FYI: 'HAMLEYS' is the oldest _(and largest toy shop in the world)_ and has been on Regent Street, in central London since it opened here in 1881. It has survived many financial 'world' recessions, including being bombed twice during WWII. It has SEVEN floors covering 54,000 square feet (5,000 m2), all devoted to toys, _(with different categories of toy on each floor)._ - Over the years, Hamleys has changed with the times - from dolls to computers to flying drones with cameras etc. Also, the majority of people don't know that it is named after a William Hamley, who founded a toy shop called "Noah's Ark" at No. 231 High Holborn, in London, in 1760!
@t.a.k.palfrey388211 ай бұрын
Btw, the tree at Trafalgar Square has been the gift of the Norwegian capital, Oslo, each year since 1946, in thanks for allowing the Norwegian king and his family to have safe haven in England during the country's Nazi occupation.
@Matty_UK11 ай бұрын
Norway also sends Liverpool, Scotland, and I think a few other places in the UK a Christmas tree. It's just the one in London gets all the attention.
@TheGreenhillsCyclistInRagOrder11 ай бұрын
I never knew that. WOW!!!!
@lawrencemcginley993711 ай бұрын
Manchester Christmas markets
@maureenalder890511 ай бұрын
Wow great info thanks 😊
@MsZepfreak11 ай бұрын
The store you're thinking of is..Hamleys. 😊
@bandycoot189611 ай бұрын
NYC is built on a block format, whereas London has grown organically and has small alleys and shopping areas tucked away in surprising places.
@claregale901111 ай бұрын
Yes it's great to explore the nooks and crannys all steeped in a long history as well .😊
@SaintPhoenixx11 ай бұрын
Most British towns and cities are a lot more random than the US cities which were planned and built pretty much all at once. London especially, has streets and buildings from so many different eras, you just have to use whatever space you have. So it looks random, but the layout is almost a physical historical record of all the peoples who came before you. American cities generally feel like they were drawn by one guy with a pencil and a ruler, built in the 1920s and have stayed the same since.
@BlameThande11 ай бұрын
The powers that be did want to rebuild London on a grid after the Great Fire in 1666, but while they were inside deciding it, all the Londoners went out and staked out string where their houses used to stand to stop them changing it!
@allisonsherrott248711 ай бұрын
Hi Steve and Lyndsay I would strongly recommend that you both watch the sainsbury WW1 christmas advert,it tells the story of when the soldiers called for ceasefire. They played football on Christmas day, then went back to fighting the following day. That sainsburys advert will always be my favourite, it brings tears to my eyes when it comes on . I can't remember if it was the 2014 or 2018. You probably knew that but I thought I would suggest it to you. I also recommend watching the irn brew adverts they are funny I would recommend that you both view it first if you are doing a family video. Even if you both watch it I am sure you will find it funny. I have been following your channel since day one and I watch your videos all the time.
@allisonsherrott248711 ай бұрын
Oops 😆 I forgot to add this guys channel for you to watch London City Walks. This is a favourite off mine .he walks round London going to different places, he does spend alot off time around the Kings guard and Whitehall . He has lots of videos he knows all the horses and is friendly with the Kings 💂♂️ 💂♀️ he is very knowledgeable about the history , he has playlist of the Kings Coronation, The Princess of Wales christmas carols . I highly recommend that you watch his channel. . 33:35
@markthomas257711 ай бұрын
Covent Garden was the historic fruit, veg and flowers market in central London. The market moved out of the centre in the 1970s and the buildings were turned into restaurants, pubs, entertainment places etc
@andybaker245611 ай бұрын
Yes, it moved to new premises in Nine Elms Lane (close to Battersea Power Station) in 1974.
@grahamstubbs496211 ай бұрын
A good place to be for restaurants, shopping and the London Transport museum. You don't want to be too averse to crowds, though. 🙂
@reactingtomyroots11 ай бұрын
Oh okay! That makes sense
@chriscox402311 ай бұрын
@@reactingtomyroots😊
@chriscox402311 ай бұрын
Hamleys is the toy store, Harrods is the up, I mean UP market department store which had a re known toy department. They also have shops at major airports
@mickpattison829011 ай бұрын
London is bigger than New York City. In fact, London is twice the size of New York City. London has a size of 606 square miles and New York has a size of 301 square miles. London looks so different because it is old and was built over centuries.
@nbartlett653811 ай бұрын
Highly debatable. I'm not sure that land area is all that relevant when measuring a city, and while London's metropolitan area has a population of 14 million, New York's is over 20 million. If somebody lives in New Jersey and commutes to Manhattan every day, they are effectively part of the New York economy although they don't even live in the same state. As a proud Londoner, I can say that New York is bigger but London is better 😇
@Axispaw111 ай бұрын
@@nbartlett6538 Mick is correct, London is over twice the size of NY in terms of physical size. And you're wrong, the 20 million figure refers to the entire state of New York, not the city or its met area. This is a figure widely used by stat websites who regularly get it wrong. In terms of city population both cities are almost identical with around 10 million, but London being twice the size makes it feel slightly less populated.
@eddaines23711 ай бұрын
@@Axispaw1not quite. The state population is indeed about 20 million, but the metro population of New York urban area is also about 20-21 million. That number takes into account the portions of the city that actually sit in New Jersey state. It counts how many people live within the bit that’s brown on the map, for want of a better description. The London equivalent, measured in the same way, is generally agreed to be slightly less at around 18million. The political population of London is currently about 9.6m. New York’s is smaller, but as per the above this is misleading. Basic point is that New York, however you measure it, is ever so slightly larger than London, but not by much. The density of Manhattan gives a false impression in that regard
@saysayuk180311 ай бұрын
New York Christmas looks better
@asseyez-vous649211 ай бұрын
The city of London is actually only around 2 square miles. The figures given are for Greater London which encompasses The City of London (Central London). The City of London is really very small.
@dgse8311 ай бұрын
Fortnum and Mason is one of the oldest continuously operating department stores in the world - opened in 1707.
@TheStar79811 ай бұрын
Iconic Fortnum and Mason Food Hampers... 😋
@vaudevillian711 ай бұрын
European cities are generally very different to US ones, they’re are very walkable and liveable rather than somewhere you commute to to go to work
@reactingtomyroots11 ай бұрын
Love it!
@jernaugurgeh811011 ай бұрын
I'd rather live in a sewer tbh
@TfL190111 ай бұрын
nothing is stopping you from doing that, tbh @@jernaugurgeh8110
@-TomH11 ай бұрын
John Lewis christmas adverts are absolutely top tier. They win most years. Especially "man on the moon" probably there best ever. You should also show lindsey the London new year fireworks. P.s, London is larger than new York lol. The UK doesn't really have casino's, we have like a betting shop where you can bet on football etc and have a few fruit machines. Gambling is heavily regulated in UK.
@kezlana690711 ай бұрын
Yes! New year fireworks display would be a great video to watch. We do have casinos, quite a few actually. Not on the same scale as casinos in America. But we definitely do have casinos.
@jojeffrie96211 ай бұрын
Yes I was thinking the same thing. Snow Lindsey the new year fireworks.
@stumilesyt11 ай бұрын
@@kezlana6907 Indeed I was surprised by OP's comment, I spent 8 years in Southampton and there are 3 big ones there! Google says there are around 150 proper casinos in the UK, 52 of which are the Grosvenor chain. But yeah we do also have an abundance of betting shops, over 6000 apparently.
@kezlana690711 ай бұрын
@@stumilesyt Me too! I see a lot of comments in videos of Americans learning stuff about the UK, where a lot of brits get our information wrong to be honest 🤣 yeah we have a lot of them!
@MichaelLynch111 ай бұрын
There's Casinos in Every County and Major City
@melissaleigh522011 ай бұрын
Hi guys ,London is HUGE!!! This is a tiny tour 😂 Yes we have many casinos lol ❤
@sparkyprojects11 ай бұрын
The telephone company (BT) removed most of the telephone boxes, but many towns and villages refused to allow removal because it takes away the character, some places have even demanded the return of the boxes They are used for things like mini libraries or places to keep a defibrilator etc There are even phone box coffee shops.
@RJE4811 ай бұрын
What you need to remember is London is HUGE! The first half of the video is only parts of the West End. This is in the centre of London. To go to Greenwich means a Taxi, Tube, River (Uber) Boat, and will take at least 30 mins to get there. To go to the "City" again is a different area of London and will take a decent amount of time.
@DougBrown-h1n11 ай бұрын
Every year us kids used to be taken to see the Christmas lights, and visit Hamleys toy shop.
@ianprince169811 ай бұрын
my dream job a Hamlies toy demonstrator
@nataliescott226111 ай бұрын
Always come home with jumping beans
@jillosler935311 ай бұрын
London is HUGE and much larger than New York. This vlogger is WALKING so you are only seeing a tiny part of the City Centre which is the expensive part of London; but the majority of London boroughs have standard department stores. The architecture is typical of Europe and goes back to centuries before America was discovered and most of London was rebuilt after the Great Fire in 1660.
@MrBulky99211 ай бұрын
The Great Fire only affected the City of London. None of the areas shown here were affected by the Great Fire though I agree that much of what we see hear was built after 1665.
@nicoladaniel102111 ай бұрын
The light trails in Wisley gardens, longleat and Kew gardens are amazing, there are loads of light trails at Christmas in the UK, they are magical.x
@Marli-o4g11 ай бұрын
Yes the red telephone boxes are still in place all over the UK (some are listed so cannot be removed). Not all of them still have working phones in them as they are not disabled accessible so more open lower phone booths have replaced them. However many are still phone boxes with modern pay phones in them and some have been repurposed to hold defibrillators or become book holders where you can leave books you’ve read for other people to take and read for free and then they pass on once they’ve read them. In the touristy central London areas they are proper phone boxes because so many tourists want photos in them.
@duncancallum11 ай бұрын
Where i live in Redcliffe Queensland the Pay Phone now is free to phone everywhere in Australia. When i was a telegram boy in Portobello Edinburgh sometimes i had to go and change the money box as it was full of pennies, it weighed a ton that was around 1955-6.
@lesdonovan791111 ай бұрын
@@duncancallum yes I was never strong enough to press button A, yes all those old pennies much larger that the new pence of today,
@mikeoxlong411011 ай бұрын
Horrible things the door was useless & People used to Piss in them
@Jimmy_Jones11 ай бұрын
@@mikeoxlong4110 used to?? They still do
@katieshaw413411 ай бұрын
I was in London last week, decorations were out of this world, so magical.
@StylishChicVibes10 ай бұрын
I really want to go I have never been around London during the Christmas holidays I have always wanted to but I have no one to go with I want to go soon and around summer and November but I want go early I want to go in the shops .
@stewedfishproductions795911 ай бұрын
I LIVE in London and have visited many US city's over the years (including NY). London is MASSIVE in comparison to New York! London stretches over about twice as much as NY. I think MOST cities in the world have their CORE centre parts _(that the majority of tourists visit),_ but London has SO MANY places to see. TBH: Just the sheer number of museums, theatres, art galleries, private exhibitions, parks, gardens, statues, works of art, fountains and other places to visit would probably take you YEARS to see all. After over 30 + years in London, I have STILL only seen a TINY fraction of the things to see!
@PLuMUK5411 ай бұрын
If you like lights like this, you should check out The Blackpool Illuminations. They are not Christmas lights as they begin in August, and last for 100 days. They stretch for 6 miles along the Promenade (the road along the sea). It includes over 1 million bulbs.
@chucky231611 ай бұрын
And Blackpool is better than London
@mikeoxlong411011 ай бұрын
They'll slowly bring more immigrants causing problems up here soon.
@margaretflounders851011 ай бұрын
No bulbs anymore but LED lights...
@joyridgway639811 ай бұрын
The only thing Blackpool is cold at this time of year. There are also Christmas lights in the town centre.
@SuzieLady11 ай бұрын
As a Londoner born and raised I can say that Yes, it’s always busy in Londons ‘west end’ especially though at Christmas with everyone shopping and tons of tourists making it busy! I worked on Oxford Street for 10 years and it’s crazy at Christmas. There are a lot of stores that put in their own light displays and pay for it. Covent Garden is ancient and used to be a convent back in the day. It’s a wonderful place to hang out in summer. My daughter and I would hang out and watch the outdoor entertainers. We do Christmas well. Halloween not so much, thankfully! It’s the most evil day of the year. My opinion. Hamley’s IS the famous toy store. The hat shop sells mostly handmade. Our alleyways are ancient and you find tiny shops there that are so charming. The Odeon was a club in the 80’s where I used to go every Saturday to dance the night away! Sometimes walking home barefooted, after dancing all night! lol! The buildings that you enjoy Steve are a couple of hundred years old, not ancient. Lyndsey, London is one of, if not the most expensive city’s in the world, just saying. Steve’s right. Every expensive, luxury item is sold here in London. It costs a fortune to live here and it’s not easy for all Londoners to thrive. To buy a house in London, you have to be wealthy or have parents with deep pockets or take on a massive mortgage! I live in council property, thankfully but if I wanted to buy, it would cost £800 THOUSAND because of my central location and grade listed building (highly desirable) There are decorations for all tastes here. You need to check out some famous shops. Harrods, selfridges, etc
@margaretreid215311 ай бұрын
The Brits never did celebrate Halloween for many years, as they had the 5th November, which is Guy Fawkes night,bombfires,fireworks etc,as we also did,and still do in the Commonwealth, especially New Zealand 🇳🇿 and Australia 🇦🇺. Guy Fawkes was the fellow who plotted to blow up the British Parliament, but got caught, and came to a very sticky end!
@Whippy9911 ай бұрын
Every child should have the Hamley’s experience at some point. It’s other worldly! The doll houses are incredible.
@Shoomer198811 ай бұрын
As others have said below the John Lewis ads are consistently great and deserve their own compilation reaction. I never thought a TV advert could make me cry but they've made it happen. But that's not to say other companies have not made some classics... Sainsbury's - "1914" (2014) Irn Bru - "Phenomenal Christmas" aka The Snowman (2007) Marks and Spencers - "Christmas with love from Mrs Claus" (2016) Boots - "Special Because" (2014) Sainsbury's - "Mog’s Christmas Calamity" (2015)
@LisaEvans-qb1bs11 ай бұрын
I was in London last week and walking down Oxford street and under the winged angels was so fabulous. I’m going back 21st December so it will feel very christmasy ❤
@amyraisey563111 ай бұрын
John lewis christmas adverts are the absolute best. But at christmas time is when we most enjoy the adverts 😊
@carlena430011 ай бұрын
As others have said Christmas markets are a relatively new thing to the UK, springing up in almost every city over the last 10 years or so. In my city we have a victorian Christmas fayre (going for 40 years or so). Lots of market stalls, fairground and food. The stall holders dress up as Victorians and people come from all over the country. I used to love it as a child but not so appealing as a 30 something with no children 😅 I unexpectedly had a free evening last week and walked around the St James area looking at all the lights on the designer shops. The displays were amazing and the buildings were so beautiful. Fortum and Mason is worth looking at, they had an advent calendar number on each window. Lots of the telephone boxes have been converted, in my city they are often cash machines.
@andybaker245611 ай бұрын
To be honest, Christmas markets aren't really a traditional thing here in the UK. It's only in recent years that they've started to become popular. If you want to see REAL Christmas markets, you need to go to countries like Germany. The Christmas markets we do have here often tend to have a German theme, which goes to show you their real origins!
@Whippy9911 ай бұрын
German Christmas markets have legendary status worldwide. However, Austria, Switzerland, Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic also have incredible ones. I’m looking forward to the Vienna one in 2024. 😊
@zmadhatter234011 ай бұрын
recent years? I remember going to christmas markets every year when I was a kid and that was in the 90s
@Whippy9911 ай бұрын
@@zmadhatter2340 That’s recent to old folk like me! I was born in the 50s 😂😂
@andybaker245611 ай бұрын
@zmadhatter2340 Relatively speaking, the 90s are "recent years". They didn't exist when I was a kid in the 70s. I don't remember them in the 80s either.
@chucky231611 ай бұрын
@@andybaker2456or me I remember the bloke who sold jacket potatoes out of the truck I also remember toys r us im a kid of the 80s 90s I remember looking at the mcalister home in the home alone movies thinking wow.
@sheiladavies727511 ай бұрын
Most if not all towns and cities in The UK decorate their streets and shops at Christmas time. Every village and town area has their own Christmas tree lighting ceremony. Christmas is a big thing here 😊
@bartoszsotysiak356811 ай бұрын
Not only UK, basically every city in Poland, Germany or Czechia as well :)
@name-vx1od10 ай бұрын
Sorry but this year its palestines turn baby. fee fee paistine !!
@jeanlongsden169611 ай бұрын
the reason that there are so many video's on the London decorations is because it is where most tourist head too in the UK. all the major UK city's are decorated and have Christmas markets. Hamley's toy shop was advertized on the open topped Bus (3:58) seconds before you stopped the video to ask about the toy store was called. lol
@chucky231611 ай бұрын
The rest of the uk has to fund or get fek all. Its alright for london typical greedy london
@weshall567911 ай бұрын
When you stopped the video to ask about the name of the toy store. The name was literally on the screen a few seconds before.
@martynadams201111 ай бұрын
They don’t do listening 🤷🏻♂️
@jasonsmart348211 ай бұрын
I loved you reaction to the lights. Worked in London for 20 years, mostly in Mayfair so I know these places like the back of my hand. miss those days and wish I had appreciated them more. it does my heart good to see the city so busy and vibrant after the strange empty place that i saw during lockdown.
@MrNifts11 ай бұрын
They convert the Phone boxes into things like Libraries, coffee stand's, medical points etc.
@andreaconroy362311 ай бұрын
Mainly defibs 🤣
@CeleWolf11 ай бұрын
Which is a good idea @@andreaconroy3623
@reactingtomyroots11 ай бұрын
That's cool! We were wondering about that. A little phone booth library would be awesome :)
@sarabazlinton982011 ай бұрын
The toy shop is Hamleys. My kids are all adults now but my parents used to take them and their cousins to London every Christmas to go to Hamleys, see the lights and visit Father Christmas in Selfridges (a big department store). They took mr and my siblings when we were children too. Fond family memories 😊
@susanashcroft267411 ай бұрын
Pretty as it all looks and it is pretty with all the decorations and lights, my experience of London at Christmas was that it was so stressful, very crowded (more than this video shows), so much to the point on Oxford street they had police telling you when to cross the roads at various points and on The Tube it was so busy that you didn't have time to stop and think where you needed to go. The food was so expensive and I was aware of pick pockets too. Now this could be any city in any country in the world as pick pockets are no exception to London, but for me I've done London at Christmas once and I'm fine with that. Oh and as with any big city any time of the year always wear comfortable foot ware as you will be on your feet all day walking between places.
@sarahjscooper11 ай бұрын
Makes me wonder where the city council stores all the lights! I love visiting New Bond St.. Tiffany & Co always have the most beautiful Christmas displays!
@highlyunlikely369811 ай бұрын
A theatre isnt movies, thats a cinema.. Theatres put on plays and musicals...
@jessieb729011 ай бұрын
They call them theatres in America. Also a theatre in the UK can also mean you’re in the OR of a hospital.
@cerdicw999811 ай бұрын
Yes, London is always that busy.
@michellerice60611 ай бұрын
If you enjoy British architecture, quaint side streets and Christmas lights I'd definitely recommend you looking at York at Christmas. Very very old architecture, the stunning cathedral and 'the shambles' which are cobbled side street with such old buildings they are actually wonky. It's stunning and so full of history and character.
@jayteedeene598111 ай бұрын
The Regent street lights are best viewed from the front seats up top of a double decker bus (after rush hour). London is like loads of little villages joined together. Each area has its own history and identity.
@JJ-of1ir11 ай бұрын
toy store is Hamleys. The Sainsbury's ad of 2014 very special. It's based on a real event during the 1914-18 World War. I have a feeling you have seen it though Steve, but if you don't mind seeing it again ......
@eddaines23711 ай бұрын
Walking the West End of London at night in the run up to Christmas is one of life’s joys. Truly. The ugly buildings are left unlit, the beautiful ones perfectly illuminated and all of a sudden you’re in one of the most beautiful cities on earth - a feeling that’s hard to believe when you’re in the cold grey 5 hours of daylight. And if it’s cold, well that’s what all the pubs are for :)
@corringhamdepot443411 ай бұрын
Covent Garden used to be the vegetable and fruit wholesale market in London. The building dates back to 1830. The market relocated to a more accessible site in 1974. The building was listed and saved from redevelopment and reopened as a shopping centre in 1980.
@lindsaydrewe821911 ай бұрын
Going up to London to see the Lights was a BIG treat when I was a kid. …a loooonng time ago now😂
@DavidSmith-cx8dg11 ай бұрын
I've seen a compilation of John Lewis Christmas ads , most big stores make mini epics each year . The street lights are usually provided by the Council but the stores do their own . Sadly Christmas isn't what it was in many other places as several big stores have closed since covid .Many London shops , especially the luxury ones are long established and it's a day out for shoppers so they seem relatively unaffected .
@penname576611 ай бұрын
London is a very beautiful city and it’s absolutely huge, but yes, because of its age, there are so many cute streets and alleyways round every turn, and it’s doesn’t feel anything like as big as it is when you’re exploring. The Strand is another fabulous area to visit.
@AnnMcKinlay-zp2ef11 ай бұрын
After much of old London was destroyed in the Great Fire in 1666, a decision was finally made to, basically, be built back as it had been! Nearly all the old narrow streets and buildings were put back as they had been and still exist today.
@reactingtomyroots11 ай бұрын
Love that they decided to do that!
@alisonrodger336011 ай бұрын
I think that they did come up with some fancy plans but some people just started rebuilding before they could be finalised. Sir Christopher Wren would be the one to look up
@susanguerinai650711 ай бұрын
In the ‘open air market’ of Covent Garden,you can listen to Opera singers busking (from the nearby Royal Opera House) inside the market,while you have your coffee,it’s just Magical. Greetings from Lancashire 🇬🇧🇬🇧
@jamesanthony307211 ай бұрын
You should react to the Birmingham Frankfurt German Christmas market, one of the biggest in Europe and definitely the best, most visited in the UK…. It’s absolutely brilliant… Birmingham was the only UK city that made it in a list of most Christmassy cities in Europe this year also… 🎅🏽🍻🕺🏼🥳
@timnewman759111 ай бұрын
Christmas at Kew. Absolutely worth finding a video about. Kew Gardens is well worth a visit at any time of year, but when they've got their Christmas lights up it's really something special.
@hannukah81211 ай бұрын
Tim makes some great travel videos! Really informative for tourists. And yes my home town of London is absolutely the most beautiful city at Christmas 🥰. The toy store is Hamleys and it’s every kids dream but it’s soooooo over priced
@jkpole11 ай бұрын
You are two BEAUTIFUL SOULS
@paolow129911 ай бұрын
Halloween has been celebrated in the UK for over a thousand years in one form or another during pagan times and Christian .It arrived in the the US from the UK .
@Sophie.S..11 ай бұрын
Agree but it is not so commercialised as it is in the USA.
@paolow129911 ай бұрын
@@Sophie.S.. if you have ever tried to scrape out a Turnip to make a lantern for the kids (traditional Scottish style ) with a candle inside it .all I can say is God bless America and Pumpkins (So much easier ) .
@anncolyer637911 ай бұрын
@@paolow1299 and put the turnips out side to ward off evil spirits the same as decorating the trees to keep out bad spirits.it was prince albert who brought trees inside before that out side
@paolow129911 ай бұрын
@@anncolyer6379 Correct gold star on your exercise book .
@jillosler935311 ай бұрын
@@Sophie.S..Christmas in the UK was once a religious celebration but has changed over the years - just like Easter and Halloween wherever they are celebrated!
@shedend306611 ай бұрын
London has grown as a collection of villages - I live here best city in the world so much to see and do with fantastic buildings and history
@maxmoore995511 ай бұрын
They were Gambling in London and Paris before America was a Country.
@kezlana690711 ай бұрын
Yeah! If I remember rightly the first casino was built in Italy, but first ever gambling came from China, that they know of at least.
@maxmoore995511 ай бұрын
@kezlana6907 Don't be daft Gambling was 1st Recorded by in Britain by Romans in Britain. But I'm sure Gambling was done the British before Romans even set Foot on Britain. As for China I have no doubt what so ever was 1000s of years ago it's a very ancient Race .But specifically Pinpoint where on the world it 1st happened is impossible. But I definitely know it was happening in France and Britain before 1776 .thank you for your information.
@kezlana690711 ай бұрын
@@maxmoore9955 hence me saying "that they know of at least". Of course it can't be known exactly when, its hard to pin point when many things first started, that's why they often go on what was first recorded or can be traced back. But whenever I've looked into the history of gambling, the earliest record or when they say its dated back to, has always said in the Asian region. And that the first known casino was built in Italy.
@danewood230911 ай бұрын
enjoyable to see your reactions to the lights, and the famous Toy Store is Hamleys. Covent Garden was the original fruit and veg market of London, and now has shops and cafes, the lower area has daily entertainment with musicians and International Opera Singers from the Opera House performing, every time I visit London I make time to go to Covent Garden for a Coffee and to listen to the Singers
@acemclovin573811 ай бұрын
The toy store is Hamleys, the world's largest toy store.
@rachelrobinson580411 ай бұрын
Liberty's is my favorite in London, all the staircases and balconies are carved oak and very, very old, It's a black and white timber building and is beautiful all year but the Christmas decorations are special
@angeladormer665911 ай бұрын
Just a quick note, Steve and everyone, please watch Hannah Ricketts channel. At the moment she is doing Vlogmas, a view of London's streets, hotels and stores at Christmas, but she also does many walking vlogs round London the rest of the year. I am a proud Londoner, born and bred, who loves seeing my home town as it is now. So many memories. This recent video you watched is a few years old I think. One of the little towns near me has a large statue that miraculously gets dressed for Christmas. We also have our knitters that decorate post boxes etc too. You really have to get into the mind-set that the UK is tiny compared to you, probably not as big as the state you live in. Also please remember that UK was bombed to hell in WW2 so there are lots of modern buildings alongside old and extremely old. All our large cities are like that.❤❤❤👵🏴🌹🌲🌲🌲
@jessieb729011 ай бұрын
I miss watching Vlogmas videos ❤️
@angeladormer665911 ай бұрын
@jessieb7290 they have been back since the beginning of December , Hannah is doing them again as we all love them.
@ladykaycey11 ай бұрын
I live in Fife, Scotland and I just watched Clan Broonford's walk around the Botanic Gardens in Edinburgh. The lights in the Gardens are absolutely beautiful. Well worth watching.
@tamielizabethallaway241311 ай бұрын
Good morning Steve and Lindsay! Glenn lives not far from me. Edenbridge is in Kent, which is next to my county Sussex. I used to go to Edenbridge a lot when I was little with my parents. They owned a caravan so we'd tow that behind us and go off for weekends. For a two-night camping trip, somewhere within an hour's driving was ideal, so we'd often go to Kent. For longer holidays we'd take the caravan on the ferry to France (only 26 miles from England) and spend a few nights in each of, France, Germany, Luxembourg, Holland, Belgium etc. We'd also go to Scotland, Wales or all over England. Tudor England is my favourite period in history, and Anne Boleyn is one of the Tudor women I most admire. As Glenn told you, Hever Castle, (pronounced HEEE VER) is very close to Edenbridge and is one of my favourite places to visit. It was the childhood home of Anne Boleyn. You should definitely check it out as it's soooo pretty, and set in beautiful grounds with a huge boating lake. During the Summer they hold jousting tournaments with reenactment actors and it's good fun to watch. They encourage all the children to yell and cheer for the blues or reds, and you can buy a kid's T-shirt in blue or red from the gift shop. Can't wait for you 3 to make it over. You are not gonna want to go home I promise you! And we probably won't let you leave anyway! 😁 xxx PS: The huge Christmas tree is a yearly gift from Oslo, Norway's capital, for England keeping their Royal Family safe during WWII. London is twice the size of New York, but has half as many residents. New York has Central Park, but London is covered in green spaces, tons of Royal Parks (former grounds of palaces given over to public to enjoy) plus lots of other parks, trails, nature reserves, canal walks etc. Yes Hamleys is the famous toy store. Harrod's, John Lewis, Selfridge's etc are all department stores, mostly featuring higher-end goods, particularly Harrod's! Although, even so, you can get some impressive luxury Christmas gifts in Harrods if you wanted to spoil someone special. Things like beautifully decorated keepsake Christmas tins full of biscuits, chocolates or sweet treats, for £20 or under. Yes, much more expensive than other similar products from cheaper stores, but still very reasonable for a luxury gift for a loved one. Yes most of London is walkable, depending on how far you can walk obviously. I couldn't do it these days due to illness, but I was up there walking it all just over a decade ago. You can walk from The South Bank, the strip along the Thames (pronounced TEMS) with the London Eye on, stroll along to Westminster Bridge, Cross the Thames looking directly at The Houses of Parliament and Elizabeth Tower (Big Ben). Behind those is Westminster Abbey. Keep walking until you get to St. James's Park, Green Park, and then Buckingham Palace. Behind and to the left ish of Buckingham Palace is the areas of Soho, Mayfair and Kensington, very rich areas, where you'll find Harrod's, Selfridge's, John Lewis, the Natural History Museum, Hyde Park etc. *BTW Hyde Park does a Winter Wonderland every Christmas, with ice skating rink, and the lights there are incredible and truly magical. Sophia would love it there! From Soho, you can continue right in a clockwise direction, circling back past Buckingham Palace, stroll up The Mall, and this will lead you to Piccadilly Circus, Leicester Square, Chinatown, Covent Garden, and to the right is Charing Cross, leading you out to The Embankment, the strip beside the Thames, that is opposite where you started. If you wanted to walk ALL of that it would take you 2 hours or less, depending on tourist levels and if you get sidetracked looking at stuff, 😂. But, if you're in London for a week, this whole "loop" is where the majority of the tourist attractions are, so you could walk to one section every day, and visit a museum or shops or park etc per day. As an example, Big Ben to Buckingham Palace is easily walkable in under half an hour. Lastly, yes Lindsay, we do have Casinos! Don't believe the hype about us all being posh, British people work to live, not live to work, and our free time is very much spent enjoying ourselves! Family, friends, days out, picnics, pubs, restaurants, amusement arcades, theme parks, castles, seaside, funfairs, casinos, race tracks, nightclubs, social clubs....having fun is very much the point of our existence. 😂 Hope that answers most of your questions. xxxxx
@jillybrooke2911 ай бұрын
I am in Sussex too
@tamielizabethallaway241311 ай бұрын
@@jillybrooke29 😁 I was born in Crawley, West Sussex, and lived there til I was 36, then moved to East Sussex, and live near Eastbourne, I love being closer to the sea. Whereabouts are you? 😘
@jillybrooke2911 ай бұрын
@@tamielizabethallaway2413 Eastbourne from 2001 😊 born in London
@tamielizabethallaway241311 ай бұрын
@@jillybrooke29 you're in Eastbourne? 😁 My parents are from London, proper Cockneys, Dad born in Shoreditch and Mum born in Wapping. Both my brothers were born in Stepney I believe, or thereabouts. Then my Dad's firm opened an office in Crawley, so he accepted promotion and pay rise, and they moved, got a 3 bedroom council house, with it's own garage, driveway and front and back gardens. My Mum thought it was a PALACE after living in a "flat" that had 3 rooms! Bless her. They moved down in 1969, and I was born in Crawley in 1970. We spent many weekends back in London though, visiting my Nan and Granddad, Aunts and Uncles and Cousins etc. Many still live in London, others moved out to Kent and Essex, some are in Devon and Norfolk too now. The 1970's and 1980's were crammed with Weddings, milestone Anniversaries, Engagements, 18th / 21st / 40th / 50th birthday parties etc, and it seemed like every other weekend we were driving up to London for another family do! I was a Bridesmaid 6 times! I still remember sitting in the back of the car, around midnight ish, my Dad driving us home with a cigarette in his hand, me sitting on my Mum's lap in the back, no seatbelts! She'd also be smoking a cigarette. I'd snuggle into her, my layers of satin and tulle of my Bridesmaid or Party dress all crumpled and slightly scratchy against my legs, and fall asleep with the smell of her red leather coat, her mint Wrigley's chewing gum, mingled in with the smell of cigarette smoke. Ahhh one of my favourite childhood smell combos! I told her once a few years ago, and she was horrified that a vivid childhood memory of mine was of her smoking! 🤣 Oh those were the days! 😁
@jillybrooke2911 ай бұрын
@@tamielizabethallaway2413 My dad was born in East Ham, Essex then but his family moved back to Camberwell where I was born, mum was born in Thornton Heath, Croydon, Surrey oh and my mum chewed gum too !
@dogwithwigwamz.732011 ай бұрын
London ? Well, who isn`t familiar with being in London over here ? A few years back I was living in EIRE ( Republic of Ireland ) and went to Dublin about a week before Christmas Day. It was amazing. In St. Stephen`s Centre ( just next to St. Stephen`s Square in the centre of the city ) there was an entire - philharmonic - Orchestra playing Christmas carols and completely free of charge. Which is just as well - Dublin being an expensive city. But that Carol Service with that Orchestra was simply beautiful. It was quality to be both seen and heard.
@jeanlongsden169611 ай бұрын
Bond Street and New Bond street are different streets, hence why the word New is in it. Americans seem to not understand this, as I live in Jersey and they always think I mean New Jersey. I then have to explain that Jersey is in the Channel Islands which is British and 16 miles off the coast of France. the reason New Jersey is called that, is because our Governor founded New Jersey.
@lesdonovan791111 ай бұрын
Love Jersey, many boat trips from Weymouth bay.
@andrewhargreaves5043 ай бұрын
Covent Garden is an old traders market, but today the recesses have small stores, eateries, entertainment; it is a wonderful part of London & a must at Christmas. There’s a church in the square where you can just stop & listen to carols .
@user-TonyUK11 ай бұрын
Most if not all major Cities and large towns now have a walking/shopping area and I guess you could call them Outdoor Shopping Malls
@user-TonyUK11 ай бұрын
Thank You for the Gift Offer Steve, but I am not a user of that Program.
@aimeedean111 ай бұрын
Welcome to the West End of Central London! He started on Regent Street, then the first Department store (on Oxford Street) is Selfridges. That whole run of windows is their Christmas Display. Then he went to Covent Garden and the piazza is very famous. However, the market was originally well known for flowers and food so you see they reflect that history on the tree with the fresh fruit and spices. Then he went to Leicester Square. All of the areas he's walked around so far is actually all very walkable. Each station name denotes an old village or town area in London which is why each area looks a little different. This area is also called Theatreland which is why there are loads of street performers. The area itself is mostly around 17th Century from memory. New Bond Street is very exclusive and yes just like the Rodeo Drive type stores there. I lived there for 16 years and love London so much. And yes Lindsay, they do have some really good charity shops if you know where they are! So many designer outfits can be found at really good prices. Not in season but still great items usually worn once.
@pjgtech11 ай бұрын
Hi another good video thank you. People do not realise how HUGE London is, when most tourist think of London, they are really thinking about Central London, which is much smaller and is where most of the touristy stuff is. The video you just reacted to is all in central London. Regent St, Oxford St, Trafalgar Sq, Covent garden, Leicester Sq, etc are all within walking distance of each other. Trafalgar square is also near the Houses of Parliament, the Embankment, etc. All these area have great Christmas lights etc. But London itself, the actual main city, is made up of 32 boroughs (each run by there own Council) and straddles both North and South of the River Thames, which also runs through central London. Its worth looking at a Map and seeing large London is, when compared to just the inner central London bit. Cheers 8-)
@alisonjames58211 ай бұрын
Hi, the toy store is called Hamleys
@jaysmith819911 ай бұрын
After 1666 great fire, parts of London were built on a wide road, block type system. St Pauls Cathedral built by Sir Christopher Wren shows what could have been. However, the land was still owned by the previous owners and they wanted their buildings back asap, so they built what was there before, hence all the little lanes/ roads that were there. You can't put a good merchant/ baker/ farrier/ blacksmith/ tavern down! London is fascinating because of the architecture. It's been around for over 2000 yrs. There are still Roman walls in the City of London part.
@davehogg6311 ай бұрын
Don't forget that London is not the only City in the UK. Unfortunately, most Americans seem to think so, it's like us thinking New York is the only City in America. We get most of the snow in northern England and Scotland, Edinburgh and Glasgow have great Xmas Markets.
@chucky231611 ай бұрын
I'm down in devon and I don't recognise london at all as my capital.
@reactingtomyroots11 ай бұрын
Oh no, we definitely know there are more cities than just London :)
@beckyallsopp569511 ай бұрын
I wish people would realise London is not the be all and end of the UK. So, so many better places to visit which are far prettier
@davehogg6311 ай бұрын
@@chucky2316 I agree mate, I'm up in mid-Northumberland and my 2 closest cities are Newcastle and Edinburgh, although I am not a city lover. 🦉🦢🦋🌺🎣♻
@chucky231611 ай бұрын
@@davehogg63 a beautiful part of the world you are in. I have been to London it is alien to me and its nothing to write home about in all honesty people are ignorant aswell nobody says good morning or acknowledges you in anyway like other parts of the country .its also expensive
@susyward58111 ай бұрын
I love your reactions - have a wonderful Christmas 🎄⭐️🤗🤗
@eanjamesmogg948811 ай бұрын
To be honest the local councils have been spending as much as the light so was much better last year but this year have only put up half the amount due to the financial crises especially as the electricity prices have gone through the roof.
@chucky231611 ай бұрын
Well London steals it's money instead of earning it so they can afford these lights
@joem66411 ай бұрын
Very nice if you live in London,the rest of the country has fek all.
@jillybrooke2911 ай бұрын
Used to be crammed with beautiful lights
@jillosler935311 ай бұрын
@@joem664Not true. Many small towns across the country have lights and beautiful Christmas decorations as well as a big lit tree. The tree in my small town of March (Fenland, Cambridgeshire) has gone viral this year and even appeared on the main media in Australia!!! Google 'wonky tree' 😂😂
@felicitywoodruffe408711 ай бұрын
@@joem664birmingham and Manchester and Portsmouth look lovely at Christmas
@elainecampbell822711 ай бұрын
He always tells you which store he is in ....... but you are so excited you talk over that part of the narration!
@katiperry853311 ай бұрын
Someone set up a Go Fund Me to bring Steve and his whole family over here!!
@abigailjohnson427011 ай бұрын
London at Christmas is magical. As kids we were always taken in to town to catch a bus at Marble Arch,sit upstairs at the front and just do the bus route down Oxford st, regents st, Piccadilly etc. I moved Fortnum & Mason at Xmas too
@weshall567911 ай бұрын
Check out the Edinburgh Xmas Market. Voted the most beautiful in the UK this year 😊
@chucky231611 ай бұрын
I'm english and good on you I detest london
@weshall567911 ай бұрын
@chucky2316 I'm not a fan either. Just too busy for me. I was the same with New York, hated that too, too busy and erratic.
@Mat-eq8mk11 ай бұрын
You hit the nail on the head with the different building styles. It's grown up over 2000 years but never really been preserved - so you've got roman roads, a city rebuilt after the Great Fire, the destruction during the Blitz that made way for a lot of the modern buildings. This weird mix of styles, old and new, etc. I love Covent Garden, but there aren't many areas like that in London. The small streets are much more like what you'd find in smaller towns across the UK. Look up Canary Wharf christmas lights to see a very different part of London. Great video - thanks!
@Aloh-od3ef11 ай бұрын
In the UK you will see pay phones everywhere across the country. We have an old law in the UK, that requires the national phone company to provide and maintain pay phones. So they can be used by any member of public, during an emergency.
@Jimmy_Jones11 ай бұрын
Well, they are certainly disappearing from the more remote places. So obviously, that isn't mandated anymore. Probably the minute it breaks, they just sell it off to the local council for £1.
@bobanob196711 ай бұрын
Just last week I actually saw someone using a payphone in town. It must be at least 10 years since the previous occasion. Haven't used one myself since probably the 90's. Really miss that smell! Lol.
@sjbict11 ай бұрын
BT are removing land lines to payphones and houses starting next year
@susangarvey941511 ай бұрын
Hamleys is the famous London toy store in Regent Street. A big event when I was a child in the 60s was for my old dad to drive around London to see the Christmas lights.❤
@uppyraptor4911 ай бұрын
London is massive
@ffotograffydd11 ай бұрын
In many towns and cities telephone boxes are often used to house mobile defibrillators. In many small towns and villages people set the up as mini libraries/book exchanges, and other similar things. I haven’t seen one with a working phone for a long time.
@kevinsavage80811 ай бұрын
The London Mare (mayor) prefers the name Winter Festival and encourages white public street lighting only, not traditional Christmas lights. so as not to offend others now forming the majority of people in our capital.
@SuzieLady11 ай бұрын
100%
@TonyKerridge2 ай бұрын
Pipe down, racist
@torlcean11 ай бұрын
Regent Street, Oxford Street, Covent Garden, Piccadilly, Leicester Square and Trafalgar Square are all really close. You could do a slow walk around the lot in about 45 mins. We live just outside London and go up every year finishing with a meal in Chinatown which is right beside Leicester Square.
@johnfrancismaglinchey419211 ай бұрын
London is twice the size of NEW YORK CITY,,,, so what is here is not just in one space ,,,,
@rubilister978011 ай бұрын
The Morrisons Xmas advert - this years -with the singing oven gloves (pot holders I believe you call them in the US) just makes me laugh lol
@Matty_UK11 ай бұрын
I've been to both New York and London at Christmas. New York simply cannot compare to London. New York is pretty disappointing. It looks good in all the Christmas movies. But in reality it's pretty dull and soulless.
@reactingtomyroots11 ай бұрын
Good to know! haha
@jessieb729011 ай бұрын
Plus we have the underground in London, so you always know where you are cause you can read maps that are up on walls, or inside the trains. NYC is so confusing cause instead of one street you need to learn two. It’s like 5th street and 47th avenue. Things like that. It’s probably wrong logistically, but you know my point. Whereas in London, it’s more “we’re on Oxford street”. Haven’t been to London in ages, but back in the day you’d also have cops on most streets to prevent crime. They don’t do that in NYC. Fortnum and Mason is the shop that the late Queen got her Christmas stuff from. Never been able to afford to go in there. I know I wouldn’t be able to afford anything, so I’ve never been in.
@Matty_UK11 ай бұрын
@@jessieb7290 New York has an underground too. They call it the subway. They have police on the streets in New York too. They walk around in pairs. I think New York is easier to navigate than London as London is a mesh of 💩 that never made sense. Where American cities are a simple block systems.
@neilbrooks509911 ай бұрын
Hope you all have a lovely Christmas. Looking forward to next year’s videos
@kenlowey111 ай бұрын
really nice festive lights, pity a lot of people can't afford to keep their heating, lights, cookers. on because of Tory policy
@t.a.k.palfrey388211 ай бұрын
The Grinch - surely we might keep politics out of the celebration of Christ's Nativity!
@chucky231611 ай бұрын
Ken is labour's Khan typical London bloke he is stealing off the motorist
@kenlowey111 ай бұрын
@@t.a.k.palfrey3882 love to keep politics out of Xmas, but with at least 2 homeless deaths it kind of makes the turkey stick in my throat
@kenlowey111 ай бұрын
@@chucky2316 agree with that mind you can’t stand the labour leader Starmer, rather have had Tony Benn if he was still alive
@spiritusinfinitus11 ай бұрын
lol! Steve was so excited he paused the video and asked what the famous toy store is half a second after a bright red bus emblazoned with the word HAMLEYS all over it flashed up! (Harrods does have a really good toy department too. We used to go to both Harrods and Hamleys as kids and both blew us away!)
@kevinralph530511 ай бұрын
Not one display showing the true reason we celebrate Christmas the birth of Christ, thanks Londoners especially you Khan.
@chucky231611 ай бұрын
Khan is a 🎉🎉🎉🎉
@jeremyd962411 ай бұрын
How can you blame the mayor for decorative style that has been the same for two hundred years. The displays would have been similar under Johnson (Tory) and Ken Livingston (labour). You show your own bigotry for criticising a Muslim mayor for doing what a Christian (nominally) mayor and an atheist mayor have overseen. Add on the fact that most of these lights are put up by businesses or local councils.
@amandasmith371611 ай бұрын
@@jeremyd9624 it’s Khan who’s the racist and bigot. Remember the poster he put up of a white British family saying it wasn’t the true face of London. He’s ruined London changing road names etc. I’m from SW London and I don’t recognise the place. He’a done sod all about the black youths with their knife crime and gang culture. He’s only interested in his own muslim brethren.
@chokolatelatte476410 ай бұрын
Could you point to what cities base their displays on the birth of christ? I am pretty certain very few places do, nor have they for decades. Is that the fault of the London Mayor? Even majority white indigenous Brits celebrate it in a pagan, not Christian way.
@Mickman00711 ай бұрын
Covent garden is no longer a market but more of a novelty place all year round, it has bars restaurants and street perfomers that are good fun in it's own unique and cool vibe.
@breakaleg847111 ай бұрын
I have lived in London all my life, but rarely ever go into Central London. I think though if I get time this year I might venture inside and see the Christmas lights. Great video,
@MichaelLynch111 ай бұрын
This video is shot in an Area called The West End, pretty much Centre of London Tourist/Shopping area in an area around Picadilly Circus, Regent Street & Oxford Street plus Leicester Square and Covent Garden all in like a 2 mile radius and walking , there is a million things to see and do , great video guys 👌👍
@janeedmunds758211 ай бұрын
London is very walkable! Many very old narrow streets. Some still cobbled. Most have been there since the rebuilding after the great fire of London. Some rebuilt after the Blitz. I have walked all over the centre.
@allycollyer396111 ай бұрын
Yes, Ireland does have Christmas markets. The nearest to where I live is usually held in Eyre Square Galway. With regards to London's Regent Street and Oxford Street Christmas lights, I was fortunate as a child to be treated to spend a weekend with my Godmother for most years from the age of 5. She lived in London. She and I would always go "window shopping" as well as admire the lights. A real treat. However, the biggest treat was to go to the Covent Garden Opera House and watch that year's Royal Ballet performance! My Mother never understood window shopping!!!
@frankdoyle906611 ай бұрын
Covent Garden in pre reformation times was a convent. After the dissolution of the monasteries the convent went and the name gradually became Covent garden.
@susansanders597511 ай бұрын
London is made up of many small boroughs and it is magnificent at Christmas. Covent Garden is an area full of food stalls, entertainment a great place to spend time.
@debthecpn11 ай бұрын
I’ll be there on 23rd and 24th Dec this year. Can’t wait. London is so beautiful and busy at Christmas.
@AM-dz2sh11 ай бұрын
Hi.. I live in West London.. Our pay phones are usually still in working order.. but we have a variation of 'addtional purposes' - We have 'book exchanges' - .i.e. community library resource/coffee shops - YES, you read it right, independent coffee stalls out of the existing phone booth or.. in some cases... just flowers.. i.e community led efforts to hang baskets and plant beddings of pretty flowers . My favourite usage is 'Defibrillators' - I would guess 70% + are for emergency services such as this.. And I LOVE it..! I am proud, that we can used such historic items and bring them into modern day community or life-changing items!!
@ronh342411 ай бұрын
birmingham christmas market is excellent👍
@helengee89298 ай бұрын
It’s definitely worth a visit I took my grandchildren at Christmas time we seen a short pantomime and the children got to meet Santa it was a lovely day out ❤
@Paul-if1jq10 ай бұрын
London is nearly 2000 years old with about 9 million people living there. It has an eclectic range of old and newer buildings, and it's a maze of streets with restaurants, markets, theatres, pubs and shops, nothing like it in the world.