I agree especially as it’s a relatively inexpensive thing to do!
@gothnate7 ай бұрын
BRB. Gonna buy and ship a bunch of screens and frames to take to England. Probably make bank doing that.
@zamboughnuts7 ай бұрын
My brain blue screened when he said they didn't have screens. Like, y'all out here just raw dogging the outside?
@LaShumbraBatesAuDHD7 ай бұрын
@@gothnate😂😂😂
@alisonflaxman15667 ай бұрын
Yep I went to England and the weather was nice so our hotel had the windows open in our room there were flies everywhere.
@vodriscoll7 ай бұрын
It is a federal offense to tamper with someone's mail. People will steal packages off your porch but they won't touch what's in your mailbox
@Cricket27317 ай бұрын
Not all places have flags on their mailboxes. In one apt I lived in, outgoing mail would go in the frame around the mailboxes.
@markiusgalfordii92487 ай бұрын
I was going to say the same exact thing LO.L
@Dragoncurse47 ай бұрын
Probably because more often than not the only thing in your mail box are bills, and who wants to steal that? XD
@magnus9667 ай бұрын
Frausters are brazen now and will alter checks from your mailbox. That's for the old school people who still write checks and buy stamps. Online payments or bill pay from ur bank account is easiest and cheapest way to pay the bills.
@jonadabtheunsightly7 ай бұрын
Mail tampering does happen occasionally, because people are idiots. But yeah, it's definitely not *worth* it, because you can get in way more trouble than it's worth. If you're going to commit a felony and risk the consequences, there are far more appealing and potentially lucrative ways to do it, than reading your neighbor's mail. Frankly, there are more appealing and lucrative forms of completely legal unskilled labor, like working a cash register.
@meganjames10347 ай бұрын
As an American, I think it's funny you call the recliner a cinema chair. Where I'm from, recliners were standard in homes when I was growing up, and reclining chairs at the movies only became a thing about 10 years ago lol.
@indigowulf7 ай бұрын
you're lucky. in my area, only the super expensive imax theatre has chairs like that. everything else is one step up from stadium seats- annoying fixed plastic chairs with cushions. The better the theatre, the more cushion.
@timb43217 ай бұрын
The recliner as a standalone chair has been around since at least the 1970s. Reclining seats in couches are newer. I don't remember seeing them before ~20 years ago.
@benwagner50897 ай бұрын
Well, recliners aren't standard in the way that the house comes with them installed like a kitchen sink. But yeah, it's rather common that people have at least one recliner in the house, or even couches that can recline.
@kathleenlindquist47997 ай бұрын
And you can get recliners with massage and heat.
@jagilo96777 ай бұрын
Recliners are a trademark of older Midwest homes. My in-laws each had one and I thought they were the laziest people, especially because they were obese. My mother’s first impression of my mother in law was the woman sitting on the recliner with her fat naked feet up in the air and she didn’t even get up to meet my mom. Ugh!
@LMStevens3 ай бұрын
The laundry room with a washer and dryer! I discovered that when I moved to the States. I designed mine in this house and it is huge so I can have the dog and cat food, cat litter, a sink, an upright freezer, a clothe line for delicates, room to store laundry baskets, brooms, detergents and shelves and more shelves. It is one of the best investment I made. I do like the French windows better because they have shutters that you can actually use. Here, they are only decorations. They are great to for insolation, privacy and protection. I also have fallen in love with recliners. Were I to move back to Europe, I would take them with me. And finally, the size of the houses, and the rooms inside. I love the feeling of openness in large rooms. Same with cars which, to my delight, are fully automatic. This European loves the American life style.
@jontarr74447 ай бұрын
Recliners are absolutely normal. Not everyone has them, but quite common.
@recycledapathy74117 ай бұрын
Yeah, not everyone has a reclining sofa, but a lot of people at least have a reclining chair. I don't - not enough room for one where I live now - but my dad has a recliner that also lifts up in the back to help him stand up. Full disclosure though, he's over 80 so I doubt he'd be able to get out of a stuffed chair without the help.
@stevenfabian2977 ай бұрын
I have a reclining sofa and a couple old la-z boys, loooove them
@CMTHFAF7 ай бұрын
Recliners are a love hate thing in the USA. Men love them. Women hate them because they are ugly.
@lynnw71557 ай бұрын
But I've never seen one in a cinema...the space is way too small to recline or stick your feet up.
@Eniral4417 ай бұрын
@lynnw7155 every movie theater I've been in in the past 5-10 years has had recliners for seats. I used to think the same thing, but they take out entire rows of seats to put them in. It cuts the seating by 50-75%, but it is so much better. No more getting your seat kicked or not being able to see over a tall person.
@garyporterfield71657 ай бұрын
It blows my mind that after a thousand years people in Europe have not discovered insect screens
@therealimnotjiminy7 ай бұрын
Or iced drinks.
@Spiklething7 ай бұрын
We dont need them, most days its too cold to open the windows so on average I get maybe 10 houseflies come in through the window a year. Maybe a wasp or two. Don't really get mosquitos here.
@kathymc2347 ай бұрын
Or air conditioning. LOL
@featherybee2397 ай бұрын
@@SpiklethingGermany disagrees 😂. They apparently open windows all year round to get fresh air, temperature be dammed.
@c.phillips77287 ай бұрын
@@Spiklething But how do you keep your cats inside? Or your toddler-age, curious and active children?
@Enginette377 ай бұрын
The air conditioning for humidity control doesn’t get the love it deserves. Just getting the moisture out of the already cool air is so nice.
@CinderellaRaptured3337 ай бұрын
I am a janitor at a school in southern Texas. 104 degrees with heavy humidity. For some reason, the school district decided it would be a great idea to save electricity by turning the AC off in the schools in our town. Because ‘no one will be there anyway during the summers ’. Ummm/ you have a group of employees doing labor intensive work all summer. It gets about 80 degrees in the classrooms WITH added humidity. Makes it reallllyyy hard to be a peppy efficient employee. 🥵
@tsiefhtes7 ай бұрын
@@CinderellaRaptured333and with modern buildings being sealed so tightly how mold is a major problem when A/C and it's dehumidifying functions are turned off.
@CinderellaRaptured3337 ай бұрын
@@tsiefhtes Yeah. We have those clocks that have the time/date/temp/humidity information on them. Our particular school feels very humid when the AC is off. I’m assuming the builders cut corners to save money, bc it’s not insulated well at all! It’s an older school. One day, the air in the classroom went out. The teacher was irritable and complaining that it was SO humid and hot! Upwards of 80 degrees according to the clock. They fixed it for her. I told her, “Yeah- imagine the whole school feeling like this! Because we work in this all summer.” She couldn’t believe it. She was like, there’s no way I could do that! That’s so sad they make yall work without cooler air like that.
@zuzuspetals92817 ай бұрын
@@CinderellaRaptured333They did that in some districts here in North Carolina last year resulting in mold so bad school was delayed by weeks and cost millions in remediation. Administrators are often quite stupid.
@CinderellaRaptured3337 ай бұрын
@@zuzuspetals9281 Agreed!!!!!
@pathfinderlight3 ай бұрын
In the US, most people don't have more than one car for a person unless they have specific needs for it, for example work trucks, farmer's tractors and crop harvesters, or full size vans for large families. The primary exception to this are people who repair and resell cars for a hobby or as part of their job. I know a mechanic who works for the state who also owns 11 cars, and fixes them up on the side. Also, you always want to run the water while running the garbage disposal because it helps pulverize the food waste.
@amanda9072 ай бұрын
Middle class here, and we've got 3 daily drivers (1 is for friends and family if visiting) and 3 project cars .. but no kids so we can afford them.
@DeirdreAvila7 ай бұрын
Wow, it just blows my mind that people don't have screens on their windows in Europe here it's standard. No bugs for me😂
@pete567 ай бұрын
No window screens is the craziest thing, so cheap and easy to do.
@alisonflaxman15667 ай бұрын
@@pete56never had to add a screen any house I've seen it's standard. Order new windows and they automatically come with screens. Went to England and there were flies in our hotel room cause they had the windows open.
@kathybouziane52697 ай бұрын
Not just bugs will get in without a screen but also the occasional bat. And if you have a cat it'll take off. Most cats are kept inside.
@LisaLisa8157 ай бұрын
Exactly! lol I would NEVER open a window.
@pete567 ай бұрын
@@alisonflaxman1566 My windows have always had screens too, but if they didn't I would put some on.
@annied32767 ай бұрын
I love seeing this UK guy reacting so excitedly to things we just take for granted here in the US. He put a smile on my face with his cheerful enthusiasm.
@freidagreenfield62707 ай бұрын
I thought he was a Comedian being silly 😂 Noo screens
@allisonvoth20287 ай бұрын
Was just about to say the same!
@zugmeister3146 ай бұрын
I'm just happy to finally see a video comparing US vs. ??? and not have it bagging on everything US.
@MoneyStrategiesSOULutions6 ай бұрын
Ha yeah right ;)@@zugmeister314
@nanskischaeffeler90416 ай бұрын
Those rubbish disposal systems are unbelievably polluting! Imagine all the stuff that gets to the waste water treatment plants and has to be filtered out of the water instead of just being put in the compost or the “green bin” which is collected by the municipality and ecologically disposed off!
@JIMBEARRI7 ай бұрын
Window screens are a very fine mesh. They used to be made of thin wire, but modern ones are made of plastic fibers. They are absolutely essential to keep out flying insects.
@CaddyJim4 ай бұрын
Her mother is upper class daughter living abroad in a house on a lake (she said mid-west where you can get bigger houses then on the east or west coast specially cities)
@scmay297 ай бұрын
No...the mailman does not have a key. It's unlocked, but considering that messing with someones mail within their mailbox is a federal crime, it's not a big risk, at least where I live.
@LostVoid-kw8my7 ай бұрын
Another deterrent being 90% of anything recieved in the mail being taxes.
@laggedoff7 ай бұрын
yea you don't wanna commit a mail crime, the Post Office has Federal Agents who are armed, and I mean ARMED BOI.
@garyporterfield71657 ай бұрын
OMG, every house I have been in in the last 50 years has a recliner chair, and for the last 20 years they have all been electric
@janfitzgerald36157 ай бұрын
It depends on your neighborhood. In newer developments you’ll often see a set of mailboxes on a big post that also contains two or three package boxes and an outgoing mail slot. You have as assigned box and use a key to,open it. Of course the mail carrier has the master key to open the entire box. We have that kind of set up in our development, there’s a mail box on every block, mounted on the sidewalk at the edge of the curb so the mail carrier can fill the boxes and collect outgoing mail without leaving their vehicle, unless the package you’re receiving is too large for one if the package boxes and then they leave it on your front porch.
@phoenixspirit95307 ай бұрын
Mine actually does have a lock. There's a slot for the mail to be put in once the door is opened. You need the key to open it to get the mail out. Anything too big to fit through the slot, is brought to the house.
@annarowden94577 ай бұрын
She lives in a more upper middle class area. That is not how a lot of Americans live. Lake front properties are rare and very expensive. Owning 6 TVs is a lot, 3 is more like it. The two vehicles in the driveway are usually a sedan and a truck, and if you have a third vehicle, mostly due to having young drivers in the family over the age of 16. Her parents live in a very large house, and most Americans live in smaller square foot homes.The recliners are very common for living rooms.
@jaycee3307 ай бұрын
I think they are squarely in "upper class" territory here.
@Phoenix_DarkMoon7 ай бұрын
She is definitely upper class. I'm middle class. 3 bedroom home, 1 car, 1 tv, minimal debt, but no savings. Living paycheck to paycheck.
@smoshfan999999997 ай бұрын
@@Phoenix_DarkMoon It depends, midwesterners used to buy or build these lakefront properties as vacation homes that would be shared and funded by extended family. I'm middleclass in michigan and my extended family does this still with a lakefront home that was built by my great grandfather in the 1950's or 60's...
@byusaranicole7 ай бұрын
Multiple cars is definitely not the norm... Her parents are probably upper middle class. My parents have an extra vehicle. It's a truck for hauling things.
@TBishopDean7 ай бұрын
Thank you. I came here to say this is not the typical home here. Also, the size of the yard. Most houses would be lucky to have half that size depending on the age. The newer houses might be lucky to have 1/8 an acre.
@elsen7156 ай бұрын
They missed, probably one of the bigger conveniences of America versus Europe, is the laundry room. Typically in Europe, the washer dryer combo machine is either in the bathroom or the kitchen. There are a lot of dedicated laundry rooms in bigger homes in the US. Or just a dedicated laundry closet in the hallways.
@taylorjaffe82995 ай бұрын
Yes. Some homes also have the laundry setup in the basement.
@user-es9mb8wi3m4 ай бұрын
My wish is to design a large, multi-functional laundry room with large storage closets for Christmas decor, extra China sets and glassware, gift wrapping table, folding area. I do not understand why builders put the laundry 🧺 in the scary basement, (think of the scene with Kevin McAllister in Home Alone) or near the kitchen. I don’t keep my clothes in the kitchen. A laundry should be near the bedrooms. Hats off to all those poor women who had to schlepp heavy laundry down and then back up two flights of stairs. Whether here in the U.S., or in Europe, we have to begin to think more creatively and practically about homes and design. And bathrooms should not be near dining areas. Just sayin’.
@saimaleon71154 ай бұрын
And Americans have dryers not dehumidifiers for drying the laundry. You can have a load of towels and jeans dry in 20 minutes!
@TallulahB583 ай бұрын
@@user-es9mb8wi3m We are a retired couple and when we downsized, there was no laundry at all. So we took the second bedroom and made it a laundry room/walk-in closet.
@user-es9mb8wi3m3 ай бұрын
@@TallulahB58 Good move, Tallulah. The importance of the laundry in the function of a home is grossly underestimated. It seems always to be an afterthought, the smallest, often windowless room in most cases. Often just a closet. Space is needed for moving around, folding, hanging clothing, and storage. It should be a pretty, pleasant room in which to work because we spend quite a bit of time in there. Enjoy your lovely laundry room.
@vanessamae45563 ай бұрын
this lady is honestly living in her own world, she’s quite clearly from a middle class or upper class family. In the town i live in there’s a population of about 3,000 and it’s not “normal” to have a lake house, or central air, to have a garbage disposal and most people where i live don’t even have one car per person.
@ae29482 ай бұрын
I live in a city. There is no central air, garbage disposals are rare, we don't have 1 car per person, and most of us don't have ice makers or sink sprayers. We DO have window screens, so theres that.
@robinsixoh22 ай бұрын
That is the truth. There needs to be a disclaimer that while a lot of homes have the amenities & upgrades she enumerates, it is by no means every home.
@carlafuentes22542 ай бұрын
Yeah a lake home is not something we all have, I would consider that more upper class. I live in a suburb of Houston and we have the central air/heat, garbage disposal and a pool. However we only have one car each. I'm not sure who would have more than one unless they were a car collector?!
@SamanthaIrish-t8k2 ай бұрын
I've never had a garbage disposal, but we have three cars for three people and we do have air conditioning. Not upper middle class, more on the lower end of middle. You can't walk anywhere here in winter so need everyone to have a car.
@annastewart89532 ай бұрын
No kidding! I consider our family of four to be firmly middle class in a large Midwestern town. We just became a two car family. We don't have an ice maker. We have one TV. Our windows don't stay open without being propped. We only run the AC from May-Sept, heat from Nov-Feb, and I don't allow the AC to be more than 10 degrees cooler than the outside temp. Yesterday it was 98, so our house was 88. As far as I'm concerned, we've got it made Rich people never seem to know that they're rich. Haha
@billyyank11637 ай бұрын
A lot of people don't realize this, but we used to have a serious malaria problem in the US. Window screens were a counter to this and they've stayed around ever since. The thing about multiple cars per person is a bit overblown in this video. Most American homes have at most one car per person over 16. The only people I know who have more than one car per person are those who have a business, so they'll have a car for regular use, and a van or pick-up for their business.
@nannerz19947 ай бұрын
I didn't know that!
@rebeccaburrow71997 ай бұрын
This is basically it. A nuclear family will typically have two cars if they can afford it, one for the husband to get to work, and one for the mother with kids to run errands, get groceries, etc. If there are more cars, it is because there is a 16+ who needs to get to school or work. Cars are expensive!
@karenmitchell68147 ай бұрын
Yes, because as someone else noted about AC, the U.S. is so much further south than the UK. That warm damp air = malaria AND great AC!
@matts.83427 ай бұрын
Car people often have more cars than drivers. It has nothing to do with having a business. For example, we have 5 vehicles. One is a motorcycle that only I ride, a truck that we only use when we need to do truck stuff, and a Jeep that I am slowly restoring after an engine fire. My wife and I both have small 4 door cars we daily drive for work etc. We are not in anywhere near the financial position it appears this family in the video is in, 3 of our vehicles were very nearly "free". My daily was an inheritance, the bike was $300, and the Jeep was free.
@amandachilds52907 ай бұрын
WHOLE REASON CDC invented and placed in ATLANTA was mainly Malaria. People also forget that is why the South had a lot of naturally immune African slaves as time went on and less Irish, the susceptible indentured servants. Malaria killed the whites so the ones with money, sent their kids away from South during the summers. Plantations developed this way due to insects and climate people were used to too. It wasn't just racism, it was measurable levels of immunity and people always forget this because most don't study entomology, virology and epigenetics. I used to work at the CDC so I appreciate the facts that built it and how things like DDT, even though had lots of bad to it, changed the landscape and potential of the South, especially GA, SC and Florida.
@robynmorita82077 ай бұрын
Everyone’s talking about the screens on the windows. I’M still trying to wrap my head round HIM trying to wrap his head round the fact that you can send letters or small packages from your mailbox! 🤣
@jamessasson59826 ай бұрын
Lolol
@robynmorita82074 ай бұрын
@@fex144 Well, by your logic the UK doesn’t have internet or phones either, since they still have post boxes! 🤣
@ASolangeM6 ай бұрын
This lady from an upper middle class family. A lot of Americans don’t have power recliners, 4 tvs, a lake view, or 2 cars per person. But most homes do have an ice maker, screened windows, a/c and probably a garbage disposal.
@yovan9166 ай бұрын
You saved me a rant 😅 i was like shit i barely have the one car
@Wheelz_TV6 ай бұрын
This...except the garbage disposal...i can only think of a few houses iv been in that had one, so for that i feel like its not as common as she's making it sound
@inna16336 ай бұрын
I bought power recliners 4y ago took a puppy and a toddler to destroy them and me regret spending 5k on them .will go cheaper next time as for fancing as european living in US ...love my privacy would love to have less front yard and more backyard ...got a pool i'm also lots in gardening so yeah would if possible extend my backyard
@hp44156 ай бұрын
@@Wheelz_TVwait what? I never been to a house or an apartment without garbage disposal? Even cheap apartment has one
@dantescave16 ай бұрын
@@inna1633 obviously it wasn’t good for you, but millions enjoy them…
@a.k.v.30423 ай бұрын
Depends on where you are in the US for some of these things. Like, we don't have an ice maker in our fridge/freezer combo because our fridge isn't connected to the water supply. For the same reason we don't have a garbage disposal - we're on well water and septic (not town water or sewer). So our "grey water" needs to be water - not food scraps. We have only two TVs (that work - there is a third, but it is in the garage and needs fixing). We do have air conditioning and reclining loveseats. And screens for the windows to keep the bugs out when it is nice enough to open the windows.
@ChimiChimiChurryPie7 ай бұрын
My coworker took a vacation to Florida and had never seen the screened enclosures surrounding swimming pools in people's backyards. She told me, "there's a whole room of screened walls and ceiling connected to the houses". Having lived in Florida for 30 years, I know why they are built. As soon as the summer sun dips in the sky, around 4pm, the mosquitoes come out. You would never use your pool after 4pm unless you want to get eaten alive. The screened enclosure also protects kids from the neighborhood coming in to swim in your pool. If the kid drowns, it's the homeowner's fault even if the kid was trespassing. The enclosure also keeps debris from trees falling into your pool and making it dirty. And lastly, it helps to keep alligators and other wildlife from using your pool as a lake. The one thing I didn't like about the enclosure is that the pool water temp is colder with the screens vs without. However on hot, humid, summer days the cold water feels nice!
@hschwartz92777 ай бұрын
Enclosed pools like that also keep out the alligators!
@3DJapan7 ай бұрын
I lived in Florida for a year and I've never seen a screen completely surrounding a pool. My apartment did have a screened patio though. That was really nice.
@lovelypoets40037 ай бұрын
Florida has their pools enclosed bc venomous snakes, gators, etc
@StanSlaughter7 ай бұрын
Your "lastly" part should have been your "firstly" (and only needed) part.
@silentrage54257 ай бұрын
Something I miss with new houses in America.... porches and patios. Now some houses will have one or the other or they will have a wooden deck. My grandmother's old house had both a porch out front with rocking chairs and out back was a large patio with a fire pit. During the day (mostly on Sundays) we'd sit out front drinking ice tea and marvel at her flower garden. At night we'd move to the back patio and tell stories around the fire pit. I loved the patio, it looked out over a grassy field with a few apple trees and her huge vegetable garden. Although when it's harvest season the size of that vegetable garden was painful. The grandkids would spend the day picking vegetables while the mothers were cleaning and prepping them, and grandma was manning the stove canning all the vegetables. I know, tell me you're Gen X without saying you're Gen X. lol
@arcanewyrm62957 ай бұрын
GenX _or prior._ We weren't the only generation to see this en masse - just the last to see it that way.
@janfitzgerald36157 ай бұрын
It depends on the builder, my development was built seventeen years ago and when you picked out your floor plan, you also had a choice of three different variations of the exterior but they all included covered porches. Also a large patio was included in the back of your house.
@bryandeviney40727 ай бұрын
I still see porches and patios but it's like the front and back yards, it's getting smaller. But you're right, you can see it slowly being less common than it once was.
@S_Cooper04047 ай бұрын
My last house only had a front stoop and a concrete patio out back. When we got our new home a couple of years ago...I finally got my front and back porches. Love them!
@OkiePeg4117 ай бұрын
In my part of the country, if you step foot outside in the summer, you'll get attacked by gnats, flies, mosquitoes, chiggers.
@CLKagmi237 ай бұрын
As others have noted, it's worth noting that this appears to be a wealthy family. Some families do have several cars to a family, but usually only very wealthy people have more than one car per person. That kitchen is also quite large, although it is relatively common in newer homes to have that detachable faucet and a garbage disposal. In American apartments built before those things were common, it's not unusual to have neither of those things. That view is also a wealthy people view. What's funny is that recliners have been somewhat common in America for a while, so when cinemas started to have them my thought was "wow this is a recliner just like my grandma's," not "my grandma's house is just like a cinema chair."
@madison_kr7 ай бұрын
I was thinking that too about the recliners. It’s only been in the last decade that we have gotten those kinds of cinema chairs and they are only in one of the rooms at the movies while the other 14 or so have the old straight back ones. We have had recliners in homes since I was a little kid (and before.) It’s funny how that’s backwards.
@paulascott57017 ай бұрын
Yes, that is a high end home. Those refrigerator are very expensive. I certainly don't have one.
@dpark1897 ай бұрын
i would mostly agree, but it feels like buying broken down "project" cars and fixing them up is becoming more common these days with how messed up car prices have become.
@johnhaller58517 ай бұрын
I used to live in a one vehicle per occupant home, but then one of the occupants was no more. One vehicle is used for transporting big things, but isn't very fuel efficient. The other is fuel efficient with 60 miles of electric range. The electric range is enough for 95% of my driving. Round trips to the airport are outside the range, but not that frequent.
@sandratuttle5 ай бұрын
I have never been to a theater with a full reclining seat. Even the newly built on just has seats that tilt back a little. I live in Pennsylvania near Pittsburgh.
@MarkHannig-lf7qf3 ай бұрын
Aside from the typical bells and whistles for most U.S. houses, construction means and methods differ across the U.S. due to the environment. Just hear in Texas, you have the Chihuahuan desert of El Paso in the west and the costal “swamp” of Houston in the east. Hence, building is different. Not to mention - equidistant north from El Paso - you have alpine environs of Colorado.
@buckeyegirl167 ай бұрын
Your expression when she reclined the couch 😂😂 And when she started moving around the kitchen faucet 😂😂
@TootsieShadow7 ай бұрын
US mail carrier here.. We do collect outgoing mail from mailboxes and offer "package pickup". Items too large for the mailbox can be scheduled for pick up at any location at their address, ie front porch, garage, inside (no, we don't go into their house.. we knock and they bring it out!! Lol). Customers go online to set up a pick up, then the carriers get print outs in the morning telling us which address, # of outgoing parcel(s) & where we can find them on site. Also, mail theft is a BIG no-no in the US and, as stated by others, is a federal offense, with up to 5 years in FEDERAL prison and $5,000 fine, for each offense. They don't take it lightly either, having federal postal inspectors, which have higher authority than local or state police agencies (and yes, they do carry firearms). It's kinda scary when they come to your office because you know it's probably theft, drugs or weapons that brought them there.
@kennethpryde9667 ай бұрын
Don't know if you get this much, but thank you for what you do.
@TootsieShadow7 ай бұрын
Thank you!! 😊
@YeshuaKingMessiah7 ай бұрын
I found it so satisfying to learn the Postal Inspectors trump the FBI!
@tonette110002 ай бұрын
I wish the druggies and criminals in my area would respect the mail laws. It's so bad that the blue mailboxes are gone now, except in front of post offices, but they get broken into, also. You have to actually give your outgoing mail to an employee in the post office now. Ugh
@kevincomer21017 ай бұрын
Not only do screens let in air but also the sounds of nature. Air conditioning is not just for cooling but removing humidity which helps with the feeling of comfort.
@Tijuanabill7 ай бұрын
That depends on the region. Where I live, the HVAC system has a humidifier that adds moisture to the air. Other places have de-humidifiers, and some places have both.
@KS-ip5xn7 ай бұрын
and if you have allergies the air conditioning helps a lot
@JanMaynz7 ай бұрын
I live somewhere very dry, so swamp coolers reign supreme. I actually struggle with a dry cough sometimes because of systems that remove humidity when it's already kind of dry after growing up with the swamp cooler... Edit: I COULD'VE SWORN I MADE SURE IT SAID LIVE, NOT LOVE, BUT!
@zarasha82207 ай бұрын
@@JanMaynz the one thing I don't like very much about swamp coolers is the smell, and it wasn't just one particular home, it was a common thing to smell that 'swamp cooler' smell everywhere that used them. That being said, I'd happily deal with the stink of swamp coolers if the only alternative was living without screens on my windows.... I can't cope with having mosquitoes, june bugs, and other unsavory critters getting into my home
@Spiklething7 ай бұрын
Where I live in the UK average maximum temperature is 64F, definately dont need AC.
@katalystkatapatheticalyssa59873 ай бұрын
We have those large mailboxes on the streets too, usually in busy areas. The pickup hours are posted there, too. Different vehicles have different uses too. I have a little car for most of my commuting, but I also inherited a pickup which is useful for moving things around. I use it more than I'd ever think.
@rachela38697 ай бұрын
Whoever owns this house has MONEY! They have the newest and nicest amenities. This is the typical home for someone in upper middle class or wealthy. Living on a lake with that view is costly! But, yes most homes have yards typically decent in size, screened windows, garbage disposals, ice makers, and at least a car per person or at least one for mom and one for dad.
@aleatharhea7 ай бұрын
That house is HUGE! And, yeah, I noticed that massive back yard right on the lake! Yeah, as I mentioned in a previous comment, this girl doesn't realize how privileged she is... talking like practically everyone has it that good... Absolutely clueless.
@ayabokti1617 ай бұрын
But they are not rich rich. Just comfortable.
@cindycruzmurphy88977 ай бұрын
Those things don’t make them wealthy. Comfortable, yes. But not wealthy. Working hard for the things you have doesn’t make you privileged or clueless. Get a grip.
@GalacticStudios697 ай бұрын
Idk, I feel like msot do the things she used in the kitchen, (fridge and sink) just LOOK nice, they are like every other sink and fridge just a little more fancy. Like I have a fridge that has a smaller space for a taller drawer and a deeper freezer. That’s basically the only difference. I think you’re just looking for reasons atp.
@MrJest27 ай бұрын
@@aleatharhea I dunno. We have a 2500 sq.ft. four bedroom home, with a nice open kitchen and most everything she showed (save for only two cars and two old TVs), and it cost less than 240k. Of course, we're out in the middle of nowhere, in the desert, but it suits us. Mostly it all depends on where one lives, and what sacrifices one is willing to make (such as moving out to the middle of nowhere). Our income is pretty minimal, too - we paid for the house by selling off the old one, and out here tax is very low and bills are likewise low. It's all about location and how you want to live.
@zengirl75107 ай бұрын
That home is beautiful but definitely expensive. Her parents have money, that's for sure.
@matthewcollins41577 ай бұрын
I was thinking the same thing. I'm an American in the mid-west. I do not own a TV anymore but growing up we had two, one was small black and white and the other color, then we migrated to two color. Only have one car per person. Now scenic view out the windows, just neighbor's' homes. That type of sink faucet is about $100 or more, and I've never seen a sink that large in anyone's home in my life! Also, I've never lived in a home with that much space. Definitely not a typical American home unless you are the upper middle class.
@camilochavez69827 ай бұрын
The backyard lake view is a giveaway. That's an expensive home.
@401Impala7 ай бұрын
@@matthewcollins4157 You need to get out more. You are in the minority.
@Shirayuuki17 ай бұрын
probably purchased when it was only like 150k. lol but if they're in the midwest the price may still be "somewhat" low compared to other states.
@KS-ip5xn7 ай бұрын
@@Shirayuuki1 My 3/2 2000 square ft house on a just under 1 acre lake lot in rural MN costs half what I paid for my winter home in S Florida that has a teeny lot and is 1500 sq ft 3/2 on a drainage pond they call a lake. My MN house is on a 1000 acre lake. But in FL the gators are free ha ha ha.
@nearlyorganicnoshing27987 ай бұрын
I am from Florida and could not imagine a life without AC or window screens. The heat, humidity, and insane number of bugs here, will literally kill you. Growing up we always had at least three vehicles. Dad wanted a spare in case one was broken, so he was never late to work, & we couldn't get to school. I have continued that thought process into my life with children. Public transportation is not readily available in the country or rural areas. Most US houses at least have a tv in the main living room and bedrooms, but it is not uncommon to have them in a workout room, kitchen, or back porch for parties. We are not rich, nor do we have the massive house or amazing view as this poster, but we have all the items listed.
@michaelwaller73657 ай бұрын
Can't forget the garage.
@LJBSullivan7 ай бұрын
Also helps keep snakes out, those window screens.
@nataliewalters27596 ай бұрын
I could’ve imagine it either !
@Torsin20003 ай бұрын
In my neighborhood in the US the mailboxes are a bank of lock boxes. Each house gets assigned a number and given a key to their box. If there's a package there are package bins where they will secure the package and deposit the key in your mailbox. To send letters, there is a specific slot that is communal that people can put their letters in, but no one besides the post office has the key to open that.
@bekahinrio7 ай бұрын
Your reactions crack me up! 69 year old American here. I lived in Brazil for 4 years where there were no screens. But where we lived, there weren't a lot of bugs either. We closed all the windows at 5 PM before the mosquitoes were out. But in the U.S., even when I was a child and we were poor, there were always screens. We lived in a place that was too cold for bugs and still had screens! :) But I agree with one of the comments, the house in the video belongs to someone relatively wealthy. Double ice makers, 6 TV's, more than one car per person and that beautiful view are not the usual in the U.S.
@alanlight77407 ай бұрын
It's actually pretty common in rural areas. No, they're not poor, but could be anywhere from mid-to-upper middle class.
@maclaycampbell20427 ай бұрын
@@alanlight7740if you haven’t noticed the middle class is shrinking rapidly in America. So even if they are Upper middle class that’s makes them very well of in todays economy compared to the AVERAGE American.
@johnhaller58517 ай бұрын
The building code in the US requires screens in certain rooms. That doesn't mean they won't get damaged over time. I remember kitchens being one required room to keep flies away from food preparation areas.
@vaiyacondios85677 ай бұрын
That house is definitely upper middle class, tho from the size of their driveway it could be in a rural area. Having a gorgeous view like that is not the norm in the US, however, even in rural areas.
@GameChanger5977 ай бұрын
@@alanlight7740Agreed. You don't necessarily have to be rich to have all these things but as far as the beautiful view goes, you may not be wealthy but you will probably be spending the bulk of your savings on it lol.
@Trifler5007 ай бұрын
9:34 - Reclining sofas/couches are quite common in the US. However, a lot of them use a manual lever, rather than an electric motor. Then your legs push it down when you get up. She said "when I was a kid", but they still sell non-electric ones, because they're a LOT cheaper, and also a lot lighter to move around than the electric ones.
@MsAubrey7 ай бұрын
Exactly! I bought a new reclining love seat last year and bought a manual one… because of all the things you said, but also I don’t want a higher draw on my electricity.
@cybercifrado7 ай бұрын
A sofa with motorized recliners on either end can easily go $2400 USD and up (depending on additional frills). Add in real leather and you're looking at around $5000. :D
@dreabia47597 ай бұрын
That’s the kind I have
@marycarricaburu36836 ай бұрын
and in an older house, the wall outlets are too precious to be used for a chair.
@Trifler5006 ай бұрын
True to an extent, although it's not difficult to add a splitter or power strip. An electrician can also add more plugs in the wall.
@ekmeger6 ай бұрын
Icemaker has different options: "Crushed Ice" "Regular size ice" The last option is "water" only.
@ektran42053 ай бұрын
cubed or crushed on power freeze setting
@mechengr17312 ай бұрын
My mom got my step dad a machine for making sonic ice
@02ujtb006262 ай бұрын
Massachusetts here. Some check out some don't. First off that kitchen was faaaancy. Most homes I've been in don't have those massive refridgerators with the ice makers. Just normal sized ones and some ice trays for the freezer. That sink is a normalish size but i have never seen that faucet in person. Most are the normal types that only move side to side. Most sinks do have this dish sprayer on the side you can pull out like a hose to do dishes though, and disposals are common. Interestingly, where I grew up fences were common in the front. My mom's house had one. We also didn't have a mailbox like most other homes, but a mail slot in the front door. Also, we never had more than 2 cars growing up. 1 each for dad and mom was enough. We did have screens as we get very hot and humid in the summer so bugs abound. Some U.S. climates are much milder and don't get too many bugs (San Fransisco) and thus don't need screens. Air conditioning is everywhere and ice is a must.
@crescentmoonchild40317 ай бұрын
Not all houses have such great views. Some are close together and you have fenced yards for dogs and safety if there is a pool back there.
@oldmanmag99057 ай бұрын
As a former postal worker. In class they told us the Office of the Postmaster General Inspector is the 2nd highest police force in the country. The only people that outrank them in civilian service is the secret service. Stealing/putting anything in a mailbox that is not your is a felony. They will find you if they want to. The mailbox on each property is TECHNICALLY the federal government's property. You are technically only allowed to replace it with certain boxes but the mailman usually lets it slide if they like you.
@SmallSpoonBrigade7 ай бұрын
IIRC, that's mostly because mail that's going from one side of the country to the other via truck passes through hundreds of jursidictions. The result is that in order to figure out where it was stolen, the Postmaster Inspector General has to have that level of authority.
@tonette110002 ай бұрын
Then why is our mail getting stolen daily left and right in some big cities in the US?
@oldmanmag99052 ай бұрын
@@tonette11000 murder is illegal and people still kill lol if you want you can file a report on continued theft and they will eventually get around to you. I wasn't in the dept but it is all true. I'm with UPS now and have done Amazon both stressed DAILY DO NOT PUT IT IN THE MAILBOX. mailmen that care will take the packages back to the post office and the UPS driver will get them next time he goes to drop off a bulk of packages along with a report on where and a warning of a fine/escalation if it keeps happening.
@DavidStebbins7 ай бұрын
One thing about air conditioning is that the entire contiguous part of the USA is more southerly than London. Things get pretty warm in the summer, even in the northernmost, snowiest, cities.
@micheal43887 ай бұрын
Exactly. Here in Minnesota it’s absolutely freezing in winter and boiling hot in the summer with temps sometimes over 100° Fahrenheit
@chirp23417 ай бұрын
Yeah, I am from Pennsylvania at the northernmost part, and the one year we hit a US record for cold temperature, but during the summer it was one of our hottest summers too like 98 f
@gloriag18993 ай бұрын
I live in Arizona, as we have mild winter here, and we love our swimming pools during the summertime, we also have TV in our patio/outdoor living room.
@pepleatherlab38727 ай бұрын
I think a key to U.S. consumerism is that we spend a lot of time and income on 'removing' daily annoyances so that we can be more productive as people. Many of these same conveniences one can also find in our work places. When it comes to multiple vehicles, it largely depends on the part of the country one resides. In Northern winters it's safer to drive an SUV or truck (snow, ice.) When the 90F summers arrive it's less costly to drive a sedan or commuter (fuel.) Many in the UK and Europe don't realize how drastic our weather changes through the seasons here. Especially in the North.
@cajbaf7 ай бұрын
Just admit it..US consumers are very spoiled and could get by with a lot less.
@therealimnotjiminy7 ай бұрын
It is NOT safer to drive a truck in snow or ice unless it's 4wd.
@jeffmockus54007 ай бұрын
@@therealimnotjiminyIf you are in snow country you have 4x4. 2wd is about non-existent in the north.
@nancykaminski86007 ай бұрын
@@jeffmockus5400I live in Minnesota. I have never had 4wheel drive, but rather front wheel drive. I have driven through snow storms safely and watched the idiots with 4wheel drive blast past me and then see them in the ditch. As far as I am concerned, 4wheel drive just gets you in the ditch that much faster and more efficiently! (Also, I know when it is better to just stay home and wait for the plows to come through.)
@therealimnotjiminy7 ай бұрын
@@nancykaminski8600 Correct. 4wd is definitely better than a 2wd pickup, which is useless in snow because there's no weight over the rear wheels, and a rwd car is better than a rwd/2wd pickup. Front wheel drive is the best in snow. Example: BIG, N50/15 rear tires, a posi rear and a couple hundred pounds of weight in the trunk of a '69 Dodge Coronet will out drive any 2wd pickup in snow. This I know for sure. I learned this in the Poconos (East Stroudsburg), as I drove past my friend in his Dodge pickup, which was - really - in a ditch. (He did it twice that year.) Don't even get me started on going up snowy hills.
@nunyabiznes44717 ай бұрын
How cute his reactions are! I’m 62, I redid my kitchen. I have the garbage disposal, a very large and deep hand hammered copper sink, a full size refrigerator with a big ice maker, and I have a 24” beverage refrigerator too. I live alone, and have two cars. I have whole house air conditioning, a whole house automatic generator, and a 2200 square foot house, with two recliners in my living room. I worked my ass off for all of it, and I’m happy and grateful for what I have. I wish every good person had the same too.
@Kammy447 ай бұрын
While many homes do have garbage disposals, if they are older homes (and many homes are in my area) they often do NOT have garbage disposals. Personally, I think they are not ideal. We should be composting our food waste, and not just throw it down the drain. A head of lettuce in a landfill takes 50 years to degrade. In a compost pile it takes about two weeks.
@JohnJBrowne112097 ай бұрын
Congrats. You sir are living the American dream
@nunyabiznes44717 ай бұрын
@@Kammy44 it’s minimal what goes down my disposal. I live on 9 acres. I throw everything out for the animals. It’s just scrapings from plates mostly. I feed the woodland creatures.
@Thecodexnoir7 ай бұрын
Gotta love a nice hand hammered copper sink 👌
@angelasamusements47867 ай бұрын
I love watching videos like this because it helps me stay humble and appreciate America. I'm in Florida. Everyday is beautiful and life is very good. I love seeing people's faces when they see things we take for granted over here. It reminds me NOT to take things for granted. I hope you're able to visit us one day!
@amonique6 ай бұрын
I'm in Orlando!!
@dawnkindnesscountsmost59913 ай бұрын
6:42 The garbage/trash disposal in the kitchen sink is NOT for ALL of the trash. It's for the crumbs and small pieces of food that are left in the sink after hand-washing the dishes, but not for bones or large chunks of food; if the piece of food world take up most of the area in the bowl of a spoon, it goes into the trash can. If you don't run the disposal every day, do run it at least once per week, and ALWAYS run the disposal with the hot water running in the sink. These tips were told to me by the garbage disposal installer.
@terrijuanette4866 ай бұрын
The window screen is a metal or plastic mesh (with tiny tiny holes) that lets air through but not bugs. The mesh is mounted on a rail that is affixed just behind the actual window on the bottom in it's own track. It can be pulled out for repairs or to clean the windows. LOVE SCREENS. Also, we have SCREEN DOORS that have mesh instead of glass that are mounted in the door jam about 3 inches in front of the outside door so you can open the door and bugs not come in. The handle can also be locked to help prevent instrusion.
@sharondornhoff75633 ай бұрын
FYI: Window screens are typically mounted in frames that can be slid up and down or removed altogether, so people can escape out the window in the event of a house fire.
@etsugradlib3 ай бұрын
You can also get pet screen, which is a thicker black plastic, but you can still see through it very well, and it keeps cats from ripping the screens to shreds, which any cat will do if you let them get a chance at a regular screen window. We had it on our porch outside in Virginia. Costs more but absolutely worth it.
@ATLcentury3347 ай бұрын
I just recalled, many years ago my family had a relative visit from the U.K. She was amazed how big everything was, especially the cars. The first time she stopped by to visit my parents and me, my mother ushered her to our back yard. She looked astonished and asked if the entire back yard belonged to us. My parents yard wasn’t an especially large yard, but my mother worked hard every spring planting flowers and making everything beautiful. The thing that shocked my dads cousin the most was a few minutes into her visit while she was sitting enjoying the garden, was a squirrel who ran and hopped off a tree, standing on the grass looking at her. She jumped up, screamed a little, and ran back in the house. My mother and I had to work hard to get her into the yard again. She wanted to know what the wild animal was.
@arh12347 ай бұрын
😂
@Kammy447 ай бұрын
I don't know why she would be scared of a squirrel, have you ever seen the size of the rabbits in the UK??? They are the size of dogs! And I don't mean a Chihuahua.
@SubeTheWench7 ай бұрын
@@Kammy44 She might not have recognized it because of the coloring. UK squirrels are generally red, while most American squirrels tend to be grey.
@GameChanger5977 ай бұрын
@@SubeTheWenchyes I thought that was strange. There are plenty of squirrels in the UK They just look a little different from American squirrels but you can still clearly tell they are squirrels
@eew127 ай бұрын
The one big thing she left out is the laundry room. We have an entire room for the washer and dryer, which are 2 separate units. In the UK, I believe there's usually a washer/dryer in the actual kitchen, and it's only one unit.
@keegansmetanko37556 ай бұрын
Not all homes in America either. Where I live its more common to have your washer/dryer in the basement or bathroom if you haver enough rom. Also there is a 50/50 split between the separate and 1 unit washer/dryer.
@eew126 ай бұрын
@@keegansmetanko3755 Certainly. I've seen those all as well. Those are also things you don't often see in the UK. Looking at the house in this video, I would shocked if it didn't have a laundry room, but I digress. I'm more specifically saying that in the US, you don't see washer/dryer units under the kitchen counter in the same location you'd find a dishwasher.
@djdezyn88386 ай бұрын
I noticed that as well. I would definitely need a dryer for clothes. I don’t think that’s real common in the UK. Comment please of it is common to have a dryer in the house.
@bettymurrell59506 ай бұрын
@@keegansmetanko3755 - a one unit piece of stacking washer dryer - or a one unit piece that you put clothes into once and it washes and dries? . . . . No moving clothes into a dryer (whether stand alone or a stacking unit)
@charlie31346 ай бұрын
Spent a couple months in Europe last year and always felt weird bringing my dirty laundry into the kitchen 😮
@scrambler69-xk3kvАй бұрын
You can install a fence around your yard if you wish. There are many types available. Some you can see through, and some you cannot. Those are known as a privacy fence. You can have them installed or have them delivered or go to stores like Home Depot, or Lowes and pick it up if you own a pickup truck and install it yourself.
@joannaflanagan20067 ай бұрын
Yes, most of these things are standard in American homes: window screens, ice makers, garbage disposals. We don’t have a recliner, but my parents have had recliners as long as I can remember. They’re so comfortable, you can literally sleep in them.
@ringringbananarchy7 ай бұрын
I literally stayed in a recliner at my parents house for a week after I'd had abdominal surgery, and wasn't supposed to sleep completely laying down, or on my side like I usually do. They are definitely comfortable enough for sleeping, (pretty much only left it for the bathroom for about 4 days, until I was ready to start moving around)
@spinthepickle12447 ай бұрын
I'm literally here to say I'm staying up too late watching this video... While laying in a power recliner while recovering from abdominal surgery!
@Austin.Kilgore7 ай бұрын
@@ringringbananarchy Tbh I sleep in recliner pretty much every single night for the last year… I tend to get pretty bad migraines if I lay down flat or rather if I have migraine (which I get pretty often) they get much worse if I lay down completely flat. So I started sleeping in my recliner whenever I had a migraine, which progressed into me just sleeping in the recliner every night now. Lol
@Danielle-jg4qn7 ай бұрын
I’ve literally slept in recliners also. No one messes with anyone else’s mail.
@Danielle-jg4qn7 ай бұрын
@@spinthepickle1244Hope you feel better.
@Keasmom7 ай бұрын
Some people have a second fridge or freezer in their garage for extra food storage. We also have laundry rooms with washers, dryers, ( Humid areas takes forever to dry fabric and towels) and small sinks to hand wash items. Most of us with a garage have remote controlled openers, so we drive up, push the button, after the door rolls up, we drive in and close the door. The new energy saving in houses it to have cooling and heating "zones", so you only warm or cool the part of the house you're using; at night only the bedroom zones stay on. In the rest of the house, it's off. Dry desert areas have water systems for the yard/ garden that adjust the amount of water, depending on the weather. On rainy days it turns off.
@Kim-hu9br6 ай бұрын
Ah, my neighborhood doesn’t have such wonderful garages. They’re small, unattached, single car with old doors, lucky if they open at all. Side door access, they’re usually storage/wood shop/fix-it spaces. Everyone parks in the driveway, sucks in the winter and the summer. Considering brick homes hold heat and those with them particularly hate 100°+ summers, swamp coolers are barely better than a box fan, and A/C can be a life or death decision to have. Sprinkler systems take maintenance over the years, but lawns can do surprisingly well if you don’t water them. Grass is actually hard to kill, can water once a month even in the heat if there’s a drought (or if they’re diverting water to waste in the desert to play climate games, as they are in our city). Rocksliding one’s yard (killing every living thing and dumping fkng rocks in one’s yard is a HIDEOUS trend apparently promoted by the morons at HGTV programming, programming, programming…as is mulch-dumping one’s yard. It does NOTHING for the environment, gives NO refuge or habitat of any kind to birds, bees and butterflies, but even a crappy half-dead lawn DOES. It will revive in the spring on its own, and in autumn, even if it suffers in the extreme heat. Our ecosystem will thank people for just leaving their lawns with grass alone. And for those who do rockslide or mulch their yards and think they’re helping with adding a few plants, well, better than only rocks &/or mulch, but it is still ugly. And it doesn’t provide nearly the habitat for birds, bees and butterflies. Ffs, ground cover that takes over is even better, or bulbs that spread over time. Squirrels come to eat a few, and it impacts nothing. Looks the same, makes them happy, exposes worms for the birds, butterflies and bees come visit (they never bother me, they only react when they are attacked by a screaming giant waving his or her hands, who in their view is trying to kill them for merely going to work for the day, keeping our food system pollinated. I talk to them and they indeed seem to very much know who acknowledges and appreciates them. I’ll sit with them and they’ll even hover right in from of me, a foot anyway, and turn to me for long enough to say hi, then turn to fly away. Anyway, they’re needed, and younger generations are indoors anyway. Might as well help the critters by not being so stupid. But I digress. That’s one think Brits are known for, their lovely, lovely gardens. We admire them for that. 💕🇬🇧
@92spice186 ай бұрын
A lot of homes in the US are starting to build small kitchens in their garages too. Things more common with immigrant families who cook food with stronger smells so that their clothes don’t smell. I’m Caribbean and I’m tempted to do the same to avoid smelling like fried seafood and curry every day. We already have an extra fridge and freezer in there so why not add some cupboards and a small electric stove.
@user-or1ye3iz6d7 ай бұрын
I'm amazed you haven't heard of window screens. It's my understanding that most homes have them in the USA. In the spring and fall, I LOVE to sleep with the windows open (with just the window screens) and listen to the relaxing sounds of the night. The best sleep ever. 🙌
@kristophergoordman72257 ай бұрын
I love that now. But, when I was a kid, my grandma lived in a rural area. So, there was almost no light outside at night. And she didn’t have air conditioning. So, in the summer she had the windows open with the screen down and you couldn’t see anything outside. But, you could hear all the crickets and other critters, and it would remind me of Friday the 13th and scare the shit out of me. She had the back of the sofa against the window, which made it 1000 times worse.
@cajbaf7 ай бұрын
To be honest, as much fun it is watching him when he sees something he never saw before, it is just as much fun reading comments from people who think all other countries have what we do. The US is a very spoiled country. I think we all don't appreciate it because we are used to it.
@cajbaf7 ай бұрын
@@kristophergoordman7225 Lol sorry you were traumatized 😂😂
@kristophergoordman72257 ай бұрын
Thank you. Somehow I got over it!
@user-or1ye3iz6d7 ай бұрын
@@cajbaf You're right. There are many things we have in the US that are advanced and we're spoiled. I guess it's surprising since I think we've had screens in our homes for as long as I've been alive. I'm 50 years old. So I thought screens were an old and simple invention. England has money. Why haven't they started selling screens (or AC) in their society? It's not like they don't have the means to. These inventions have been around for a long time. I feel bad that they are so hot bc they don't have AC. But then, they can't even open their windows to get air bc bugs come in. Their society has the means to bring these things over there. I'm curious why they haven't, after all this time? England is not an under-developed country.
@tonyg4906 ай бұрын
Yes, the "cinema chair" lol, is very common if America. They have been for decades.
@lisagd222 ай бұрын
They've been in houses a lot longer than they've been in cinemas! 🙂
@poppa_squirrel7 ай бұрын
Summertime here in North Carolina 31-34 Celsius is an average day. With 85% + humidity. Air conditioning is a must.
@Alex_Riddles5 ай бұрын
If you go due west from London you will find yourself in Hudson Bay. That fact explains a lot about who has air conditioning and who doesn't.
@projectafterworld25577 ай бұрын
Funniest mailbox quote I just came up with: "The key to my mailbox is a federal appointment. You're either appointed as the mailman, or appointed a jail sentence."
@SmokinSesh7 ай бұрын
Too bad it isn’t a law upheld. I’ve had mail and packages stolen and post office and police don’t care 😂
@stephaniefoster19647 ай бұрын
@@SmokinSeshnot the [local] police, the [federal] postal inspector!
@SmokinSesh7 ай бұрын
@@stephaniefoster1964 nobody did anything. Lol. This was few yrs ago
@martinsmith52807 ай бұрын
UK expat here, move to the USA (North Carolina) relocated through my work. Money goes a very long way here, specifically NC. First, land and property are cheap (getting more expensive) but I have a moderate home, just under 3000sq ft, in ground pool, 4 bedrooms older home I’ve been modernizing on just under half an acre. Cost me less than a terrace home in Aldershot, 2 bedroom that was about 1000sq ft. It’s crazy living here because money goes a long way compared to the UK. Oh and the interest you pay on your home, is tax deductible, everyone does their taxes like a self employed person does in the UK, so you can deduct working from home space, medical mileage etc.. I miss family, my heart will always be with the UK, but tropical summers, cold winters and wonderful spring and fall weather can’t be beat. Southerns are fantastic people too and the English accent, goes a long way too! Did I mention air conditioning in the homes? Much love to you all xx
@watchman18727 ай бұрын
I think it was Reagan who once said that if you think things are expensive now, wait until they're "free". The reason things are less expensive here in the US is largely because taxes are so much lower. With every product and service being taxed at every stage of its production, from raw materials all the way up to the final product, it all adds up, so that the consumer really has no idea how many taxes they are indirectly paying, as they are rolled into sale prices at every stage. All that "free" healthcare and other services provided to Europeans come with a hidden cost, drastically reducing their real income, relative to Americans.
@LED8163 ай бұрын
I have my mini van for kids and sports stuff, my husband has his car, then we have one specifically with 4 wheel drive that we got specifically for vacations. The last several years my whole family takes a vacation to 4x4 beach in NC where there are no roads and you have to drive 10 miles down the beach to get to the house. Also useful for harsh winters when we get lots of ice and snow. Then we have a pick up truck for what everyone else uses pick ups for lol. Lumber, bags of soil and gardening stuff, tools, heavy yard equipment, etc. and my 19 year old daughter has her own car. We don’t buy anything new, always used or from auctions. Everything is paid off. And we have 8 TVs 😂🤦🏻♀️ No recliners though.
@SlackerSuperstar7 ай бұрын
Stuff like screened windows is standard, but keep in mind with things like the fridge this family is upper middle class. This is not an average home.
@angiemeloy21427 ай бұрын
I dont think the video fridge was so upper midd.e class. This is a pretty common fridge. More and more the freezers are on the bottom.
@SlackerSuperstar7 ай бұрын
@@angiemeloy2142 That's still an expensive fridge. Did you not see the rest of their house?
@sandracox43417 ай бұрын
, I grew up in a solidly middle class, single mom home, even in the 70s we had an ice maker.
@RyTrapp07 ай бұрын
That was one nice ass fawkin fridge! LOL, we have a pretty decent Samsung fridge, side-by-side fridge doors up top, freezer on bottom that's split into 2 separate freezers with 2 doors, so that general style of fridge is pretty common and accessible these days. But that one in the video specifically is a damn rocket ship😂
@SlackerSuperstar7 ай бұрын
@@sandracox4341 no one's talking bout the ice maker.
@boomhaur6267 ай бұрын
Recliners are very common brother, so are fine mesh screens for windows, and no the mail man does not have a key to our mailboxes (it's a federal crime to steal mail, you get more jail time for that than assault or any other kind of theft)
@jaycee3307 ай бұрын
Not THOSE kind of recliners. Most Americans don't spend $5000 on one like that.
@w1975b7 ай бұрын
If someone lives in an apt complex, the postal worker has a key.
@loverlyredhead7 ай бұрын
Community mailboxes are getting more commonly installed in new subdivisions and yes, the mailman has a key to the back which opens all the boxes. Then each resident has a key to their individual box. Still has a slot for outgoing mail though.
@zarasha82207 ай бұрын
@@loverlyredhead I grew up in the 80s, and our neighborhood had community mailboxes for each end of the block. It was usually my job when I got home from school to walk the dog & get the mail. Every apartment I've lived in (including current one) has had community mailboxes as well
@mandeepeterson22977 ай бұрын
We have post office drop boxes, but if you have an individual mail box, the mailman will pick up the letters you want to send. You see this arrangement in less densely populated areas like the suburbs or the rural areas. Yes, someone can steal your mail, but getting into someone else's mail or mailbox is a federal offense.
@Sharon-pb7so7 ай бұрын
We put the flag up every day on our mailbox by the road. We leave a nice cold bottle of water for our letter carriers. They love it and every now and then they thank us for thinking of them, especially when it's hot outside.
@vickimendoza648827 күн бұрын
There are mail boxes and mail slots that are built into the house-usually the garage. But now the newer way in some places is a large mail box divided into smaller mail boxes for nearby houses. There is also a box for outgoing mail and 1 larger box for receiving packages. Each house has keys for their individual box. The outgoing mail box just has a slot to put outgoing mail. They have to be envelopes or flat packages. The larger box normally has a key stuck in the lock. No one can remove the key except the mail person. If someone has a package in the big box, the mail person puts the key in the mail box of the person to whom the package belongs. When the person opens the big box with the key, it once again stays stuck in the lock and they can retrieve their package. Though the key is in the lock, the door can be opened because it is empty.
@fxbero7 ай бұрын
Vehicles here in the States are like shoes. You have different cars/trucks for doing different things.
@ayabokti1617 ай бұрын
True
@hschwartz92777 ай бұрын
Absolutely this
@maryannspicher7 ай бұрын
😂 ok
@ganggreen90127 ай бұрын
I have a summer car, good fuel efficiency and fun to drive, and a winter SUV, because my car stranded me in the snow four times the first winter I owned it. Now if the weather permits in the winter I will drive the car and if there's ice or snow it's the SUV.
@pagejames87546 ай бұрын
If you can afford it. Most people do not have this luxury
@clwest35387 ай бұрын
I am single - 2 cars: 1) smart car to commute and run errands 2) pick up truck - for horses care and haul large items. Smaller, well kept, non-fenced front yard with fenced in back yard with my veggie garden and fruit trees (and soon to have chickens!) and a place for the dog to run. Kitchen - meh, about the same, frige not so fancy but lots of ice (have to have special filter for water because ours is 'hard'). No tv in my house - just one computer screen Screens on all windows and - not mentioned - 'storm' or 'screened' doors too! And yeah, most have recliners too. My house is considered 'smaller' even though it has 3 bed and 2 baths (1700 sq ft) Not fancy like the one shown. I also live in sw us - so air conditioner is mandatory! Like your video!
@ednarose866 ай бұрын
The recliner is a standard in most American homes. It's typically associated with dad coming home, grabbing a beer, and lounging in his easy chair after a hard day's work.
@userfromaz20845 ай бұрын
YES! Iconic American activity for the species of "homess Dadiosus", beer can attached!
@janetandrews4533 ай бұрын
“Standard”?? Maybe not. But certainly not uncommon.
@userfromaz20843 ай бұрын
@@ednarose86 And Dad has a strong grip on the remote, with the other hand! 😂🤣♥️
@Sheylenna3 ай бұрын
I have a recliner that I sleep in because if I sleep in a bed, my back hurts... but my mom has a bed that lifts head and feet. I can't remember what it's called, but it's similar to a hospital bed.... though last time my nephew visited Mom, she gave him her room, so she slept in the den that has two hand lever recliners, and she said it was the best sleep in her life. The den also has a pull out bed in the couch..... which she felt was to time consuming to open and close every night...
@andrealgreenberg2 ай бұрын
My refrigerator make three sizes of ice. I didn't notice it until I got it home. One is a round ball for cocktails, the other is small little squares and then the one on the door where they are standard cubes and you can select the crushed ice function.
@bob_._.7 ай бұрын
Window screens are a fine wire mesh, about 1 or 2 mm spacing, or a plastic facsimile.
@Cricket27317 ай бұрын
Screens on windows are GREAT!!! They keep out flies, mosquitos, & all kinds of flying or crawling critters!
@arcanewyrm62957 ай бұрын
Used to be made of fine steel wire. I remember seeing rusty screens as a kid in older houses. Modern screens are generally a fiberglass mesh, but aluminum mesh can be found as well.
@kristophergoordman72257 ай бұрын
Yes, stealing someone’s mail is a federal offense, not just petty theft. When I still live at home with my parents, my father would open up my mail. I would tell him it was a federal offense. So, he would say “I don’t care, it’s coming to my house”! The kicker is, he once worked for the post office!😂😂😂
@andimproud7 ай бұрын
Lol when I went to college, my mom would open my mail, then call and read it to me. I'd be like, madam, I'm reporting you to the police! 😂
@lianabaddley82177 ай бұрын
I will send my kids a You've Got Mail MSG. Then a picture of it if it looks important. Like tax return/owed.Then they'll let me know if they're coming over soon or to open it and let them know what it is. If its just junk mail, I still give it all to them to do with what they want. Cuz. It's their mail. They still kinda get a kick out of opening it all. Except maybe the, you still owe this much. Lol
@jenniferhess16767 ай бұрын
Yes, technically you could have reported him and gotten him in big trouble. Man, that is such a rude and disrespectful thing for your dad to do! I would never open someone else's mail, kid or no.
@1024laf7 ай бұрын
My stepfather was like that, it didn't matter whose name was on the letter he would open it and read it.
@Austin.Kilgore7 ай бұрын
@@1024lafyeah some people can just be way too nosey… my moms husband (don’t like referring to him as my stepdad lol) opens other peoples mail a lot. He’s a very nosey person
@jeannewilson16557 ай бұрын
Having air conditioning is a survival necessity in south Louisiana and Mississippi. I remember my dad putting in a window unit in our house in 1965. We lived in a rented "shotgun" house in the Lower 9th Ward of New Orleans (the part that was wiped out by Hurricane Katrina). I think we were one of the first families in our circle to have a/c in our house -- and we were dirt poor at that time. I now live in a 1 acre lot in a subdivision where most of us don't have fences around our entire property -- only the area closest to the back of the house to keep our pets in. It's also against the zoning in a lot of suburban areas to have fences in the front of houses in the US.
@tonette110002 ай бұрын
We get 120 degree summers in my area (49 for you) and I don't have ac. This is what I have to do daily: I have a window fan in a window in the front of the house, and at night I open a window in my bedroom, then turn on the window fan to do an air exchange until 10am, when the temps outside go over 80 degrees (27 for you). Them I close up the house and pray for the best until it cools down outside around 7pm. BUT I have block out curtains or closed blinds on most windows, plus I have a pergola giving partial shade to the south and west side of the house. We also have tons of insulation and tile floors.
@ej36067 ай бұрын
Middle Class American here - I would say this is a very affluent family that is NOT the norm in the US. I don't know anyone who has multiple cars per person. Typically one car per adult but I have known some who share one car. I've never seen a refrigerator with two icemakers and that looks like a very upscale fridge. Many of the homes I've lived in don't have garbage disposals, including the one I live in now. Where I live many people don't have a/c (but with climate change more and more people are getting it - my neighbors tend to have window units for one room). I have one television. Many people I know don't have a tv at all anymore because they watch what they want to on their laptops or phones or they aren't into tv. That view is extraordinary, but not all homes are like that. Again, pretty upscale there. We do tend to have front yards but often they have hedges or short fences around them. Regarding mail boxes, typically neighbors don't steal from them but there are theft rings that steal mail and peoples' identities. More and more mailboxes are replaced with locking varieties and the postal person has a universal key that opens them. (And I've heard of the post person's key being stolen too!).
@Ariel-lol7 ай бұрын
For sure that family house looks rich. And even my parents are middle class. We have an because it would be insane not to on the East Coast. We don’t have a garbage disposal (the previous house we did) Our yards are generally open, I have seen some with front fences in the more bad areas.
@padywac19707 ай бұрын
I didn’t realize I was affluent.
@nicole069647 ай бұрын
My fridge looks like that and I’m far from affluent. The top ice maker is technically part of the door ice maker. That’s where the ice comes from for the door and you just have to pull it out if you want the ice in there
@MM-pl6zi7 ай бұрын
@padywac1970 Many Americans don't realize they are affluent, until they aren't anymore.
@bikeman1x117 ай бұрын
i have two cars- an everyday oen and a fun/project car that i enjooy- wifre has minivan and older son has car-
@thepatchworkcottage7 ай бұрын
As an American, I just have to say that I want to live in this woman’s America, too! Her parents are definitely upper middle class, possibly upper class, &/or have worked hard & invested wisely to enjoy their retirement in such a place. Gorgeous home, gorgeous view, why the need for 4 cars & that many TVs, I have no idea. I could see having a car for each driver plus an extra if one of the daily cars was being serviced, since public transportation is a joke (at least in my area) so a car is necessary to go anywhere. Or if someone just wanted a fun car for weekend drives. (If we ever hit the lotto, that would be my hubby!) We are in our mid-40s, a middle of the middle class family, soon to be empty nesters in the next couple of years. We purposely bought a smaller home (under 1300 square feet, small for modern suburbia) knowing our kids wouldn’t live with us forever, & we didn’t want to move again once we’d finally bought a house after 10 years of renting. Our backyard is fenced, we don’t have a garbage disposal (we have a septic tank, IYKYK), no ice maker but I buy 10 lb bags of crunchy ice to keep in our upright freezer, we own one car per licensed driver (our kids worked hard for & bought their own cars). We have always had 2 TVs so the kids didn’t have to watch what we watched if they didn’t want to, & vice versa. We have never allowed TVs in the bedroom, just personal preference, though smart phones now let you watch TV in every room. And we love our recliners - though we don’t like the electric ones, we prefer the old school lever style lifts - less to break & repair! If we ever were to move to Europe, I’ll remember to import our recliners! We have that style mailbox, but we live in an older neighborhood. I receive mail here but I don’t mail stuff from my box - for safety, I take it to the post office. Most of the neighborhoods around us have community mailboxes located on a centrally located street, with dozens of small square individually keyed boxes. This makes it quicker & easier for the postal worker to deliver mail, vs stopping at every house. My neighborhood alone has over 400 houses, & it’s one of the smallest neighborhoods in our area. It’s funny how non-Americans think Americans live, & vice versa. I enjoy watching home shows from here & abroad, & I’m always amazed at how different homes are just within America. We have a single story basic ranch style house, common in our area (Texas). I watch shows from the northeast with families in multi story homes & brownstones/townhomes, using vertical space to build because there’s not enough land to build out, so they have to go up. It’s a lifestyle I cannot imagine, living on 3-4 floors. (Two stories are common here.) Then I see folks in other countries, often Asia, residing in micro apartments & sharing a communal bathroom. This world is an incredible place, so full of diversity. It’s hard to paint all of a country with a broad brush.
@Dev_2R7 ай бұрын
I can see one car per person and a work truck or something that fits a specific purpose, not 3 of the same SUV and a 4-door car. I too wish I had so much disposable income that I could have doubles of my cars.
@paulgarcia6217 ай бұрын
In Texas you need the SUV or Truck(dual cab) to go to the ranch and or your costal home. The family car to go out to concerts or restaurants and the sports car or sedan to go to work or go out on date nite. Then you need a vehicle at the ranch and your costal home just in case for other family members. Then u have to talk about the golf cart or similar vehicle to get around on the ranch or in the costal home. So yeah 4-8 vehicles. Now don’t get me started on the need for and EV if you want to look like your concerned about the environment. Then there is also the class B van to travel to other cities across the US plus you need your electric bikes and in some cases another vehicle your pulling with you van. No wonder I gotta work till I am hundred. Thanks goodness education debt is getting erased. 😂
@thepatchworkcottage7 ай бұрын
@@paulgarcia621lol!!! I guess if I had more than one house, I’d need all of those cars! 😂 We have my crossover SUV for our family, & hubby has an old Ford Ranger for his daily commuter. That’s the extent of our vehicle collection. If we go out somewhere fancy, we just give my SUV a good scrub & vacuum, & enjoy our night out. I do have various family that have farms & ranches. And yes, they do have work trucks specifically for that purpose. But they’re old beaters, nothing new or fancy. Who wants to drive something nice through the cactus & mesquite trees?!?
@paulgarcia6217 ай бұрын
With out being coy I still have my 1993 Lexus SC 400 (old Betsy) never was able to part with her and still in mint condition.
@thepatchworkcottage7 ай бұрын
@@paulgarcia621nice! Some things are worth keeping. Good old cars are definitely one of them!
@ekmeger6 ай бұрын
I have a screened-in porch to enjoy the summer nights without bugs plus you enjoy the feeling that you're outdoors. Watching fireflies (we call it lightnin' bugs in the South) glow in the dark is like you're in space with the stars.
@pattii555 ай бұрын
I’m from upstate NY and we always called them Lightning Bugs too.
@TheRealDrJoey3 ай бұрын
I spent a summer in Nashville and couldn't believe the clouds of fireflies. I asked a girlfriend if she knew why there were so many there, and I wondered what they eat. She replied, "What do farflies eat? I dunno...their innards are so tiny..." I loved that chick for saying that!
@edmandziuk38583 ай бұрын
I had multiple cars. At one time i had 6, but usually 4. The 4 primary were Truck, Van, sedan/coup, and a Mustang convertible. Truck to haul gear, Van to haul family, Mustang to haul ass and the sedan to get better gas mileage to work. As kids got older I needed to expand to 6 cars.
@wittsullivan81307 ай бұрын
In rural areas, if you want to work, you NEED a car because there is no public transportation. Some small towns have a very local bus route, but you pretty much need a car to get to the bus stops, which defeats the purpose. In a typical household, the parents have a car each for their jobs and the teenaged kids have a car so they can go to school or work after school.
@silverkyre7 ай бұрын
And then maybe they have a truck to haul something or a bigger car to fit the whole family, I could see that as the reason somone might have more cars
@LonelyBetters7 ай бұрын
Not just rural areas. There’s so much land and everything is spread far apart. Cars are necessities for most unless you live in a very large city.
@dpark1897 ай бұрын
@@silverkyre I moved from a bigger city to a more quiet rural one and yeah I can absolutely see a need for having an extra hauler if you live in a small town or further out in farm country but don't want to drive a 10 mpg, gas guzzler when you don't need to carry heavy loads.
@silverkyre7 ай бұрын
@dpark189 yeah exactly. We loge in the city but my mom has an old truck and uses all the time to move bigger things. But if she isn't using for that she has a car to drive around. She used to also have a van but she sold it.
@TheGreatMunky6 ай бұрын
The highest temperature ever recorded in the UK was 40.3°C (104.5°F), and it hits that every single year where I live. Two summers ago it got up to 47.7°C (118°F) where I live. This is the reason that we have A/C everywhere. Though I used to live in Seattle, WA and in-home A/C was less common.
@thelastremainingmoderate19977 ай бұрын
Recliners are very common, electric reclining sofas aren't. Garbage disposals are a mixed blessing. Yes, they chew up the garbage, but they tend to clog up your drain. My wife and I each have one car each and one TV between us. We each have a laptop and a tablet, so why would we need more TV sets? Above all, that house is far from typical. Around where I live, that would cost a good $700,000.
@garycamara99557 ай бұрын
I have 2 cars, my wife has a pickup, I have a hot rod pickup and a hot rod roadster, she has a 2nd (36 Dodge) but it isn't running.
@jaycee3307 ай бұрын
They have a lakeside house, it's probably more than that.
@rich74477 ай бұрын
Electric reclining sofas are a lot more common that you might think.
@daedaluspicard98437 ай бұрын
@@rich7447 I mean, yeah if you live in a theater or grew up around all upper-middle class or wealthy people.
@rich74477 ай бұрын
@@daedaluspicard9843 They weren't common when I was a kid (in my 50s).
@cathisayers35735 ай бұрын
I’m from Florida my AIR CONDITION RUN YEAR ROUND. I had a large flat Tv in my kitchen and also larger flat Tv in my living room. Both bedrooms had TVs also. I’m very comfortable in my home. I also live on the gulf ( water )
@wendyloy62657 ай бұрын
A few things to say I live in West Virginia,USA , I live alone, I have a truck, car and a camper van, and several motorcycles. I don’t have a fence, I do have air conditioning, but no TV. I have screens on my windows, they also make screens that fit below the opened upper windows that are expandable, pop it in stretch it out to fit, then lower the upper window onto the frame of the screen. No ice maker, no disposal, an acre of yard , with a creek.
@adidab147 ай бұрын
christ on a cracker what you need so many vehicles for? how?? assuming several motorcycles is at least three thats six vehicles!! lmao i'm barely scraping by being able to afford my POS hyundai lol i can't imagine going out and bying a truck, a van, and a few motorcycles
@GameChanger5977 ай бұрын
The key word is you live "alone" so you have more disposable income. If you don't have some of the things on this list, it's by choice bc you can definitely afford them 😉
@kathrynmauro86737 ай бұрын
@GameChanger597 , I live alone, single income household. It can be nice, but other times it can be difficult. No one to share bills or maintenance with. Also no one to share the housework and repairs with. So it can be a good thing or a challenging thing.
@MoneyStrategiesSOULutions6 ай бұрын
Nice!
@laurasexton74506 ай бұрын
I have screens on my chicken house windows.
@melaniedavis43626 ай бұрын
OK so there are a few things I would like to clarify as an American. 1. MOST people DON’T have more than one car per person. It usually is a car for each adult. There are occasions where there might be a company car/truck or a utility or fun (sporty) vehicle. 2. The faucet in the sink, that is a restaurant style faucet and not common, most are the kind that have a lever you raise lower, turn left or right for hot or cold water. That was a nice expensive one. Most of the other stuff is accurate but on the nicer/pricier side of things. That is a nice house on a lake or river. I have to laugh about the insulated cups. That is pretty bad but not far off the mark.
@MyFiddlePlayer5 ай бұрын
Adding to that, comments on air conditioning. She seemed to imply that everyone has it everywhere in the US, but actually there are places where it is fairly common not to have it, because it doesn't get that hot. For example: at high altitude (northern Rocky Mountains), at high latitude (Upper Peninsula of Michigan, costal Washington, Alaska, Maine), and Hawaii (because it is always 70-85 degrees, so if 85 isn't too hot for you, then you don't need it).
@Kirinketsu_4 ай бұрын
Outside of the "cities" Most people where I live have alease 3 vehicles and people that live where it snows heavly or the roads ice over bad will have 3 or 4 vehicles. Most people tend to have two daily drivers that get good gas mileage and then they will have an SUV or truck. Some people may even have a "work truck" that they use to haul tools and stuff in or to drive to work that's located on rough roads. Then you have people that live in places that get heavy snow or icy roads. These people will have a "junker" a vehicle meant to be driven in the snowy roads and if you slide off the road and damage it is doesn't matter because its your old vehicle or you bought it for 1k to 4k.
@jbre72333 ай бұрын
Yeah we keep a third vehicle that isn’t the best on gas usage, but is handy for when all the kids want to go somewhere or we have a lot of luggage. If you have the space to park it, it’s not that $$ to keep your last vehicle when they’re offering peanuts to trade it in.
@MrMarlowe34883 ай бұрын
it's pretty common to have 1 car for each adult and then one additional car, like i live in nyc so we don't have any cars but i grew up the suburbs and it's pretty typical to have 1 car for husband to drive to work, 1 car for wife to drive to work, and then a third car that's either older or like is a big SUV that's not super practical as a day to day vehicle but has specialized uses
@jennifersilves41952 ай бұрын
Some places it's very common to have a couple of daily drivers, a fun car, and an SUV or truck for a couple.
@paulawitham35797 ай бұрын
We live on a farm in Indiana and we have a beautiful view here but not every place in the US is the same as in this video. For instance, we only have 2 TVs in our home. And as far as the multiple vehicles go, some people have work trucks and then maybe a car they use for personal transportation. Also some people have cars that they rarely drive and for pleasure like a convertible or they have vintage car and they take them to car shows. There could be multiple reasons. Yes we all love our ice here and our A/C. It can get extremely hot and humid here and especially in parts of the southern US it can get miserable in the summer time. But growing up we didn’t have A/C. It was a fan in the window but we always had window screens. 😊
@SarahDenna6 ай бұрын
The mail thing, yes normal and people don’t tamper with your mail. The recliner thing is fairly common too. Also, screens are on all our windows, yes. And AC is common as well, even if it’s just a window unit and doesn’t work super well. The rest of the stuff is stuff you see in the homes of people who are better off than I was/am. I have 1 TV, I don’t have a recliner, I don’t have an ice make in my fridge. I do have a garbage disposal in my sink but I didn’t have one growing up. And I have one car and even growing up, my family usually just had one car to share.
@Chickeny6 ай бұрын
Multiple cars per person isn't actually very common. Unless someone has a particular job that requires them to have a work vehicle that they're not allowed to use for personal errands or they live on a farm or something. (Farm truck vs personal car for town.) Also my fridge only has one ice maker. That lady has a pretty fancy fridge. Reclining couches are pretty common. Not always electrified, though.
@sandratuttle5 ай бұрын
I never saw a fridge with 2 ice makers. I never even had one. I did have a garbage disposal in the kitchen remodeled myself and always had a dishwasher and laundry room. Now that I have moved to a senior apartment I have no dishwasher and laundry room is down down the hall - one on each floor. Still don't have an ice maker.
@charlesliechti17 ай бұрын
It's a federal offense to steal from post box. Prison time
@Chris-fn4df7 ай бұрын
Yeah, because its such a widely enforced law...
@pd-ou1tg7 ай бұрын
@@Chris-fn4df Depends on the federal judicial district you live in as all federal crimes, just like state crimes, are charged and prosecuted based on the discretion of the prosecutor. I've witnessed many people go to federal prison or at least have their day in court for stealing low-value Amazon packages on porches while sitting through federal trials in a district court that had more aggressive prosecution overall. Other federal prosecutors elsewhere might've let them go. Because of the prevalence of Ring and other doorbell cameras, prosecution of mail theft is getting easier to prove so federal prosecutors have less excuses to not enforce. But there will always be prosecutors who decide not to enforce any type of crime. It's their call. But that's nothing unique to mail theft.
@TheRagratus7 ай бұрын
@@pd-ou1tg Maybe 10 yrs ago. Now carjacker, thieves and murders are out on the street.
@Tijuanabill7 ай бұрын
There isn't anything valuable in your mailbox. The street value of your phone bill, or your letter from grandma, is zero dollars.
@charlesliechti17 ай бұрын
@@Tijuanabill let me catch someone taking anything out my mailbox. I have a surprise for them. The only person that should take mail from the box is the carrier or myself.
@cherrypickerguitars7 ай бұрын
Re: cars. I usually have 4 vehicles. A “daily driver”, a pickup truck, a “summer” car (or collectable car) and an RV, and sometimes a motorcycle, too! I will usually have a snowmobile and a 4 wheeler as well ! I’m a Canadian who lives in the BC mountains, though. And my wife has her car, too! Peace
@dawnyoung87 ай бұрын
A lot of people have a truck and a car too once kids are 16 they probably have them
@KS-ip5xn7 ай бұрын
Chances are her folks have a fishibg boat and/or a pontoon and some sea-doos.
@dawnyoung87 ай бұрын
@@KS-ip5xn I can think of a lot of reasons for it . Work truck , small business . My dad always had more cars than could be driven because he liked to buy sell trade and fix them too
@LeonardoHakaisha7 ай бұрын
My family would save their old cars and hand them down to a teen driver. Then, they would go finance a newer car. I mean a car only lasts so long, and if a teen is coming to that age it makes more sense to just hand over the old one instead of buying a used or newer one. I feel like that's a typical American thing that happens with families.
@dawnyoung87 ай бұрын
I live in Illinois . We had the same when I was a kid . But now , just one car .
@Bobrogers995 ай бұрын
In many countries as well as some places in the US, the sewage system cannot deal with garbage disposals. They are also not recommended for anyone with a septic system instead of municipal sewers. I have one window a/c for my small house which I rarely use. (I have ceiling fans.) I specifically bought a fridge without an ice dispenser because they are so trouble-prone. I love my recliner! I have 3 TVs but only 1 large one.
@calendarpage7 ай бұрын
My mailbox is down a hill that can get snowy and icy in the winter. I use 'informed delivery' from the post office. They scan the outside of my mail and post it on the site. I can see if I've had any deliveries or if what's in the box is important. That saves me from going out in -5 weather just to learn I've no mail, or it's all advertising. The recliners are typical and well-known as 'dad's chair.' Even my little 3 yr old grandson has his own mini-recliner.
@jadeh26997 ай бұрын
Multiple cars per person could be due to the work a person does, or a hobby a person does on the weekends. For instance, a guy might need a truck for work, but uses a car to pick up a date. Or someone might need a truck to pull their boat but uses a car that is cheaper on gas to drive around town. And yes, recliners (what you called a cinema chair) are very common in the US.
@zamboughnuts7 ай бұрын
I was going to say, for the average couple without kids, it's not unusual to see two cars, sometimes three if one is really fuel efficient, or a truck. The other thing is that if there are kids who are of driving age (or even if they're adults living at home with their parents) they might (kids), or will (adults living with parents), have their own cars.
@eurofritz46177 ай бұрын
and also not everyone trades in a car, they might also get passed down to a kid and then when that kid is grown up and gets their own car they just end up keeping the old one since they already have a newer car and have no reason to trade it in to a dealer.
@jadeh26997 ай бұрын
@@zamboughnuts Yes, exactly.
@AdamNisbett7 ай бұрын
Yep, and I know people that have a car for work commuting, a truck for the occasions when they need to haul stuff and/or pull a trailer, and a minivan for when they want to take the whole family somewhere.
@lynnw71557 ай бұрын
We have a farm truck that gets bad mileage so we don't use it for non-farm errands. We also have a camper and a car (2 people)
@jwmemories7 ай бұрын
I reside in Phoenix, AZ, where air conditioning is an absolute necessity. We endure more than 120 scorching days with temperatures exceeding 100°F (37°C), and a staggering 55 days surpassing 110°F (43°C). Suffice it to say, air conditioning is a big deal here. 😄
@dragonspirit9967 ай бұрын
Not quite as bad here, but I live smack dab in the swamps of Florida and god I could not imagine a house without AC, especially in the summer.
@KDbelieves7 ай бұрын
Y'all really in the wilderness huh 😂
@klmeyer99077 ай бұрын
you forgot to mention the 6-10 days over 120
@klmeyer99077 ай бұрын
@@dragonspirit996 i'm up in duval. lived in az too. i'm still not sure which is worse. there's a point (in a dry heat) that it just doesn't matter
@jenntip7 ай бұрын
@@dragonspirit996Yes!!! I live in FL too and we had no electricity after a hurricane. Spent 4 days without ac…. I was dying by day 1!
@thegrimmperspective2 ай бұрын
We just purchased new furniture earlier in the year. First time in 20 years. Recliners have been around for forever. But unfortunately it's difficult to find one that isn't electric. Normally it would have been more manual with a lever and a spring. But times have changed, I guess.
@dgray22287 ай бұрын
The "window screens" are a fine wire mesh. It lets the breeze through but all the flying creepy crawlies stay OUT. Some houses also have "screen doors" . It is an outer door that is basically a frame with the same fine wire mesh attached, it function is the same as the window screens. So on moderate temp days that is too warm for heating but not hot enough for air con, we can open the doors and windows and get fresh air flow with out all the "live stock" moving in.
@bethworthley7 ай бұрын
To add to this, not everyone has air conditioning (I live in the north and it’s common to not have whole-house AC or even window/smaller AC units), so letting in a breeze through the doors and windows is great
@ladyjustice14747 ай бұрын
Not all US houses have beautiful views. AC here in the US is an absolute must. Unfortunately, not all homes/apartments have it. Same goes for TVs a lot US homes can afford only 1 others that have more than 1 are lucky. You're going to find what US citizen have in their homes, and live is based on income just like anywhere else.
@cajbaf7 ай бұрын
We never had an air conditioner growing up and my husband wouldn't get one either. I never had central air until I moved out with the kids into an apartment, and they were both teenagers by then.
@dianethomas93847 ай бұрын
I had a job where I had to go into people's homes they were homes of people who were of all socio-economic backgrounds I saw people with only one TV but the screens were always the largest available at the time, and the rest of the electronics followed suit.😃😃😃
@garycamara99557 ай бұрын
Actually I have never lived in a house with air-conditioning. I do live in Nor Cal though. I have never seen a house without window screens.
@Timbothruster-fh3cw7 ай бұрын
I'm from the deep South, I've never seen a house that didn't have air conditioner.
@Denise-t4z7 ай бұрын
In my experience most people have at least 2 TV's.
@cbiln7 ай бұрын
Sorry but I had to laugh at his expression and shock to learn we have screens on all our windows to stop bugs from entering. I can’t imagine living where there is no screens on windows. Someone should start up a small business with screens, they will grow profit extremely fast in other countries. @L3WG Reacts, the screen are a mine mesh wire or plastic form with the tiniest hole spaces covering the entire screen, no bugs of any kind will fit through them. Love opening the windows in Spring to get a nice breeze in the home.
@randalmayeux88807 ай бұрын
MOST bugs can't get through, but lately I've been having a problem with tiny little gnats getting through my screens. Drives me crazy!
@jjbud31247 ай бұрын
They're called no-see-ums. They can get through and they are almost invisible blood suckers. They aren't everywhere in the country though.
@user-jv5pp8pv9l7 ай бұрын
Tea tree oil, apple cider vinegar, and water in a spray bottle and then drench the outside of your window and the surrounding area/plants. It works. Two summers ago I had hundreds of flies in my house because of some bushes immediately in front of my house. I was ready to yank the whole lot out, but didn't want to hurt the feelings of the person who planted them for me for free and lives next door. I figured what the heck, I'll give it a try before getting rid of the bushes. I had maybe 6 flies in my house this past summer and that's pretty normal. You might have to refresh after a rain, but other that that it lasted me the entire summer and fall doesn't show up until October where I live. There are recipes online, but I did maybe 20+ drops of tea tree oil, half cup of ACV, and filled the rest with water in a smaller spray bottle you can find in the beauty section.
@somerandomviewer78037 ай бұрын
@@randalmayeux8880 get some stem fruit fly spray and spray the screen it’s oily so it sticks to surfaces and kills all the tiny fliers instantly. I love the stuff I keep the aerosol and regular spray bottle around as in the summer time we get lake flies it even kills them instantly. Though you might have to clean All the dead knats off your screen 😂
@aipo86t3 ай бұрын
New cars are expensive, but if you can do a bit of work yourself multiple cars are easy. Insurance and registration where I live are relatively inexpensive. I have pick-up because they are so handy. I have a newer sedan for day-to-day. I have an antique car for Sunday, special outings and trips, and an SUV for winter. Three of them were well under $1000.
@IIDASHII6 ай бұрын
To be fair...this is clearly the home of some very well-to-do people. This IS NOT the typical American home, though several features are typical. The garbage disposal, the window screens, air conditioning, and the recliner are fairly ubiquitous. More than one car per person, 5-6 TVs, and a lakefront view are not.
@mediaproductionpro6 ай бұрын
TVs in almost every room is pretty normal. But most people would kill for that lakefront view.
@AimeeMarsh-m5y6 ай бұрын
This is typical! I’ve never been in a house without these things and I’m 45 middle class!!!
@signheart75206 ай бұрын
Lakefront view is the only one that is rare...everyone else has all of the things on the list. Most everyones mailboxes on Long Island are on the house next to the front door
@signheart75206 ай бұрын
Recyliner chairs and sofas are in most every home. Some have one car for each of person and a bigger one to tow the camper or some have an old "station" car to take to the train station to go to work by train and leave the junk car at the station.
@signheart75206 ай бұрын
Wow, mindblowing that people have no screens on the windows! Yikes the bugs would get in, if I moved to a country without them I would have them put in.
@ConversationslivingroomRJRJ7 ай бұрын
Yea you can buy recliner chairs, couches or sectional sofas that have the recliner options in different seats
@timorr23997 ай бұрын
I live in southern Illinois (U.S.). I live in a rural area. I drive 32 mile round trip to work everyday (Mon-Fri). I have 2 vehicles. A car (3 yrs old) that gets 40 miles per gallon that I drive for saving fuel. And my truck that is 17 years old, 4 wheel drive in perfect working condition (but has 239,000 miles) that is for bad weather, fishing, hauling stuff, and just enjoyable to drive. Both vehicles are Toyota's and I expect to last for a long time.
@DustinDawind2 ай бұрын
I have recliners, but I have no desire for the electric recliners. They're too slow. Doorbell rings and you need to get up and you gotta sit their holding in the button while it whirrs away. Whereas with the mechanical ones you can just pop them closed and get up. The electric ones just also give off a vibe of like being in an old folks home. The first electric ones I ever came across were those ones meant for old folks who have a hard time getting up so the chair just kind of keeps going up until it dumps you out onto your feet. So now the normal electric ones still give me that same vibe.
@tani291117 ай бұрын
The neighbors can have my mail - there’s never anything I want to keep.
@chrissymoss5147 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@waves.of.change307 ай бұрын
They can pay the bills while they have it 😋
@okbookworm7 ай бұрын
😂😂😂 Facts!!!
@bscar7 ай бұрын
0:35 It's rare for someone to mess with anyone's mail. On rare occasions you will get people driving around hitting them with baseball bats, but they leave the mail itself alone. Other times people- or snow removal services- will accidentally hit the mailbox with their vehicle. But that's about it for the mailboxes themselves, the front porch package thief is way more common. 6:18 That faucet isn't typical for most people as they can range from $100 to $200 or more. Also, the sink is a single unit, most are double with the occasional triple tub for washing their dishes-wash side and rinse side. 8:30 That style of fridge/freezer is becoming more popular here- called the French door freezer on the bottom design. The upright fridge on the left/right and freezer on the right/left used to be popular years ago, but it gave way to the freezer on top fridge on bottom design. 9:30 the couch recliner is becoming popular, but it's normally just a single person chair that is the recliner. I have a loveseat(2 person) with recliners for the seats. Hers is electric reclining which isn't as popular as the lever activated ones
@LaurinGarcia7 ай бұрын
I am a 57 year old American that has lived my entire life in America only and though I know that there are many homes that have garbage disposals I personally have only stepped into one home that had one in my entire life. And that was a newly built house back in the 1990s that was on sale and my Mom was checking out. I have never lived in any home that had one and aside from that one house that was being sold, it just so happens that I also have never visited any home that had one. Just luck of the draw, I guess. LOL! So needless to say, Not every American home has a garbage disposal. LOL! 😉👍
@alisonflaxman15667 ай бұрын
Where in the heck do you live? Never been in a house , condo or apartment that didn't have a garbage disposal.
@hellannthefirst55297 ай бұрын
Same, no garbage disposals except in 2 homes of my acquaintances. I'm guessing they're a bigger thing in big cities.. I personally think they're not worth it and will not be putting one in our kitchen remodel. We do have a garden and compost though.
@LaurinGarcia7 ай бұрын
@@alisonflaxman1566 I lived 47 years in New York City but I lived 10 years in Miami, Florida during my teen years. But I do visit Miami once in a while to see my Mom who still lives there. A huge chunk of New York City apartments don't come with garage disposals. And I have visited a few townhouses and penthouses of friends over the years. But even when living in Florida or visiting I still have yet to see one in someone's home. Like I said, I guess it just has been the luck of the draw for me. Update; I just googled it. It said, "There are garbage disposals in NYC apartments. Prior to 1997, they were illegal. Now they are allowed at the discretion of the building's board." So that means that you might find a garbage disposal only in turn of the 21st century building construction and on. But most NYC buildings were built prior to that. Especially apartment buildings in upper Manhattan and in some areas in the outer burrows where you can find many pre-war apartment buildings. And then there are the low income housing. Garbage disposals, dish washers and washing machines are not considered an essential priority. They are considered a luxury and are also disapproved upon because fixing them and stopping an accidental flooding is more problematic and expensive deal with.
@emilydiaz29947 ай бұрын
Yep I live in the country with a well and septic- no garbage disposal here. My parents and siblings have them though (they live in town and have city water/sewage service)
@heatheradams35767 ай бұрын
I've only seen a garbage disposal in real life once at a friend's house when I was young. They didn't even have it hooked up though cause they had dogs and no need. I've seen too many horror movies with people reaching their hand down there, no thanks
@juliebiggerbear73003 ай бұрын
3:29 having been born and raised in the US. I can confidently say I don’t know many people who have two cars for themselves, unless one of those cars is specifically for work, like a work truck. 3:59 oh, I miss this. And this is not something you get all over the US, at least not at this time. For example, in eastern Nebraska where I grew up, absolutely you had central AC and heating. When you have to deal with 100+ degree heat as well as 100% humidity for days on end, AC is really crucial. And having that nice toasty heat in the winter is just wonderful. Where I moved to in the US, up until the last 10 years or so, central air was considered an oddity. It never really got enough long enough to be considered a necessity. But as the climate continues to shift towards hotter and hotter temperatures, it is starting to become a very common place thing to see AC units hanging out of windows, as well as seeing people get air-conditioning of some type installed in their homes. 5:20 ummm… y’all don’t have screens to keep the bugs out when you open windows? O.o