourites.
@luther0013
@luther0013 7 ай бұрын
It’s nostalgic for gen Z. I remember almost all of these from when I was under 12.
@christineharding4190
@christineharding4190 11 ай бұрын
I remember a few of these adverts, but I don't think much of the choice. There's a lot better.
@DavidSmith-cx8dg
@DavidSmith-cx8dg 11 ай бұрын
Always a hazard when dunking , there can't be many who haven't lost half a biscuit in the cup . Loved the cat ones . Most of these aren't that old .
@stephenlee5929
@stephenlee5929 11 ай бұрын
Hi Steve, These are not nostalgic, not like the nostalgic we used to have. 😁 The cravendale milk ads, I think must have worked as you still see that brand of milk in most supermarkets. Matchbox was originally a British toy made by Lesney a British company with main manufacturing in Hackney (North East London). Chrusher is a flavouring for Milk similar to Nesquik (which I think you have in US).
@corringhamdepot4434
@corringhamdepot4434 11 ай бұрын
"Frosted Flakes" is a generic name in the UK from many manufactures, so "Frosties" is likely the Kellogs trademarked name.
@Living_the_Scottish_Dream
@Living_the_Scottish_Dream 11 ай бұрын
I think manufacturers have to make it totally clear what products are for the American public. They are not exactly the sharpest knife in the block!🤣🤣
@richardh3761
@richardh3761 11 ай бұрын
Surprising how many UK kids adverts use American voiceovers.
@darrenj.griffiths9507
@darrenj.griffiths9507 11 ай бұрын
Canadian*. Because we share very similar/same adverts with Canada, particularly toys and relevant ages
@claregale9011
@claregale9011 11 ай бұрын
I remember years ago holidaying in florida , evening time put t.v. on and started watching a programme 5 minutes in an advert came on then back to the programme another 20mins and another advert . Bombarded with Adverts . But had a great time on my Holly bobs . 😊
@tarantulagirl666
@tarantulagirl666 11 ай бұрын
Should do a reaction to 70s ads. They were mostly focused on telling us all the ways we would be killed if we went outside 😂 train tracks, water, strangers in vans, car crashes, lightening etc
@OneTrueScotsman
@OneTrueScotsman 11 ай бұрын
Apaches 1977 is my favourite.
@clairejohnson6522
@clairejohnson6522 11 ай бұрын
Seem to remember The Grim Reaper,Drowning,Boys trapped in fly-tipped fridge',Charlie Says," Never Play With Matches " (Cat) and the cartoon with Pertunia and her husband in the sea,Drowning.Oh,Those were the days! If children were to watch that today they would probably need counselling !🤣
@andybaker2456
@andybaker2456 10 ай бұрын
They weren't really ads though, they weren't actually selling anything! I think the official name for them was "Public Information Films".
@Living_the_Scottish_Dream
@Living_the_Scottish_Dream 11 ай бұрын
Matchbox originated in Britain, like most great things in this world!😂
@BlueTexel
@BlueTexel 11 ай бұрын
The Cadbury Smash ads were the best in my humble opinion 😂
@audiocoffee
@audiocoffee 11 ай бұрын
I wanted a smash alien when I was a kid. still do now. these days, I just buy smash (supermarkets own version) 🤣
@paulguise698
@paulguise698 11 ай бұрын
@@audiocoffee Smash is horrible
@audiocoffee
@audiocoffee 11 ай бұрын
@@paulguise698 supermarkets own brand not so bad though. cheaper and makes better potatocakes. it's down to flavour. I add a splash of hendersons relish, garlic granules, sea salt and butter. smash was the only thing obtainable as a kid and the only way I'd eat mashed spuds because none of my parents could cook that well. it's how I learnt to cook better than they could to survive. smash is just stupidly expensive these days. it does make a great thickener though for soups/gravies.
@steven54511
@steven54511 11 ай бұрын
Have to admit that I only recognise the Arla milk commercial as well as the Kellogg's ad through product association. The rest? Never heard them! Edit: Except for ASDA, obviously!!
@kristymac3236
@kristymac3236 10 ай бұрын
I haven’t seen half of these before you need to look at older ads for real nostalgic ads. Also look at our Christmas ads in particular John Lewis ads which pull at your heart strings
@rikmoran3963
@rikmoran3963 11 ай бұрын
As others have said, none of these are nostalgic as they aren't very old. Also, several of them are American adverts which you can tell by the accents. The only advert that caused any response in me was the Crusha advert as it was so different to make it memorable.
@croceyzx2433
@croceyzx2433 11 ай бұрын
The Dolmio and Argos Alien family ads were awesome lmao. Gutted they weren’t in this compilation but defo something to check out. Well IMO anyway 😄
@peterbiggin7193
@peterbiggin7193 11 ай бұрын
Most of these seem very Americanised and fairly modern. I hardly knew any of them tbh, I'm assuming the toy ads would have been shown late afternoon after kids got home from school
@sayra7587
@sayra7587 11 ай бұрын
I am way too old for these ads. I don't even recognize most of the products because they are too new. Also that floam thing looks like an excellent way to get microplastics even more distributed into the environment!!
@kirstipeters1314
@kirstipeters1314 11 ай бұрын
Crusha is a syrup to make milkshakes
@sayra7587
@sayra7587 11 ай бұрын
@@kirstipeters1314 I recognised that one.
@kirstipeters1314
@kirstipeters1314 11 ай бұрын
Sorry, I put my reply on the wrong comment lol
@IceClawz.
@IceClawz. 11 ай бұрын
McDonald's had limited edition London 2012 Olympics coca cola glasses and I still got em boxed 11 years later 😂
@paulguise698
@paulguise698 11 ай бұрын
I've still got my Great Britain Football shirt, never been wore and still got tags on
@auldfouter8661
@auldfouter8661 11 ай бұрын
Arla is a massive farmer owned co-operative based originally in Denmark but it now has thousands of dairy farmer members across Scandinavia and the UK. Cravendale is ultra filtrated to extend its keeping quality markedly.
@leohickey4953
@leohickey4953 11 ай бұрын
GI Joe was marketed in the UK as Action Man (we don't have GIs in our forces) and was a popular toy when I was growing up. Matchbox cars were founded in the UK, originally made by a company called Lesney, the brand was sold to Mattel in the 90s.
@linkash4167
@linkash4167 11 ай бұрын
I never knew that Action Man was GI Joe!
@queenirmamay
@queenirmamay 11 ай бұрын
​@@linkash4167you are very young
@queenirmamay
@queenirmamay 11 ай бұрын
Do 70s adverts and the public information we're kicking
@andybaker2456
@andybaker2456 10 ай бұрын
GI Joe and Action Man were pretty much identical to start with, but Action Man was gradually changed to make him/it more relevant to the British market.
@geoffwright3692
@geoffwright3692 11 ай бұрын
This video would have been even more fun if it had focused on some of the iconic ones from the 70's and 80's, many of which are remembered today. J R Hartley in Yellow Pages, the carling "Dambusters" one, the Heineken "Water in Majorca", Hamlet cigars, the pseudo-erotic Flake ones, R Whites Secret Lemonade drinker, as examples. Not forgetting those which were essentially the precursors (known as public information films) to the Most Effective ads, but often even more graphic. Classic examples:- "Think Bike", "Lonely Water" where the Grim Reaper causes the death of kids playing near water, "Clunk-Click" (fronted by J***y S****e), and the totally fcuked up "Rabies means Death" (there was an inexplicable paranoia at the time about the potential of someone illegally importing an animal and causing a rabies outbreak)
@audiocoffee
@audiocoffee 11 ай бұрын
I think you've dipped your toes in the murky world of the 'public information films'. some of which terrified me - the 'think bike' ones did, as did the one about escalators. and the R*** H***** 'learn to swim. not forgetting the ones on electrical safety (why we don't have plug sockets in the bathroom). let alone the petrifying bonfire night ones - with actual survivors of mishandled fireworks. those would be worth sourcing and watching for sure. you haven't grown up terrified until you've seen some of those. there were also a number of lighthearted PIFs, that go beyond 'Charlie Says'. it was another world back then and we were easily terrified and needed a little humour to soften the blow. thats before we hit the point where there was a very real threat of a potential nuclear attack. and some of those 'informercials' on 'what to do if...' were truly the stuff of nightmares.
@geoffwright3692
@geoffwright3692 11 ай бұрын
@@audiocoffee Yeah, I'd encourage Steve to take a look at some of the old school ones. There'd be some definite WTF moments, especially as some of them broke the unwritten rule about never bumping off kids. Certainly not in gruesome ways....
@rayc9854
@rayc9854 11 ай бұрын
I love that Tim Curry voiced the Cravendale advert with the cats. My fave actor ever ❤️
@Witchy-bitch106
@Witchy-bitch106 11 ай бұрын
I'm sure the singer on the Cravendale ad sings on karaoke in my pub on a Saturday night. Excruciating!
@DavidDoyleOutdoors
@DavidDoyleOutdoors 11 ай бұрын
We rarely say commercials, however the part where they show the ads on tv we call a commercial break.
@Animals_Matter
@Animals_Matter 10 ай бұрын
I used to make Weetabix a long time ago. My dad used to be in charge of making the tv adverts, (Cartoon "Bixies", and Robin Hood Weetabix ads) my ex father in law was a Weetabix bus driver(free bus service for workers) my ex wife used to work in one of the packaging departments, and i used to work cooking wheat.
@geekexmachina
@geekexmachina 11 ай бұрын
Yes these were definitely newer adverts. You can tell the american import adverts from the quirky British ones. The 80s and 90s had really crazy adverts especially for smoking and beer. So when I was young Lego (I remember getting one of the first Lego Space kits the then the first lego technic kits I was a member of the Lego club. G.I. Joe was a popular brand, Branded as the Action Man range with the large toys then later as the Action force figures with the cartoon series. Along with Star Wars and He Man transformers and Gobots toy lines and cartoon series. Corgi Dinky and Matchbox cars were very popular then hotwheels later, especially the themed ones like the batmobile and the james bond Astin martin . Mattel, MB games, Waddingtons were common toy companies along with Peter Pan, Hornbyand Blubird Toy Companies. The earliest form of building kits in the lego type catagory was Meccano which was a Hornby invention in 1908 who later produced model railways, models and dinky toys.
@theaces3697
@theaces3697 10 ай бұрын
99% of the time we in the UK hate the "hard sell" advert, we dont want to be lectured or shouted at about product, companies here know that if you can make a fun, unique and catchy advert it will win people over perhaps not to a specific product (which is why a lot of the adverts are quite detached from the product) but it will win them over to the brand in general
@AndrewwarrenAndrew
@AndrewwarrenAndrew 11 ай бұрын
These were on tv when my son and daughter were growing up. That Floam stuff was a complete pain to clear up it stuck to everything.
@ebbhead20
@ebbhead20 10 ай бұрын
The good ads are from 1975 to 1985. The hovis ones, the weetabix ads and monster Munch. That's my go to stuff. Used to record 4 hour VH tapes full of ads every summer on holiday in England. Had a few in the late 80s. 😊
@beccaboo3040
@beccaboo3040 11 ай бұрын
Crusha is a liquid milkshake mix that come's in many flavour's Raspberry is the best 😋💖
@gavinspence2381
@gavinspence2381 11 ай бұрын
"For mash get Smash" .... The PG Tips Chimps ( "you hum it son and I'll play it") ....Leonard Rossiter Martini ads ....Milk Tray ....Action Man ( with his eagle eyes) .... Hamlet Cigars..... satirical ones like "Ash Trey" .... every Irn Bru advert ... yeah I'm old(ish)
@vallejomach6721
@vallejomach6721 10 ай бұрын
Frank Muir 'Fruit and Nut' ads, John West Salmon 'Oh look! An eagle!!'
@timglennon6814
@timglennon6814 11 ай бұрын
America had GI Joe but here in the U.K. we had Action Man.
@susanashcroft2674
@susanashcroft2674 11 ай бұрын
Like the US once had Barbie and the UK had Sindy dolls.
@andyjohnson4907
@andyjohnson4907 11 ай бұрын
​​@@susanashcroft2674GI Joe was rebranded to Action Man. Barbie and Sindy were competitors.
@susanashcroft2674
@susanashcroft2674 11 ай бұрын
@@andyjohnson4907 Thanks I've learned something new, I didn't have an action man but a family member had one with the moving eyes and that creeped me out a bit.
@alisonscott1469
@alisonscott1469 11 ай бұрын
Hi Steve Thankyou for another great video, take care 😘
@TheMeerkat2323
@TheMeerkat2323 11 ай бұрын
Crusher is/was basically a syrup that you put into a glass, only a fairly small amount, fill the glass with milk, give it a damn good stirring and hey presto, you have a cold refreshing milkshake in whatever flavours the company did
@cyberash3000
@cyberash3000 11 ай бұрын
you should try the john smiths adverts, start with Peter Kay, then the Jack Dee ones then the ancient comedy john smiths adverts with the two old men, all hilarious
@proudyorkshireman7708
@proudyorkshireman7708 11 ай бұрын
Not forgetting the no nonsense level head pub
@gavinspence2381
@gavinspence2381 11 ай бұрын
The Boddingtons Bitter Ads with Melanie Sykes made far more of an impression on me when a teenager!
@tonyhoughton6857
@tonyhoughton6857 11 ай бұрын
Gi joe was called Action man over here in England 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿
@blueround9590
@blueround9590 11 ай бұрын
Funnily, Frosted Flakes are what "own brand" Frosties are called here.
@vallejomach6721
@vallejomach6721 10 ай бұрын
According to Wikipedia it reckons that the name 'Frosted Flakes' was too general a term to qualify for getting a UK Trademark applied to it so 'Frosties' is used instead, and presumably that'll be why supermarket own brands often just call them frosted flakes.
@davebirch1976
@davebirch1976 11 ай бұрын
Asda stores looked like that before Walmart took over, and people were always comparing them to Walmart because they looked similar, which is probably why they ended up owning the company for a while. The name Asda is an abbreviation of Asquith and Dairies which came from a merger of Asquith Supermarkets and Associated Dairies.
@chrisperyagh
@chrisperyagh 11 ай бұрын
You ought to do a reaction on British public information films from the 1970s. These were either shown during the day along with Schools & Colleges broadcasts or just before closedown.
@jacquelineeccles3938
@jacquelineeccles3938 11 ай бұрын
Those were quite scary too if I remember right 😮
@chrisperyagh
@chrisperyagh 11 ай бұрын
@@jacquelineeccles3938 That was the whole point of them - to shock us into not doing stupid shit that could ultimately kill us. Had I not seen 'Apaches' in the late '70s I'd have not treated slurry pits with the respect they deserve as we lived right by a cattle farm back then.
@chrisperyagh
@chrisperyagh 11 ай бұрын
@@scottneil1187 Links? He's done 'Top 10 Most Effective British Adverts' and 'Most Disturbing British TV Adverts' but not any of the classic PIFs
@Rainex-my7jd
@Rainex-my7jd 11 ай бұрын
Cadbury chocolate made incredible mix of ads especially 'Yes Sir, I WILL boogie' in the Office Cadbury Chocolate one of the best ads ever !!!!
@Pedro-lf4gr
@Pedro-lf4gr 11 ай бұрын
HEXBUG is a brand of infrared and automaton toys developed and distributed by Innovation First International. HEXBUG uses many elements used in BEAM robotics. First piloted in the US through RadioShack, HEXBUG is now sold in most major retail stores. The original Hexbugs are based on six-legged arthropods but now come in several different varieties. The name "HEXBUG" relates to the six-sided packaging it is sold in, rather than to its number of legs.
@Tvashk
@Tvashk 11 ай бұрын
Magnetix is the magnet toy that comes to mind for me
@Thomashorsman
@Thomashorsman 11 ай бұрын
Walmart bought ASDA but sold it back to British Owners a couple of years ago
@dataterminal
@dataterminal 11 ай бұрын
I've not watched broadcast TV for about 25 years now, so I haven't seen any of these adverts before. The ones I remember are from back in mid to late 80s. The UK advertising agencies that work for these brand companies are amazing though, lots of innovation to the point we even had a TV show called "How Do They Do That?" - it was run by the BBC that followed a group of adverts being made and showed the behind the scenes of the techniques used to create the visuals you see.
@Grithron2
@Grithron2 10 ай бұрын
Everyone else has said it - these ads aren't old enough to be "classic". I know I've made a long list on another page, but... In this batch only the Cravendale ones are on the level of classic ad series like "Is someone pulling your Pilsner?" or "Don't you just hate it when that happens?" or "It's good, but not `that' good", or Boddingtons pretending to be any number of other products...
@andyjohnson4907
@andyjohnson4907 11 ай бұрын
We had two types of GI Joes here. The 12 figures that your could dress up were rebranded to Action Man, and the four inch figures were rebranded to Action Force. "Action Force against Cobra the enemy, fighting to save the day!"
@DonnaPoynton.
@DonnaPoynton. 11 ай бұрын
I have the whole set of the Mcdonlads glasses I must of had them nearly 20 years still in the packaging
@shaun-hoppy
@shaun-hoppy 11 ай бұрын
Interesting fact, the milk with the cookie advert you liked had to change the voice over artist, it is a group called The Tiger Lillies they are a Dark cabaret, Gypsy stlye group that sings about child murder, rape and very anti-religious songs whilst wearing clownish face paint, I love them
@torreyskidd
@torreyskidd 11 ай бұрын
omg i remembered the words to the “fluffy go walkies” song hahahaaa i loved these!!!
@PeterDay81
@PeterDay81 11 ай бұрын
Lego A/S is a Danish toy production company based in Billund, Denmark.
@stevelknievel4183
@stevelknievel4183 11 ай бұрын
The music on the first milk advert sounds a lot like the music from a show called Shock-Headed Peter that I saw in a London theatre as a teenager. It was a series of songs acted out with puppets all about children who had died because they were naughty. I believe the band that performed it was called the Tiger Lillies.
@jordanpeterson2001
@jordanpeterson2001 11 ай бұрын
Only discovered your channel today and have been on a little bit of a binge. Love the channel and love seeing another countries view ok what we may see as normal day to day things. Some small recommendations 1) The history of coal in wales - sounds boring, but is a massive part of this part of the country. Big Pit being a good example for a tourist 2) The Everyone vs England rivalry - Especially in sport, look into the English or British question I.e. Andy Murray Syndrome 3) Things invented by Scottish People
@reactingtomyroots
@reactingtomyroots 11 ай бұрын
Thanks for the recommendations Jordan. I'm glad you're enjoying the channel. :)
@MrShadeUK
@MrShadeUK 11 ай бұрын
Yes we do still have lego, we even have Legoland. kzbin.info/www/bejne/bXyZfIWhadFloKc If you was curious about it, here's a tour vid of it 2023. It is a bit long, but the last time I was at Legoland I was about 10 years, im now 32 and it is still around now.
@BlackLiger788
@BlackLiger788 11 ай бұрын
They didn't change the name to be in the UK for Frosties. They changed it to be in the US. Keddogs does a LOT of their production R&D over here.
@dorothysimpson2804
@dorothysimpson2804 11 ай бұрын
I have not seen any of the toy adverts. Frosties with Tony the Tiger is about 65years old I am 70. Cats with thumbs was very popular. We have Lego, matchbox and Dinky cars.
@denniswilliams160
@denniswilliams160 11 ай бұрын
Wallmart tried to sell Asda to Sainsbury's but the Competition And Markets Authority blocked the sale. It was sold to a UK consortium in 2020
@angelavara4097
@angelavara4097 11 ай бұрын
I have a purple glass from coca cola. Floam is American.cravendale ads are still on tv. Lego friends ad is American. I never seen the pinata ad in my 66 years.
@Ka1denBreak
@Ka1denBreak 11 ай бұрын
That ‘biscuit’ advert would actually be called cookies. Crunchy cookies like ‘Maryland cookies’ for example. Biscuits are lights and easy to eat, usually can dip in tea and it will instantly go soft, unlike cookies.
@Chris_GY1
@Chris_GY1 11 ай бұрын
Asda was owned by Walmart but it came back into British ownership in February 2021. Cravendale milk is filtered it’s not as nice as unfiltered milk. Crusher I believe is put into milk to make milkshake, I remember one similar in the 80s/90s. There are videos of British adverts from 70s, 80s and 90s on KZbin.
@OneTrueScotsman
@OneTrueScotsman 11 ай бұрын
I didn't know it was sold back to Britain. That's pleased me very much. I hate how everytime we create something, the owners see literal dollar signs instead of keeping it here. And not because it's the US, I'd feel the same if it was China, Germany or Brazil we sold everything to. But Walkers, Cadbury, DeepMind, ASDA, and so many others. It's really annoying. Also, how we change names for things, like "ball" to "prom". And "shaggy" to "hickey".
@Arvak
@Arvak 10 ай бұрын
These are very much 2000s ads - some are nostalgic for me but I was born in the 90s! Some are too recent even for me to feel nostalgic for 😅 We use 'cookie' here quite a lot, mainly to refer to a certain kind of biscuit (e.g. chocolate chip cookie, oat and raisin cookie), whereas biscuit is more of an umbrella term. We never use the word 'commercial' here, just ad or advert. We use 'fries' to refer to skinny chips, including McDonalds. I had Cool Cardz as a kid in the 2000s and I loved it! Action Man was more popular in the UK than G.I. Joe. Crusha was a liquid you could mix with milk to make a kind of milkshake. I believe Frosties is the original name, not sure why they're just Frosted Flakes in the US!
@stevegray1308
@stevegray1308 10 ай бұрын
My brother was a fanatic Meccano builder as a little kid, I was a nerd playing with Maths toys. He became a civil engineer, I became a computer security consultant. The toys make the man.
@stevegray1308
@stevegray1308 10 ай бұрын
No computers then (the 60s).
@neilbradley5011
@neilbradley5011 5 ай бұрын
Used to spend hours creating and building stuff with Lego using my imagination,in the days before the Lego kits came out where they became the same as model kits,no imagination needed.
@user-gr8xl2cv1i
@user-gr8xl2cv1i 10 ай бұрын
Asda was sold a year or two ago. We would get bored of the medical adverts from America very quickly. They list of the side effects ingredients they last about 4 mins sometimes. They are called advertising agencies not commercial agencies. I have noticed Americans are saying fries more than French fries. Crusher is a homemade milkshake drink. Just add the syrup and then the milk.
@nilocnolnah6788
@nilocnolnah6788 11 ай бұрын
Going way way back does anyone remember the baby elephant with the little boy and then they grew up. A Rolo Advertisement. It was voted best avert ever for many years.
@davidt-rex2062
@davidt-rex2062 9 ай бұрын
Arla is a Danish-Swedish cooperative - they do some spectacular ads.
@lisaweinmeyer5782
@lisaweinmeyer5782 11 ай бұрын
Great fun!
@traceysmartart
@traceysmartart Ай бұрын
My daughter had a lots of these like the chocolate coin maker, walking dog etc and was born 2003 (21 this year).
@veryblocky
@veryblocky 11 ай бұрын
I’m 22 and I remember most of these from my childhood, so mostly 2000s
@AlexanderBrassington
@AlexanderBrassington 11 ай бұрын
Frosted Flakes would be what the knock off brands would call them here
@helenwood8482
@helenwood8482 11 ай бұрын
Krusha is a syrup for making milkshakes.
@elliefrew3429
@elliefrew3429 10 ай бұрын
So many of the toy adds originate in the US which really stick out to me because of the narrative voice with American accents!! My mum wouldn't let me watch much of the TV channel ITV because of the American accent adverts. I watched bbc, which didn't have US accents it also, no ads at all to temp me into pestering my parents to buy me toys hahaa
@cheman579
@cheman579 10 ай бұрын
Yeah so these adverts are nostalgic for me and people my age. I'm turning 20 in October. All of these were adverts from when I was a kid and I got real nostalgia from some of them, like the Cool Cardz one, hearing the song unlocked a forgotten memory. But yeah I was born in 2003 and these will be from mid-late 2000s and early 2010s, if I can remember them then I'll have been at least 5 (so late 2008). Also Hex Bugs were amazing along with the theme tune (which was a remake of Monster by The Automatic - an early 2000s kid song) Also Frosted Flakes are only called Frosted Flakes in NA. They're called Frosties in the UK and Ireland, in commonwealth countries, as well as in Europe and the Middle-East. So they changed the name for you guys not us lol. Loving the videos though mate, you're one of the better reactors out there as you actually remember stuff you learn lol. Keep it up pal.
@ltrtg13
@ltrtg13 11 ай бұрын
The Cravendale advert reminded me. I do have a photo of a cat that looks like it has "thumbs".
@andrewwells3367
@andrewwells3367 11 ай бұрын
You still haven't done the hilarious Marmite compilation of ads.
@malarkey2217
@malarkey2217 11 ай бұрын
Never saw or heard of the toys in any of these toy commercials, don't know why they are considered 'nostalgic'. Cravendale cats is really recent, like last year!
@malarkey2217
@malarkey2217 11 ай бұрын
@@scottneil1187 I'm not a cat lover, i saw it for the first time last year. A decade is still recent relatively speaking. None of these stir any nostalgia in me, each to his own.
@scottwebb1978
@scottwebb1978 11 ай бұрын
Asda is the UK's third-largest supermarket, and - like EG - is owned by brothers Zuber and Mohsin Issa and private equity group TDR Capital. The £2.27bn deal will mean the acquisition of around 350 petrol stations and more than 1,000 food-to-go locations.30 May 2023
@kevs4252
@kevs4252 11 ай бұрын
STEVE, i have a couple of reaction ideas. Firstly The Magna Carta which is what our democracy and laws are based on and is the foundation of our country. Secondly there is a fantastic video you should watch called ' Visit America Without Leaving Britain! The JFK Memorial ' Incidentally the Memorial is few minutes walk away from where the Magna was sealed in 1215 by King John. This location for the Memorial was chosen because your constitution is basedon The Magna Carta. So these two subjects would work well together.
@reactingtomyroots
@reactingtomyroots 11 ай бұрын
Thanks for the recommendations. I really appreciate it.
@OneTrueScotsman
@OneTrueScotsman 11 ай бұрын
I have never seen any of those adverts before, and certainly don't get nostalgia from them. I think the video producer might be pretty young, so had a different growing up experience.
@philgreen8277
@philgreen8277 11 ай бұрын
We also have concentrated fruit juice, 20ml to 50ml in a glass of water. We call it squash. As a boy I Action man. Later on it became GI Joe. There's a lot of kiddies ad's here. In the UK, when advertising toys over a certain amount of money. The advertiser has to state how much etc. If you want funny ones. Look for hamlet cigars, P G Tips tea with the chimpanzees.
@andrewfurey2999
@andrewfurey2999 11 ай бұрын
Crusha is a flavoured syrup for making flavoured milk drinks
@kevanembleton2030
@kevanembleton2030 11 ай бұрын
Crusher is a milk shake syrup. just add milk for a milk shake.
@bobclarke1815
@bobclarke1815 11 ай бұрын
They used to be called Commercial breaks.
@MrNifts
@MrNifts 11 ай бұрын
I have no idea how Biscuit Boy managed to find way home with no Head! lol
@sludgiebear
@sludgiebear 10 ай бұрын
I loved Lego. I used what I had to recreate Voyager (from Star Trek Voyager). I was quite proud of myself because it looked pretty good, and the warp nacelles raised like in the show. I also remember building a car, complete with boot/trunk space. I think I put in a small motor at one point to make it move. I spent countless hours with my Lego! If only it was socially acceptable for me to break them out and play with them now. 😆
American Reacts to the Most Disturbing British TV Adverts
24:39
Reacting To My Roots
Рет қаралды 53 М.
American Reacts 10 Reasons Why Queen Elizabeth II Is a BADASS!
22:38
Reacting To My Roots
Рет қаралды 32 М.
I Built a Shelter House For myself and Сat🐱📦🏠
00:35
TooTool
Рет қаралды 26 МЛН
КАКОЙ ВАШ ЛЮБИМЫЙ ЦВЕТ?😍 #game #shorts
00:17
Poopigirl
Рет қаралды 10 МЛН
Can you beat this impossible game?
00:13
LOL
Рет қаралды 62 МЛН
American Reacts to the Top 10 British TV Shows America Loves
20:11
Reacting To My Roots
Рет қаралды 43 М.
American Reacts to Crossing the Pontcysyllte Canal Aqueduct Wales
16:40
Reacting To My Roots
Рет қаралды 43 М.
Glasnevin Cemetery Dublin And The Grave of Brendan Behan Ireland
18:05
Graveside Walks
Рет қаралды 1,8 М.
CANADIAN REACTS | 80s British Sweets Adverts
20:10
Adventures and Naps
Рет қаралды 31 М.
Reacting To Nostalgic 2000s UK Adverts and Commercials
39:37
Evil Hamburger 64
Рет қаралды 726
American Reacts to US vs UK Meal Etiquette
23:46
Reacting To My Roots
Рет қаралды 34 М.
🇬🇧BRIT Reacts To CLASSIC AUSTRALIAN ADVERTS!
12:58
Kabir Considers Sports & More
Рет қаралды 215 М.
American Reacts to 10 Hilarious British Insults
19:11
Reacting To My Roots
Рет қаралды 62 М.
American Reacts to British Childhood Ads | Evan Edinger
22:17
Evan Edinger
Рет қаралды 728 М.
American Reacts to "UK Commercials/Adverts"
16:57
ItsJps
Рет қаралды 37 М.