Watching an American use cutlery is like watching a toddler discovering the concept of not 'using your hands'
@lottie25257 ай бұрын
Haha yes, exactly this.
@philipashley97237 ай бұрын
Most Americans don't know how to use a knife and fork, because, most of their food is eaten, using their hands. Nearly all American food is fast food. Pick it up and stuff it in your mouth. When first visiting America, in 1979, I watched two elderly ladies in a restaurant, using a knife and fork like 5 year olds. I had never seen such contortions, holding both the knife and fork, like they were trying to stab the food.
@mattbentley92707 ай бұрын
Its horrifying to watch the way they shovel it into their face like they are starved Neanderthal
@waitingforapril7 ай бұрын
It’s really not that important and there are people from all different cultures with different rules, no point in having a single rule. Much more important to be kind and respectful to each other and differences, imo.
@TectonicEventsWales7 ай бұрын
Watching big bang theory use cutlery is cringe!
@McKamikazeHighlander7 ай бұрын
As a British actor, I HATE the fact that American theatre audiences start clapping as soon as a famous person appears on stage at the start of the play. Most plays begin in the middle of a scene/conversation, so in the UK audiences are completely silent until the interval/end of the play. But in the US, plays have to literally pause to wait for the audience to shut the eff up and frankly, it's annoying
@lottie25257 ай бұрын
Absolutely HATE American so-called 'good' customer service. Just take our order, give us our food, leave us alone. THAT is good service - not all the interruptions and trying to be my 'friend'. I'm here to enjoy my actual friends' company - quit with all the bloody sycophantic nonsense. Same with shops, if I want some help I'll ask, otherwise quit bugging me. I'll just walk straight out of the shop! So funny that you actually like all that stuff and equate it with good service. No, no, no thanks.
@mattbentley92707 ай бұрын
Yes Lottie, 1000000% agree, someone talks to me im outta there !! some other shop can have my money ... not a miserable;e person just DO NOT TALK to me people when im shopping and hungry
@jmillar711107 ай бұрын
Completely agree. I don't mind a "hello/good morning" but the OTT stuff drives me nuts😂
@dianakorz07307 ай бұрын
As an American I completely agree! I cannot stand it as a shopper and I hate being over friendly as a manager in customer service. This American should have been born in the UK. I relate more to the Brits than I do Americans.
@gregorybiestek34317 ай бұрын
@@mattbentley9270 Then NEVER come to the USA because you will spend three DAYS while you remain hungry trying to find a store that does NOT do that sort of customer service. The reason is simple. If the employee fails to do that sort of customer service there is a 90% chance that person will be fired from their job and most likely also denied unemployment benefits for being fired for "cause".
@thedeewolf7 ай бұрын
@@gregorybiestek3431 Sounds good to me...I'll stick to Europe and ppl being earnest instead of the obsequious nonsense u poor Americans are forced to do!!!
@phillipescott97647 ай бұрын
I’m sure that most British people would use only ‘start’, ‘pause’ and ‘finished’ for cutlery, but they are widespread across British society. Incidentally, we’d never call the implements ‘silverware’ unless they were actually made of silver.
@julianaylor43517 ай бұрын
I'm so crashingly middle class that I own soup spoons, dessert spoons, fish knives and forks and cake forks. 😁
7 ай бұрын
Start, either side of but next to plate. Pause, separated, either side of plate, implements not touching. Finished, implements together in line, in middle of plate. Paying? Bring the bill, then bring the damn machine to me.
@EdDnB7 ай бұрын
@@julianaylor4351I just thought they were all norm 😮😅
@James-hd6ez7 ай бұрын
@@julianaylor4351I just eat with my hands ✋️
@j_fenrir7 ай бұрын
@julianaylor4351 bloody hell mate i dont think ive seen half of those in my life
@helenroberts11077 ай бұрын
You never ask people about money in the UK for general conversation. That would be awful! It’s rude
@riverraven73597 ай бұрын
Depends on how well you know them and in which context.
@AnnaBellaChannel7 ай бұрын
@@riverraven7359 True but only with very close people.
@victoriawilliams81966 ай бұрын
I hope that's changing with the newer generations. The only reason to not discuss money is so employers can rip you off.
@AnnaBellaChannel6 ай бұрын
@@victoriawilliams8196 No. Why would you talk about money with strangers? Not a very smart or safe thing to do.
@andrewdunn15027 ай бұрын
What Americans call customer service is actually obtrusive harassment!
@HeatherMyfanwyTylerGreey7 ай бұрын
100pc agree.
@moshpitted7 ай бұрын
We just think they think we're shoplifting
@paulashe617 ай бұрын
We care? No you just want to interfere in a crisis?
@pv-mm2or5 ай бұрын
@andrewdunn1502 include unjustified sales pitch, to interrupt my browsing is akin to putting your foot in the door, don't dare invade my space uninvited unless you want a broken toe!! that's what i think of American customer service!
@philipashley97237 ай бұрын
Yes, as someone said, British people don't appreciate American servers, fussing at our meal tables. We know, their only intention is for us to eat, and leave, as fast as they can get us out, so they can get the next group in, who might just, give them a bigger tip. The British are allowed to eat their meal in peace, the management realizes that customers who find a restaurant relaxing, is somewhere they might like to return to.
@Amethysttredecim7 ай бұрын
Dinky does mean small in the UK, we also had a well known miniature toy car manufacturer in Liverpool called 'dinky'
@nolaj1147 ай бұрын
I'm Australian and when I was a child, the boys all called their toy cars, usually made by Matchbox or Mattel, "dinkies". But we'd also say "dinky" for something small and quaint, though a term not much used any more.
@Ramtamtama7 ай бұрын
@@nolaj114 could that be a case of a brand becoming the de facto name for an item, like hoovers and sellotape?
@lindsaymckeown5137 ай бұрын
I don't see it as a negative personally, often refers to something cute/sweet like a puppy, a baby, a flat that is comact and bijous!
@stewedfishproductions95547 ай бұрын
@@nolaj114 FYI: Dinky derived from an old Scottish word (still in use); 'dink' - meaning small, neat, trim and cute.
@nolaj1147 ай бұрын
@@Ramtamtama yes..that must be it. I didn't know until now it was a brand.
@julianaylor43517 ай бұрын
In the UK restaurant staff aren't allowed by law to take a credit or debit card anymore, because of theft and fraud. You just hand it over to someone who swipes it in front of you. In fact it's banned in all businesses including car dealerships, they have to swipe it in front of you, or most times now you tap it yourself, on a contactless terminal. In the UK you only talk to supermarket staff at the till or ask them for help in the aisles.
@lloydcollins63377 ай бұрын
Plus if you have to put the PIN in you need the terminal to do that.
@gregorybiestek34317 ай бұрын
@@lloydcollins6337 USA banks have fees and charges for everything and when they are not doing it to their customers, they are doing it to the businesses. One reason tap & pay was slow to catch on in the USA is that every bank charged the business TWICE the normal rate if they switched from the old method.
@julianaylor43517 ай бұрын
@@gregorybiestek3431 We have institutions called building societies in the UK, they charge nothing for withdrawals and smaller charges than banks for other services. They borrow your money and lend it for three days after it's deposited. You are a member and not a customer and get access to better banking services, interest rates and accounts than banks. There's only one draw back, if you like paying bills across the counter, you can't, but as I'm in one, I pay my bills the usual DD way or go and pay across the counter at a post office or use a special pay card for bills there or at a shop that takes that card. Many people don't know that building societies have current accounts, they think they only do savings accounts, whereas they do all sorts of account types, so they get ripped off by UK bank charges. Even my accidental overdrafts, only had three in over 30 years, are cheaper.
@jonevansauthor7 ай бұрын
@@gregorybiestek3431 more accurately it's because you don't regulate your companies at all on any level. You think the UK banks did things because they were being smart? No, we just forced them to do it or be massively fined. *shrugs* I do hope you guys get to catch up at some point, it'll make life easier for you. Especially if you start handling sales tax in the only sane way to do it which is to include it in the label and have no maths to do as a customer.
@gregorybiestek34317 ай бұрын
@@jonevansauthor The USA will likely never catch up to the rest of the world because it is a nation of the corporations, for the corporations, and by the corporations. USA conservatives run the country like the age of robber barons. By the way, the Republicans just proposed making unions illegal and have pledged to get rid of the few worker rights that were established in 1930s. So, we look back for the future.
@nicw55747 ай бұрын
Butter on a bacon or sausage sandwich is amazing. The butter starts to melt, it's delicious.
@theturtlemoves30147 ай бұрын
You have to have real butter, Also essential for chip butties where the butter runs down your face
@nolaj1147 ай бұрын
I can't imagine sandwiches without butter! Butter gives flavour, gives some moisture, and keep some ingredients, like tuna, from falling out. I was really surprised when I learned Americans don't use butter - but then, maybe they don't have real, fresh butter?
@lemming99847 ай бұрын
I prefer bacon or sausage sandwiches without butter - just generously spread with HP sauce.
@TalesOfWar7 ай бұрын
@@nolaj114 I imagine all the other crap they have in their "bread" oozes out and has the same effect.
@annarosetarot6 ай бұрын
Butter is a necessity I even use it when I’m having peanut butter on toast butter first 😂
@alananderson57317 ай бұрын
All Europe know how to use a knife and fork properly ,us still haven't learnt this yet.
@GrumpyOldGit-zk1kw7 ай бұрын
On a related note - and saying 'knife and fork'; most people (that I've listened to) from the U.S. say 'fork and knife' which sounds like a knife that they're angry with.
@personalcheeses80737 ай бұрын
@@GrumpyOldGit-zk1kw😂😂😂
@TalesOfWar7 ай бұрын
@@GrumpyOldGit-zk1kw Say it with an Irish accent and it's especially funny lol.
@austinwiththehat7 ай бұрын
Randy is normally used when referring to others these days as opposed to one’s self. Calling someone a Randy b******d when they’re overly affectionate or touchy feely
@Freakyman4037 ай бұрын
true, i was just about to make this comment and noticed yours, so take a like :)
@jonathancauldwell98227 ай бұрын
Yep, randy means horny. You can't use it as a name without people laughing.
@wuxing1007 ай бұрын
I went to the US on holiday with a brand new never used card, got to the hotel put our stuff in and went out for food at a nearby restaurant and paid with my card, the next day I had a call from the bank that someone had gone on a shopping spree using my card so I went back into the restaurant pointed out the server who handled my card and they ended up calling the police because I was about to stomp the fucker out. No one has any need to handle your card over here for that exact reason, you either go to the counter and pay or they bring the card machine over to you
@GirlOfTheTardis7 ай бұрын
Exactly they claim its more convenient for the customer but its more convenient if they bring over a card machine
@WookieWarriorz7 ай бұрын
Americans are obsessed with the idea of people doing things for them. It's ironic given the American dream shite. @@GirlOfTheTardis
@Shell21647 ай бұрын
Just Once my grandparents handed the waitress their card in a restaurant, she went off and charged the card. Two days later my nan had a call from her bank saying someone had tried to use the card for a $1700 transaction in New York which they didn’t approve luckily. Never again did they ever hand their card over. We don’t do that here in the uk and there’s a reason.
@lottie25257 ай бұрын
If buskers can sort out having a card machine, surely restaurants can get with the programme.
@gregorybiestek34317 ай бұрын
@@Shell2164 Your experience is most likely NOT the fault of the business that swiped your card, it likely was another of the frequent hacking breaks that regularly attack and get tons of credit card information off computer servers. The hackers first sort this info by those that use online or tap & pay a lot, divide into blocks of 10,000 accounts, then sell these blocks to the highest bidder on the black market. Since Europeans visiting the USA all use tap & pay, they are particularly prime targets for these hackers. Also, hackers are another reason many US people still use very old tech, since it keeps many US consumers the most difficult to scam. I have had six notifications that one of my financial institutions has been hacked in ten years, but never had a scam charge, because I refuse to use online banking and use old tech as much as possible.
7 ай бұрын
BestBuy came to the UK, and brought their customer service attitude with them. Their employees literally got told to fuck off, a lot, and they knew it would happen. People started by going into the new shop, getting pissed off with the customer service, not going back because of it. It was one of their biggest mistakes coming into the British market.
@TalesOfWar7 ай бұрын
I'm pretty sure they bought a bunch of old PC World units too to make people think they'd just changed name or something for those who didn't know who they were.
@bigdaddigaming7 ай бұрын
I’ve lived in America for 23 years and the bread is fucking disgusting, I hate it, it’s so sweet you wouldn’t want to turn it into a savory sandwich or anything, I’ve tried so many I’ve found a couple of brands that aren’t too bad otherwise as a Brit keep away from American bread
@TalesOfWar7 ай бұрын
I saw somewhere that some "bread" in the US could technically be classed as cake under EU laws given how much sugar is in the stuff. I also find it hilarious how lots of American "chocolate" is only classed as "flavour" in Europe because it doesn't actually have enough chocolate in it. Same with American "cheese".
@bigdaddigaming7 ай бұрын
@@TalesOfWar yea there’s loads of bad items here that I find horrible, cheese that isn’t cheese, bread that’s actually cake and chocolate lacking cacao and that’s just the tip of the iceberg, and there’s one British KZbinr that keeps on going on about how he’s heard that American food is so good, what an idiot
@hypsyzygy5067 ай бұрын
@@TalesOfWar US 'cheese' doesn't have enough cheese in it?
@TalesOfWar7 ай бұрын
@@hypsyzygy506 No. They're often called "cheesy" or "cheeze" or something like that due to the lack of enough cheese to be legally classed as such.
@elizabethrose52037 ай бұрын
Brit here, lived in the US for 3 years, had to buy a bread machine as their bread is truly gross, sweet and cake like!
@onecupof_tea5 ай бұрын
In uk we like shop assistants who say 'if you need help, I'm just over there', and they walk off to do something more important than to chat to you. But at least you know where they are !
@GazGaryGazza7 ай бұрын
In the uk cc payment is a wireless tap on the terminal and for as long as I can remember YOU NEVER EVER let your card out of your sight
@michaelprobert40147 ай бұрын
Oh, what a young man you are...I remember they would take your credit card into the back, telephone your bank to see if you had enough credit , then if you did, they would put it through a click clack machine..
@bigfrankfraser13917 ай бұрын
@@michaelprobert4014 i remember when you would pay in shillings, did that for 30 years, then in the 90's poof, no more fun coin names
@redwiltshire18167 ай бұрын
Honestly yeah the thought of just giving someone your card sounds like a recipe for disaster
@fayesouthall66047 ай бұрын
Or keep it in your purse or wallet and use your phone.
@julianaylor43517 ай бұрын
It was banned by law years ago after too much theft and fraud, for others to take your card.
@JungleTunes947 ай бұрын
Get that butter on your bread. The idea of any sandwich without is totally alien for sure. You can still add condiments but the butter brings it all together and stops the bread getting soggy + adds a subtle flavour
@jmurray11106 ай бұрын
I can understand it fir hotdogs (those are annoying ti butter but yeah
@lisasallery78606 ай бұрын
100% you cannot have a ham and cheese sandwich without butter!
@davidmellish32953 ай бұрын
@@jmurray1110Butter on sandwiches is a must, butter on hotdogs I've never heard of
@redrumtruecrime7 ай бұрын
Being a Brit myself there is nothing more off putting than a store employee 'badgering' customers for a sale‼️ If we want help or advice then we'll find you, but if we feel we're being watched and that staff are flat out pushing for a sale, then the majority of us will just leave to make a purchase elsewhere, from a place who respects their customers right to browse and not be rushed to the check out‼️. We see such sales personnel as rude and pushy stores typically don't do well, because we have Argos, where you won't ever be accosted by ANY employee, ever. Plus customers are promised Argos' prices are matched to other retail stores cheapest offers or they'll refund you double the difference‼️😁🇬🇧
@lottie25257 ай бұрын
I read somewhere they tried to have American-style meeter greeters in one UK store. It didn't go down very well, as you can imagine. Leave me the f alone!
@WILFREDRUSSELL-h8n7 ай бұрын
A lot of sales staff in the US work on commission, so they over-do the hard sell thing
@gregorybiestek34317 ай бұрын
@@lottie2525 Then NEVER come to the USA because you will spend three DAYS while you remain looking for the item you want trying to find a store that does NOT do that sort of customer service. The reason is simple. If the employee fails to do that sort of customer service there is a 90% chance that person will be fired from their job and most likely also denied unemployment benefits for being fired for "cause".
@thedeewolf7 ай бұрын
@@gregorybiestek3431 nice copy n paste...
@nadeansimmons2267 ай бұрын
I agree. Start coming over and talking to me and i will leave the shop. I don't mind a hello but that is all
@karenphillips20926 ай бұрын
When you ask for the bill in UK the card reader is brought to the table, your card doesn't leave you...
@doobiedootwo35177 ай бұрын
Only film where there should be audible audience reaction is ‘Rocky Horror Show” and with that audience participation is mandatory. Just like a panto - its an unwritten rule.
@jondavey52217 ай бұрын
Love Rocky Horror! Go as often as possible. Love the heckling 😂
@eileencritchley46307 ай бұрын
Oh my then you've never been to a cinema when it's showing a recording of a previous live BTS Concert because ARMY take their ARMY bombs (light sticks) with them and are up out of their sits screaming Rap lines and singing along in a mix of English & Korean. It's like being back at Stadium again with 60,000 -100,000 follow ARMY.
@fredericksaxton39917 ай бұрын
@@jondavey5221 I think I have just over 200 visits to RHS since my first visit in 1979... Getting a tad old for the outfit now. 😞
@catw47296 ай бұрын
@@eileencritchley4630 I wish it was like that when I go to films of BTS concerts - just a few there, so no atmosphere.
@Oxley0167 ай бұрын
In the UK the word 'Sir' is generally reserved for teachers, your superior officers if you are in the armed forces, or actual knights of the realm.
@hypsyzygy5067 ай бұрын
It's very unsettling to be called 'sir'.
@Oxley0167 ай бұрын
@@hypsyzygy506 Thankfully I've never been called sir but if it were to happen I wouldn't know what to do!
@gpr1277 ай бұрын
Utter garbage. Often used by more respectful people toward senior gentlemen.
@Oxley0167 ай бұрын
@@gpr127 'Garbage' No way you are British.
@tanja93646 ай бұрын
If anyone calls me “ma’am”, it puts my back up and I want to be very rude to them! (Like those scammers who call you.)
@judithdelaugere38773 ай бұрын
I like the attention given when I go into a store in the U.S. as a Brit living in the U.S. I got so fed up trying to find someone to help in the U.K. Usually this involves a search throughout the store asking “excuse me do you work here?”
@minimuff835 күн бұрын
That's true...I accept that for sure xx
@olwens13687 ай бұрын
An American bloke did once say to me that he couldn't understand why people laughed when he introduced himself. I asked him what his name was. "I'm Randy" he replied. I laughed.
@markthomas25777 ай бұрын
the whole point of hot sandwiches like sausage or bacon is the melted butter !. Same with toast ..... always butter.
@julianaylor43517 ай бұрын
Sandwich toasters. 😋
@DevonRex1167 ай бұрын
@@julianaylor4351 Butter inside AND outside the sandwich! 😊
@helenwood84827 ай бұрын
The aversion to butter baffled me until I saw the state of American butter. Ours is from grass-fed cows and is rich and creamy. The whole point of butter is to spread on bread. If you have mayo, you need butter to stop the bread going soggy.
@briansmith487 ай бұрын
Your bread going soggy.?! 😳 How long do you take to eat a sandwich??? 😄 🇺🇲
@ralphhathaway-coley54605 ай бұрын
@@briansmith48 You have to forgive us here in the UK, a lot do not realise that most store bought American bread is what we would think of as cake as it is so sweet and generally weird. To be fair I mostly cook my own bread so know what it should taste like. ;-) :-D
@briansmith485 ай бұрын
@@helenwood8482 . I've recently tried putting kerry gold butter on a sandwich. And a half to say... Yuck! 🤢 Man, I had to struggle to get through that thing. 🤢 I'll stick to mustard and mayo. 😋
@thomas_oak29437 ай бұрын
I am fine with people calling me sir. What absolutely infuriates me is a stranger calling me by my first name. I am frequently very rude in response.
@freewheelinfranklin62016 ай бұрын
Especially if you have a first name, a middle name and a surname and you've always been called by your middle name. Banker (may be a mis-spelling) : "Can I call you Robert, Rob, Robbie, Bob, or Bobby?" Me: "Grrr, lets stick to Mr. Surname, shall we!"
@deja-view10176 ай бұрын
Way better than being called 'guys' in a restaurant (even when you're all women).
@austinwiththehat7 ай бұрын
I think I’ve only ever done the “finished” position
@cmin37837 ай бұрын
same
@wobaguk7 ай бұрын
definitely learned the pause one too growing up, most of the others Ive never seen before
@brun47757 ай бұрын
Pause is also a thing. The others are BS.
@cmin37837 ай бұрын
@@brun4775 true but to me the pause one seemed less like an etiquette thing and more of a placing the parts of the cutlery ive used on the plate and the parts i hold off the plate, like just kinda common sense i guess
@catbevis16447 ай бұрын
You're still talking about cutlery, right?
@Dan-B7 ай бұрын
It truly is horrifying to me, the idea of a waiter taking my card when I can just use my card myself, and I’m far too British to understand why Americans don’t see any problem with it 😛
@gregorybiestek34317 ай бұрын
That's because you were immediately marked as a foreigner and an easy target. Americans have been handing the cards over for over 30 years and NEVER had a single problem. When you are some obvious non-citizen you put a target on yourself.
@gregorybiestek34317 ай бұрын
@@Sradders Your experience is most likely NOT the fault of the business that swiped your card, it likely was another of the frequent hacking breaks that regularly attack and get tons of credit card information off computer servers. The hackers first sort this info by those that use online or tap & pay a lot, divide into blocks of 10,000 accounts, then sell these blocks to the highest bidder on the black market. Since Europeans visiting the USA all use tap & pay, they are particularly prime targets for these hackers. Also, hackers are another reason many US people still use very old tech, since it keeps many US consumers the most difficult to scam. I have had six notifications that one of my financial institutions has been hacked in ten years, but never had a scam charge, because I refuse to use online banking and use old tech as much as possible.
@clivepygott38837 ай бұрын
I'm not all that horrified, but it does sound odd saying you went to see a film at the 'theatre' - films are shown in a cinema, theatres have live actors!
@Spiklething7 ай бұрын
the spelling of theatre in the US too - theater just looks odd
@gregorybiestek34317 ай бұрын
@@Spiklething Just remember in the USA until 1950 there were NO places devoted solely to film and cinema. All films were shown in actual theaters with large movie screen installed to lower & rise like one of the backdrops. As a result people after WW2 became conditioned to continue to use that terminology for any place where it was presenting show - either a live performance or one on film.
@felixhenson99267 ай бұрын
tbf there are many kinds of theatre including an operating one i wonder if it's just a space where there can be an audience
@clivepygott38837 ай бұрын
You're absolutely right. 'Theatre' originally just meant somewhere with an audience. Operating theatres in hospitals used to have a viewing gallery for medical students, similarly for 'lecture theatre'. But I'd argue that current UK usage is cinema for where you watch films and theatre for watching actors (but I may just be showing my age!)
@gregorybiestek34317 ай бұрын
@@clivepygott3883 I do wish Brits were a little less up-tight about different countries using the English language is different ways. If they understood the how any language develops, maybe they could be a little more forgiving. As another example, the USA, Can, Aus, NZ & Ireland all use the original 19th century term soccer for association football, while the UK has changed post WW2 to just football. Same sport, different term, nothing to get all worked up about.
@darkblondewatch86527 ай бұрын
no you need butter on bread. kettles are a must. i will never put a cup of water in the microwave that thought alone horrifies me to my core.
@geoffpriestley73107 ай бұрын
Boil a Cup of water in the microwave and leave it there it softens any dried on food makes it easier to clean. That's the only reason to put water in a microwave
@jennyli77496 ай бұрын
I honestly have never even contemplated microwaving water to make a cup of tea it’s pretty crazy imo
@graveperil21697 ай бұрын
in the UK the terminals are hand held so they would bring it to the table for payment the card/phone never leaves my hand
@gregorybiestek34317 ай бұрын
I like many Americans have been handing the cards over for over 30 years and NEVER had a single problem. USA banks have fees and charges for everything and when they are not doing it to their customers, they are doing it to the businesses. One reason tap & pay was slow to catch on in the USA is that every bank charged the business TWICE the normal rate if they switched from the old method.
@TalesOfWar7 ай бұрын
@@gregorybiestek3431 The fraud liability was different in the US and UK/Europe. It's on the bank in the US, it was on the store in the UK/Europe. Tap to pay only took off in the US because they changed the liability to the store, which incentivised stores to get newer terminals that did Chip and PIN and contactless, more specifically things like tokenisation as is used by Apple Pay. Even now you hear of some places still refusing to accept contactless or Chip and PIN despite the terminals they're using having full support for it. They just don't turn it on for reasons. Big companies like Walmart also tried to roll their own payment system called MCX and CurrentC instead of just using the global standard of EMV.
@Sachielk306 ай бұрын
@@gregorybiestek3431 Wow. Greedy banks, no surprise. We DO get charged on a few cash machines (ATMs), but not many, and not at all if we use our own bank's ones. Card fraud is high everywhere you go, so we'd rather not chance it by having our cards taken out of sight. :-)
@charlestaylor94247 ай бұрын
The best reaction to "have a nice day" was "I have other plans".
@adrianw58117 ай бұрын
I always reply...'Enjoy the rest of your life.'
@gabbymcclymont35637 ай бұрын
Classic
@julianaylor43517 ай бұрын
😁
@jemsjemski5337 ай бұрын
I work in British retail and genuinely say have a good day in the morning, post lunch a good afternoon and after 3pm let’s all have a lovely evening 😂 because minimum wage and the crap we put up with (5.5hrs = 15mins break) over lunch the huge retailers expect of the employees, makes me grateful to be getting the hell out of their control 😳😬🫣
@littlenan35767 ай бұрын
Well, we do put our cutlery together so it is obvious that we have finished our meal. We are not as fussing as this makes out though.
@StRoRo7 ай бұрын
We used our credit card once when in the US. It was an expensive resturant who took the credit card away I really wanted to follow the guy to watch as, in the UK you don't let it leave your sight. 2 days later, still in the US, our bank calls asking if we are trying buy a $1200 TV in Walmart. Ummm nope.
@helenwood84827 ай бұрын
Yes, we see driving for an hour as a long trip, but Americans freak out when I say I did an eight mile walk to take photos of the hedgerows. Can't do that now, due to disability, but I'm building up my strength so I can do it in a wheelchair.
@ellehan30037 ай бұрын
Good point😅
@briansmith487 ай бұрын
It takes me 45 minutes just to drive to work, on the freeway ( motorway ) here in America. One way.
@lindayoung45907 ай бұрын
I've had my credit card cloned multiple times when in the US. Once I was in Macy's in New York and the assistant had to call my credit card company as the machine rejected it because someone was buying a laptop in LA. That's why in the UK you never let your cards out of your sight.
@helenwood84827 ай бұрын
If a member of shop staff says more to me than a basic greeting, I immediately walk out.
@lottie25257 ай бұрын
Me too, and I'll be muttering under my breath about how they just lost another customer over it lol.
@gregorybiestek34317 ай бұрын
@@lottie2525 Then you will walk out of the first 9,998 stores you walk into. If the sales person does do that sort of customer service they get fired.
@lottie25257 ай бұрын
@@gregorybiestek3431 Thankfully I live in the UK where we don't have such nonsense forced on us.
@sandihill6697 ай бұрын
@@gregorybiestek3431it’s not ‘service’ though. It’s hard sell
@gregorybiestek34317 ай бұрын
@@lottie2525 Actually USA sales staff ARE trained to do exactly that. They are REQUIRED to be overly helpful AND to watch for potential troublemakers. Just Google "loss prevention activities". If the staff in the USA do not do that - they get fired simple as that.
@Riverman20127 ай бұрын
Ive just returned from a 3 week trip to California. We drove 1400 miles. Its ok when you have nice scenery, nice weather and very little traffic....driving 6 hours in the UK from Southampton to Newcastle, for instance, is an absolute nightmare!!
@TalesOfWar7 ай бұрын
Especially when you're in Southampton then Newcastle!
@Mike-James7 ай бұрын
In the UK we have a pin number, the Bank would close our account if we tell strangers our pin, if we swipe we still have to use our pin number.
@trudimclaren43012 ай бұрын
8:25 I love that audience interaction when it comes to the Rocky Horror Picture Show - everyone's dressed up and has been singing along, and we'll all sing the closing credits and applaud. It would be a little weird to do that with every movie, though! 😂
@wobaguk7 ай бұрын
American suburbs and walkability isnt just about the pavements, its the zoning. It seems to prohibit anything other than houses houses and more houses. In the UK suburbs thend to have clusterings of a few shops here and there, a pub etc. places within reach you would actually want to walk to
@briansmith487 ай бұрын
They make it difficult to come and go in certain places on purpose. They don't want certain people to hang around nice new housing developments. It's called white flight or red zoning.
@jeanine63287 ай бұрын
I don’t even go into my best friends fridge, and we’ve been friends for 40 years.
@greg1943-u3i7 ай бұрын
Everyone in England knows that Americans are emotionally incontinent. It most often manifests in hospitality complaints, and a lack of appreciation of nuance.
@Timbothruster-fh3cw7 ай бұрын
What??🤨
@AnnaBellaChannel7 ай бұрын
100% true. Over-emoting is awful.
@ralphhathaway-coley54605 ай бұрын
Please tell me that your comment is meant as satire, '........ a lack of appreciation of nuance' says the person who says England when meaning Britian or UK, that was a great example of a lack of nuance, if deliberate.
@greg1943-u3i5 ай бұрын
@@ralphhathaway-coley5460 No nuance there Ralph. I meant England so I said England. The Celtic nations are generally more emotional than the Anglo-Saxons. Anything else you need explaining?
@dattrax7 ай бұрын
Dinky is fine.. doesn’t imply value, just size
@stampandscrap74947 ай бұрын
Americans call cheap stuff Rinky Dink. They cannot fathom that Dinky means something else in Actual English, English
@SeasonsOfMists6 ай бұрын
There was a whole we range of toy cars called dinky toys... Very valuable now
@sckiddle5 ай бұрын
Also has connotations of being cute/sweet.
@PaulMartin-w3g7 ай бұрын
Its common sense to put butter on your bread before anything else as it acts as a barrier to any grease/sauce/relish etcs thus stops the bread going soggy. The sandwich is less likely to fall apart when its picked up and eaten.
@MrBrianholding7 ай бұрын
I was only taught to put my knife & fork together in a 6 O'clock position to indicate that I was finished. If you pause while eating just to rest them on either side of the plate. I've NEVER heard of putting cutlery in the other weird positions shown, the one expressing poor food would be incredibly rude. We dont practice semaphore on our plates. That site looked American as it used "fork & knife" rather than "knife & fork" which is ,naturally, the correct way.
@catherinearangie23117 ай бұрын
Lol. In South Africa saying fork and knife sounds like an expletive and will earn you an old fashioned Viktor Orban look.
@johnthornton736 ай бұрын
I should lend you my new T shirt which says ....."I'm not arguing - I am just telling you why I am right.
@minimuff835 күн бұрын
Exactly this!!
@nicklomas1816 ай бұрын
as far as cutlery, I've only ever used the 'paused' and 'finished'
@user-sx6eu4rg2x4 ай бұрын
Butter is an important step in sandwich making - butter helps prevent the bread from becoming soggy.
@cpowell76236 ай бұрын
On the making yourself at home bit: I, being his child, lived with my dad for many years. Whenever I visit him, if I'm hungry, I will ask if I can get something to eat. An American friend of mine, fairly new to the UK, was with me at one point, and was perplexed that I, his son would still ask permission. He genuinely took it as a sign that my dad was the kind of person to gatekeep the fridge. He was even more perplexed when I told him that I knew my dad would never say no. It just feels disrespectful not to ask, even if you know the answer.
@jgibbs6516 ай бұрын
When I was 5 years old I walked a mile-and-a-half to school; in the summer the "prettier" route was 2 miles. And at 7 years old I took myself off to the swimming pool, including a half-mile walk, alone even in the winter.
@timglennon68147 ай бұрын
I’m English, and I never put butter on my Burger Bun. Making a Sandwich I do but butter on the bread.
@personalcheeses80737 ай бұрын
I don’t like butter on burger buns or bacon sarnies. But I love butter, real butter, not the fake stuff.
@lilbullet1587 ай бұрын
8 hour trips in a car sounds horrendous ! Most UK people would need Psychiatric Therapy after that...
@isomochyn17 ай бұрын
I think the difference in population density makes driving 8 hours in the UK a very different to 8 hours in the US. I regular drive long distances through France and it is far more pleasant than the UK.
@iantellam99707 ай бұрын
With my family living in Cornwall and me living up north that's a pretty common trip length for me. It's fine.
@TalesOfWar7 ай бұрын
@@iantellam9970 Most of it on the god awful M6, half of the time you're stuck trying to get through Birmingham. Nobody wants to be stuck in Birmingham for any reason.
@Freakyman4037 ай бұрын
Regarding Dinky, dinky is most likely in reference to a small toy series called Dinky Toys, so we got associated with anything small and quaint or small and cute as something that is dinky.
@stewedfishproductions95547 ай бұрын
The other way round... Dinky is derived from the older Scottish word 'dink' (still in use). It means something that is small, neat, trim or cute. 😊
@Freakyman4037 ай бұрын
@@stewedfishproductions9554 and dinky toys are a Scottish toy brand, because the creators daughter called them dinky hence the name, and then they became more widespread as toys and the some parts of the uk still use the word dinky. dink used to mean double income no kids from the 1980's im talking from how to word became more used in the uk rather than the origin of the scottish word.
@dirtywaterpj_dj2 ай бұрын
There have been cases of bank cards being cloned. This is why stores and restaurants bring the card reader to the table.
@crocsmart51157 ай бұрын
Cutlery (not “silverware”) positions are understood but rarely used,apart from finished. On this theme,swapping the fork hand for cutting and eating is a very weird custom and makes American diners resemble toddlers learning how to eat. Sandwiches are always buttered,I have a cold shiver even contemplating dry desiccated bread wrapped ingredients without the balm of butter to make the sandwich whole. And as for service…..deliver my meal then go away,if I want you again I’ll call you,check on me more than once an hour and I may have to end you!
@sandihill6697 ай бұрын
Changing your ‘fork’ hand differs in Europe. Bad manners to eat the way we Brits do once food is cut up.
@jgibbs6516 ай бұрын
@@sandihill669 Where in Europe would that be? Everywhere I've ever been they have knife and fork in right and left hand and they stay there.
@sandihill6696 ай бұрын
Well certainly in France and Switzerland. Worked there in the 70’s and often it was explained to switch. Maybe 🤔 it’s changed now 😊
@nolaj1147 ай бұрын
When I was a child I wrote a short story about a rabbit that was published in the children's pages of a newspaper (remember those?). In my innocence, I named the rabbit Randy and didn't understand why they made a miatake (in my eyes) and called him Andy..😅
@stampandscrap74947 ай бұрын
Randy Rabbit lmfao
@colingregory74647 ай бұрын
In UK, being refered to as Gentleman by a child's mother is the reference that tends to make me feel old (let the gentleman by or mind out for the gentleman)
@johnduncan23125 күн бұрын
In the UK the banks tell us dont let your credit/bank card out of your sight. The waiter brings the card machine to your table. (In the rare occasions where the establishment doesnt have the facility, small cafe etc. you go to the till with your card.
@christiner3026 ай бұрын
I don't like Iced tea. My tea is always warm and NEVER microwaved.
@smythharris26357 ай бұрын
Note, the fork is not a shovel. Hold and use your cutlery gracefully, as it enhances the pleasure of eating.
@nicolafenner62607 ай бұрын
I am British and never seen anyone put butter on burger buns. Sandwiches yes, not burgers or hotdogs
@mysticalmaid7 ай бұрын
I'm British and I've seen plenty of family and friends add butter or marg to buns etc, including myself.
@gennytun7 ай бұрын
I put butter in everything!
@meeshelle13977 ай бұрын
On a bacon or chip buttie - yes please, add the butter
@virgiltracey91307 ай бұрын
But not in a burger.
@mysticalmaid7 ай бұрын
@@virgiltracey9130 yes to in a burger, it's lovely but I use dairy free marg like vitalite instead of butter.
@RCassinello4 ай бұрын
LOL! What's horrifying? Tipping? Making tea in a microwave. I fucking love you. :)
@randomistmech5 ай бұрын
Dinky meaning small isn't just the UK. It means small in the USA as well, hence the Jackson Dinky guitar, a guitar that's a bit smaller than the other models, with a body size of 7/8. They come at all price points, not just the cheap end of the scale, you can spend a couple of thousand pretty easily. Sweetwater currently have one listed at $3400.
@vikkirobinson41316 ай бұрын
The only cutlery placing is start, pause and finish. Pause is quite handy. I was recently hearing of a case where a waiter was privately scanning huge amounts of cards behind the counter, it can be a thing, and it is not necessary.
@WOFFY-qc9te7 ай бұрын
Butter is essential as it seals the bread stopping moist cucumber from turning the bread or toast mushy. This also applies to bacon and egg Butties [sarnies] . Americans prefer hydrogenated crap their bread.
@jamiewilson92807 ай бұрын
Iced tea is a mystery we do not need! Tea is an example of perfection and doesn’t need to be messed with.
@MGrayl-ib5fo7 ай бұрын
Americans don't have the first clue how to make tea.
@expressoevangelism807 ай бұрын
I beg to differ. I was stuck in an airport in Thailand. Boy it was humid. I had 5 iced lemon teas which saved my life.
@MGrayl-ib5fo7 ай бұрын
@@expressoevangelism80 You'd have fared just as well (if not better) by drinking water.
@tracey34267 ай бұрын
Iced tea is amazing!
@diarmuidkuhle81812 ай бұрын
There's Lipton's and that's decidedly British.
@ColinRichardson6 ай бұрын
With the thing with the fridge.. My friends would let themselves into my house.. Make themself, and make me a sandwich, and then walk up stairs, hand me the plate and then say "Alright mate". But at that level of friendship, it's basically Family that you CHOOSE to have. Rather than the potluck level of family known as... FAMILY
@A14Rors7 ай бұрын
Run for the overground train. Never run for the underground (metro, subway, tube) they come every 2 mins!
@lindsaymckeown5137 ай бұрын
'Would you like some bread with your butter?' was a mantra in our house growing up...
@Queenfloofles7 ай бұрын
The V fingers thing comes from the days when the English longbow men were feared so much by the French that if they managed to capture one of the archers they would cut those two fingers off. The two fingers were a way of saying we've still got them and come and have a go if you think your hard enough. So it is an insulting thing to do still, even if the French are no longer cutting our fingers off.
@RCassinello4 ай бұрын
"I just think that's a crazy person thing!" - :LOL!
@leecaine67007 ай бұрын
If im eating at a restaurant, I hate the waiter coming to me to ask how my meal is whilst I'm eating. Not sure why, I just want to be left alone to eat, and I would let them knoe if i wasnt happy
@maxjjackson7 ай бұрын
The collective term for the utensils you eat with is cutlery. Not all cutlery is silver (or silver plated). Crockery refers to plates, bowls and dishes you eat from. Silverware tends to refer to both functional and/or decorative tableware, made from silver, like serving platters, punch bowls, cruet sets, even candelabra on the table. Virtually anything that the butler had to regularly polish..!!
@RCassinello4 ай бұрын
I think in the "Being John Malkovich" example you cited... That is all perfectly acceptable and, hopefully, what should be expected. Even in the UK, in that situation, I would have applauded every cast member appearing.
@DavidPaulMorgan7 ай бұрын
in UK and most Euro countries, they bring the wifi POS termina to the table, you tap your payment or insert card for chjp'n'pin WE can also scan the QR code, place orders, monitor the bill and pay 'online' - much better.
@mubbles10667 ай бұрын
Start,pause and finish are the only cutlery positions used.
@jorgehurford17427 ай бұрын
nobody in the UK says public transit. Public transport is what it's called.
@planekrazy17957 ай бұрын
We certainly do use Sir or Madam or Miss in the UK particularly in retail or any customer facing roles, just not as much (would rarely say would Sir step this way or it suits Sir very much) usually as the greeting, Good morning Sir or the like.
@legendofmirr7 ай бұрын
Still find it strange that after all this time Evan doesnt realise hes in London. In my area people have put lights and decs up my whole life.
@UphillGardener-ly5sh7 ай бұрын
On the retail thing, Whenever an assistant would walk up to my friend as soon as he entered a shop saying "hi, can I help you?" he would say "yes I'll stand here, you have a look round"
@Shoomer887 ай бұрын
Nobody puts butter on burger buns - not a thing. EDIT: GrumpyOld Git's mate Keith does.
@davidbean69737 ай бұрын
Yeah, first I’d heard of it.
@GrumpyOldGit-zk1kw7 ай бұрын
In m 56 years in the UK, I've only met one person who did - my mate Keith. I was horrified when he was about to butter mine.
@AnneDowson-vp8lg7 ай бұрын
I do. I put the mayonnaise on top of the lettuce. That's where mayonnaise is supposed to go.
@briansmith487 ай бұрын
If a burger bun is toasted then yes. Put butter on it. If not... Yuck. 😝
@liamb86387 ай бұрын
I was in the states in 2012 and went to see the first avengers… I’m used to people getting up and leaving in silence at the end. In America they all got up and clapped and cheered.. it was soooooo weird lol
@annedunne45267 ай бұрын
Here in Ireland the waiter brings the card machine to your table. They never take your card! That would make it easy for someone to copy it.
@janetgeorgiou95958 күн бұрын
My ex got the "you should stay at my Welsh cottage sometime" from HM Queen Elizabeth II. They were discussing where he went scuba diving. He didn't follow it up.
@lesleycarney88687 ай бұрын
So you don't mind if your credit card / debit card get's cloned behind the counter by a crook waiter?
@redwiltshire18167 ай бұрын
That’s exactly what I was thinking
@Jill-mh2wn7 ай бұрын
" I was just taking the tip, Sir" 🤣
@gregorybiestek34317 ай бұрын
@@redwiltshire1816 Not in the slightest! I like many Americans have been handing the cards over for over 30 years and NEVER had a single problem. When you are some obvious non-citizen you put a target on yourself.
@redwiltshire18167 ай бұрын
@@gregorybiestek3431 “non-citizens” do all Americans just use terms these day? Card fraud is a known problem that happens everywhere any time any place banks tell you not to leave your card with anyone
@gregorybiestek34317 ай бұрын
@@pamelacole2756 Then I VERY strongly suggest that you NEVER visit the USA, because you cannot stay or do anything in the USA without handing your card to someone. Sorry but we don't allow you to operate that way here.
@stuffmcstuff3997 ай бұрын
Iced tea, in the UK, is mostly an alcoholic beverage. Cider is too. Basically we drink a lot. It helps to remain stoic and repress our emotions.
@PeachyNanaUK7 ай бұрын
English 72 year old here. The only cutlery position I’ve heard of is the “I’ve finished” position and the pause. The others, nope.
@NH_HN6 ай бұрын
I learned Americans don’t have cutlery placement when I put mine in the pause position, went to the toilet, and when I returned to my seat, my food was gone.
@pxrixo.7 ай бұрын
The butter thing blows my mind. Butter on your sandwich isn't just a preference, it's just the normal way to make a sandwich here. Americans use mayo instead of butter, spread thinly on the bread. Terrible. Butter your bread then squirt a fat dollop of mayo on! It's the only way
@deja-view10176 ай бұрын
The way Americans say Khaki gets me every time. It sounds like 'caccy', so your 'caccy pants' doesn't mean the same as 'khaki trousers'! 😂
@lisasallery78606 ай бұрын
Unfortunately in the UK our price of fuel is shocking. So road trips here are a couple of hours max.
@onbedoeldekut15157 ай бұрын
When I was 12, in July 1985, I experienced (at that time) the most unexpected occurrence at the cinema in Guildford. We'd just watched Back to the Future, and when the film ended, the entire audience in the cinema clapped in appreciation. No whooping or hollering, it was the most British thing I'd seen until then. It was a most worthy film.
@kennethoconnell84767 ай бұрын
The ‘flicking the V’ insult in the UK, is also known as a ‘Harvey Smith’ by us old folk! 😉
@paul1warr2 ай бұрын
I assume the cutlery was the same. If you are still eating the knife and fork are at 8 and 4 (o'clock) or maybe 9 and 3. to signify ; you are finished you put them together in any position on the plate (signifying you don't plan to pick them up again. Surely this is fairly universal?
@free_gold44676 ай бұрын
We don't really use all of those 'cutlery positions', just the two together on the plate meaning you have finished.
@CarolLeslie-x5n7 ай бұрын
We hate that kind of fuss when we go into the shop just leave me alone, you can’t make me spend more money that I intend too.
@PsyMongazoid7 ай бұрын
The OTT customer service and long advert breaks show just how hard sell everything in America is.
@expressoevangelism807 ай бұрын
Clapping the pilot after landing safely is something we have experienced from certain European neighbours. I don’t think we have generally adopted it as a practice as yet.
@martinarscott35246 ай бұрын
I've never put butter on my burger 'rolls' and don't know anyone else who does. But as far as sandwiches go, definitely butter (margarine is considered less fattening but is actually much worse than a thin scraping of butter)