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@Dlmadison21Ай бұрын
Love you 😍 💗 😎😎😎👍💪
@au9parsecАй бұрын
A skeeter boy
@sandersson2813Ай бұрын
@@LostinthePond That's a weird sponsor for an American centric channel.
@Boomken76Ай бұрын
7:00 on the language part as an American I am a huge fan the UK ability to politely insult
@Boomken76Ай бұрын
Story about water taps, born in 76, in 84 moved to a house & town built in the 1800's so my new home had this "massive" cast iron tub & the bathroom sinks had these 2 taps & a plug on a chain. It was interesting as an "80s kid" growing up in a house that seeming liked time forgot. Even had a glass screw-in fuse box. Most part its been modernized but it has a charm.
@pmn2821Ай бұрын
Laurence, I hope you're enjoying being a US citizen as much as we love having you one.
@jacob4920Ай бұрын
If he wasn't enjoying it thoroughly, he'd have left this country behind a long time ago. Foreign people who crap-talk America have, 99% of the time, never been here in their lives. They just believe the "propaganda." And I'm not just talking about Russians.
@jovetjАй бұрын
*Laurence
@HicSvntDraconesАй бұрын
Hopefully he continues to stay an American after Nov 5th
@YourlibrarianАй бұрын
@@HicSvntDraconesi remember that date!
@chicagotypewriter2094Ай бұрын
Hope so, Nov 5th is my birthday! (And Guy Fawkes day for a Brit!)
@greenoftreeblackofblue6625Ай бұрын
Look at this full blooded American Patriot talk about our beautiful country. 🇺🇸
@tomdrewenskus8167Ай бұрын
Gullible Americans don’t realize when an Englishman is blowing smoke up their hind quarters. Wake up America.
@alantremonti1381Ай бұрын
Nothing is more American than British people moving to America and denouncing Britain.
@axelkusanagi4139Ай бұрын
Guy loves the US probably more than I do
@justaneditygangstarАй бұрын
Why tf does he talk about America better than most Americans that are born here 😂😂😂😂😂
@tomdrewenskus8167Ай бұрын
@@alantremonti1381And also celebrating the 4th of July.
@jcortese3300Ай бұрын
The backward slope of Adirondack chairs mean that they aggressively demand that you continue to sit in them. They will brook no denial of laziness and afternoon naps and have an armrest the perfect size for a glass of anything that appeals, and are hence one of the most glorious inventions the US has ever given to the world.
@TheRealBatabiiАй бұрын
Didn't you just quote that verbatim from one of Lawrence's other videos
@rondakrichards1556Ай бұрын
😅❤
@rb239rtrАй бұрын
there is a version in Canada called the Muskoka chair. The backward slope is milder, letting you get out of the chair quicker. You always have to worry about bears up here.
@jcortese3300Ай бұрын
@@TheRealBatabii No.
@SharonMitchell-r3jАй бұрын
The Adirondack chair is, without question, the most uncomfortable chair I have ever sat in. Being short my feet hang above the ground while in the said chair making it all the harder to get out of it. If a bear wander by I would have to surrender to being his lunch.
@jamiegduboisАй бұрын
As an American living in the UK for almost 8 years, AC is _definitely_ what I miss the most (or even just a good ceiling fan). It wasn’t too bad when I lived in Scotland for the first 2 years, but now I’m further south in England and I’m pretty warm-blooded, so I get hot so easily. In fact, for me, one of the best things about going on holiday is just enjoying a nice, air-conditioned hotel room 😂
@toolbaggersАй бұрын
There is a solution to your dilemma...
@jenmatt1923Ай бұрын
Wait, they haven't even started using ceiling fans?! They are so nice when there is no AC. I get that AC is terrible for the environment, but it's sooooo niccceeeee.
@morgan97475Ай бұрын
Right....no moving to Devon for us.
@BP-or2iuАй бұрын
It’s not just about the temperature. People think that. But it’s also about having non-stagnant or stuffy air. Not only do many Europeans not have AC, they don’t have ceiling fans either. Never seen a. Ceiling fan when I was over there.
@Ge0rge249Ай бұрын
Air conditioning is energy intensive compared to not having air conditioning, but it’s actually very energy-efficient compared to heating. A home in a place with a hot summer and mild winter will on average use much less energy on HVAC than a home in a place with a mild summer and cold winter.
@RijackiTormentАй бұрын
Mud rooms are more common in the Midwest and Northeast, but are a glorious architectural addition. They're very uncommon on the west coast and I have always been envious when I see them and wish I they were common where I live. The pile up of shoes and stuff to go out that doesn't fit other places still happens, but not in a special room. The mud room is also great as an "air lock" to help with containing pets, heating or cooling in the house, and snow or other debris from outside since it gives you a room that is neither in nor out. Putting laundry equipment in the mud room crowds out the ability to have a room for shoe removal and outdoor clothing/shoe storage. A proper mud room is golden.
@tsparky9196Ай бұрын
I love that his mud room has classic 70s paneling. Reminds me of the home I grew up in.
@joekellyouАй бұрын
Having laundry equipment in the mud room is fantastic for people that have dirty clothes when they come home. When I was a paramedic, I’d strip in my mud room every day I came home and throw everything directly in the wash. Never had to bring bloody / soiled clothes in the house.
@kathrynwitte3398Ай бұрын
I’d want a full bathroom attached to the mudroom. Time to shower off +/or wash the dog before you bring all that _____ in the house. Leave your clothes and towels in the laundry basket (while you’re there) before coming in to the rest of the house.
@HunderbarDachsАй бұрын
Oh, contrare! We West coasters in Oregon & Washington love our mud rooms, we have a long mud season. California is not the whole coast!
@badjuju2721Ай бұрын
Also pretty uncommon in the south, I honestly didn't know what he meant at first because I've never seen one lol.
@skyeline9228Ай бұрын
It's funny actually, the mud room is like the American analog to Japanese entryway, where outside shoes are removed - I know a lot of American households that treat it the same way, especially in parts of the country with lots of rain and snow
@microusb42069Ай бұрын
Dont compare us to other countries
@stevegee218Ай бұрын
They were also very popular in farm houses where you could take off your boots. You don't want to drag what is in the feed lot across the living room carpet.
@scarlettptheoriginalАй бұрын
@microusb42069 you're on a channel the whole point of which is to compare the US to another country. You're watching the wrong channel.
@bvd02Ай бұрын
Genkan
@toby1peterАй бұрын
I live in Minnesota, and our mud room has a stash of those free slippers you get from hotels and airlines… just for our guests in the winter!
@misspat7555Ай бұрын
I lived without A/C until I was 10 myself (then spent my adolescence coming home, turning on the A/C for an hour, then turning it back off so my parents were none the wiser). My home is now a continuous 65 degrees Fahrenheit, and my life is bliss! 🥰
@Heartwing37Ай бұрын
Right? One of the main attributes couples should look for any each other is a compatible thermostat temperature! Sure having the same political beliefs and religious belief is great, but it can all be for nothing if you aren’t compatible temperature wise! 😂😂😂
@TiredMommaАй бұрын
We don't even know what 65 feels like until late fall. Oh, you mean inside the house, then for us that's during the winter only. It's always above 73, downstairs, but upstairs it can at times be a whole 10 degrees hotter. If it's 76 downstairs, it'll feel like it's 85 at least upstairs, unless you're in the small room, with no ac in the summer. It gets to 90 or higher in that room if temps outside are 100 or a bit higher.
@charlesfarmer5749Ай бұрын
Me too. No AC until I was 10. Dim memories of fans. We did it because that’s what people did then.
@misspat7555Ай бұрын
@@TiredMomma How sad. 🥺
@chitlitlahАй бұрын
I wish my air conditioner could get it down to 65 in the summer. It can't handle a 40 degree difference. I do keep it around there in the winter though if not cooler.
@johnlabus7359Ай бұрын
Things that are more typical in the USA that I would have difficulty living without: 1) Central Air Conditioning 2)American sized fridges with ice makers 3) Tumble Dryer 4) Storage vanities in bathrooms 5) Walk-in Closets 6) American varieties of barbecue. 4) Things being open late and on Sundays.
@cg9612Ай бұрын
@@johnlabus7359 Ice in drinks in the summer time is what keeps us from killing each other.
@jaxxon98Ай бұрын
@@cg9612 😅
@Jon-qf6qgАй бұрын
Guns
@smtpgirlАй бұрын
@@Jon-qf6qg NOPE
@ianedwards7862Ай бұрын
I'm a Brit, but live in Virginia. My British sister, who is now German (thank you Brexit) came to visit with her family in July. Now she is insisting on a tumble dryer for her home in Germany.
@riceman00Ай бұрын
As soon as I heard you speak of laziness… I knew you were one of us. Just beautiful.
@KhanaHatakeАй бұрын
A lot of the mud rooms I've seen in the US double as laundry rooms.
@JeanWatson-y3hАй бұрын
Yes, which really does not make the room, a mud room. Most absurd architectural design anyone could come up with. Typically the woman trying to clean everyone's clothing, with people (children) coming in and out with dirty shoes and boots. It's not a mud room. It's an afterthought about "where" to put the washer and dryer. Bad designers and architects do this.
@MsVilecatАй бұрын
What? Having the washer and dryer in the mudroom makes sense since you can throw your dirty soggy clothes in there to wash instead of dragging dirt around the house. Ours also has a double utility sink between the washer and the door leading to the outside, and a closet-sized bathroom for when you need to go but are going right back out again. In Quebec I remember most houses I've been to had either a mudroom, a sunroom (similar in many ways) or the entrance gave you direct access to the basement as well as those were more storage and tool-centric than living spaces (firewood storage, furnace room, etc.)
@ryanrents126Ай бұрын
Being an area people come into dirty makes it the perfect place for laundry actually. I work outside a lot and when I come home I leave my boots in a lined drawer I built into mudroom counterspace, strip off dirty clothes and put them straight in the washer...
@rosameryrojas-delcerro1059Ай бұрын
I call those laundry rooms.
@xenn4985Ай бұрын
@@JeanWatson-y3hits the back door you insipif foreign national
@darrell0803Ай бұрын
Even as an American I never gave a crap about drive-throughs until I had a kid. And then I understood.
@AntfarmerАй бұрын
Agreed! Then we had twins and we learned really quickly to use the drive thru. My good friend, that already had kids, told me that's why modern kids have such atrocious manners in regular restaurants becos they never saw the inside of one until they were ten years old 😆
@GilmerJohnАй бұрын
I'm the reverse. With kids, I always enjoyed going in and let the kids have fun in the play area. When I was alone I would just as soon eat in the car even if I just park for 5 minutes.
@gamemeister27Ай бұрын
@@AntfarmerMy parents made a concerted effort to develop our restaurant manners young, like starting at 3, and every time I hear about it, it sounds exhausting. Started off with fast food places, eventually graduated to places like country kitchen, and eventually full blown sit down restaurants like Chili's or other places where there'd still be plenty of noise
@jenniferhansesАй бұрын
@@gamemeister27 Yeah. That's something parents have to actively do. I was raised in the '80s. We did drive thru at times. We also went in at times. We also went to eat at family style restaurants like Big Boy and Ponderosa. We all had good table manners for being in public because we were taught them at a young age. We'd sit and do the activities on the little paper mats to keep kids occupied. We didn't run around because we were never allowed to do so. Adults sat on the outside, kids sat on the inside in the booth seats. We also liked the food at the places we went out to eat, so it was a treat. We didn't want to cause trouble.
@OceanLover1188Ай бұрын
@@gamemeister27 This is what my parents did and my husbands parents. We are doing the same. It's actually not too bad. Cruises are good practice too because the staff all are so kind and great with kids.
@mcarp555Ай бұрын
As an American who's now lived in the UK since 2001, I find these videos oddly appealing.
@analyons8595Ай бұрын
Likewise, I'm an American who's lived abroad for more than 20 years. So great to have someone walk me though America, grass blade by grass blade.
@JeanWatson-y3hАй бұрын
Two and a half weeks of watching Brits worship people (Royal Family) was enuf...for me. Glad our (USA) gene pool is not like the blueprint to a submarine like the UK.
@kenmohler4081Ай бұрын
I heard about a man who called an air conditioner repairman. The repairman came in and walked to the thermostat. The owner stopped him and said, “That one is a fake for my wife to play with. The real one is in this closet.”
@hfjjor3681Күн бұрын
Workplaces do that too!
@hamiljohnАй бұрын
I'm very impressed how happy Arthur is. He has clearly bonded with his parents.
@kenbrown2808Ай бұрын
when we visited our friends in Scotland, they had a mud room with grapes growing in the ceiling. it was brilliant.
@marshalltille7770Ай бұрын
Wish I could see that in my mind. Sounds kind of awesome, but with maybe a downside.
@nicolad8822Ай бұрын
Sounds like a conservatory.
@kenbrown2808Ай бұрын
@@nicolad8822 yes. a feature US houses don't have. we will occasionally have a sunroom, but that's more of a sitting room with a glass ceiling.
@sergioandrade8735Ай бұрын
I'm 70 years old and I can remember that separate hot and cold facettes were standard in then1950s but by the 60s the single tap was common.
@sandybruce9092Ай бұрын
My memory is getting foggy but I think we had separate faucets way back when I was very young - but you are correct! A single faucet is so much better!
@recoil53Ай бұрын
I remember them back in the 70's but only in old buildings. My parent's apartment and my Catholic pre-school. One of them had a connecting tube, so it was still mixed.
@ashextraordinaireАй бұрын
I used to live in a WWI-era building, and my bathroom sink had clearly once featured separate faucets. I have no idea when it was converted, only that at some point, someone drilled a new hole in the sink between the two faucets and used one of the original fixtures as a central mixer faucet. Where the original faucets had been, there were separate hot and cold taps to control the proportion of hot and cold water flowing to the center faucet. (Moving to a house with modern faucets was an absolute revelation.)
@Kim-J312Ай бұрын
My grandparents house still had one bathroom with single hot and cold water separated into 2 faucets .
@jenl2530Ай бұрын
Yes, my grandparents had the two faucets in the bathroom. House was probably built in about 1930.
@meleyeons4686Ай бұрын
Brit here: I have 2 drive thrus less than 2 miles from my village, and all my sinks have mixer taps/faucets. Both are much more popular in the UK than they used to be.
@fuzziestlumpkinАй бұрын
Yeah, mixer taps are a bit more recent, but I've been going to drive throughs and wearing vans since the 90s lol
@toolbaggersАй бұрын
The guy thinks the UK is still stuck in 2006 when he left.
@thisisnotaustin1Ай бұрын
do the drive thrus wrap around the building clockwise instead of anticlockwise like in america?
@nthgthАй бұрын
@@thisisnotaustin1I can't imagine they'd put the window on the "wrong" side like that, with how inconvenient it would be for the customers. I've been to a couple of places in the US that do, but there's a workaround in place - the food passes over in an electric conveyor system, or it's optional and there's a window on two opposite sides of the building so cars with passengers can use the "wrong" side lane where the line is probably shorter
@meleyeons4686Ай бұрын
@@thisisnotaustin1 yes, they do!
@LastRookieАй бұрын
As a Midwesterner, my biggest joy in a house is my 3rd car slot in my garage that is never used for a car, and instead an area where I can do whatever without annoying the family. I don't watch sports or TV enough to justify a man-cave, but I can tinker with what electronic device I feel like fixing. If I want, I can play video games with friends in the corner area, or even open a door off to the side and sit in my adirondack chair for a nice cigar or tequila. Best part is that I'm more likely to run any errand for the family because "I'm close to the cars and why not?". The inside of the garage is temperature controlled, so I never worry about getting too hot or cold. Things like the household trash, recycling, lawnmower, and snowblower are towards the garage door, so all these tasks are xlose by to encourage doing them. The closer I am to a chore device, the more happily I am to do it. Cheers, from MN to you, Laurence.
@Nathan-vt1jzАй бұрын
We Americans are quite fond of British culture. I think its great to borrow things from each other :)
@MistressrichardsАй бұрын
Yes please pass the sugar!!
@garryferrington811Ай бұрын
Can't beat jellied eels...
@ryanweible9090Ай бұрын
especially humor. python, benny hill, are you being served, fawlty towers, black books, dangermouse, the original who's like is it anyway?, blackadder. snarky brits are the basis of a lot of my humor development, and thats not mentioning douglas adams and terry pratchett and even neil Gaimen. Britain is just where funny comes from(the shared language helps, i love japan, but much cultural nuance is lost in translating)
@JeanWatson-y3hАй бұрын
Well, go hang out in August when the Brit's are opening windows, sky lights (no screen) and their homes are filled with dirt, dust and spiders. Then there's the humidity which really affects the bathrooms. You'd be glad to return to the USA and at least have an exhaust fan in the restroom which works (ventilates outside).
@RunningGrass-we7tm16 күн бұрын
Old British comedy. The woke bbc is garbage
@retriever19golden55Ай бұрын
My dogs also love drive-through windows. Sometimes it's a biscuit (the bank or pharmacy), sometimes a burger, sometimes a pup cup. The oldest one has taught the younger ones, "Make sure you lean out of the car window and give your biggest doggy grin, so they can't miss you."
@cynthiajohnston424Ай бұрын
🐾🐾💙
@seameologyАй бұрын
🤣
@JaneAustenAteMyCatАй бұрын
There are drive-thru banks and pharmacies in the US? In the UK the only thing used for drive-thru is food and drink
@Angelic_HeroАй бұрын
@@JaneAustenAteMyCat some banks will also have drive-thru atms that are just in seemingly random places. and there's some businesses like Walmart/ hardware stores that have added drive throughs or curbside pickup so you can call or order the stuff you need online and pick it up without ever getting out of a vehicle
@JaneAustenAteMyCatАй бұрын
@@Angelic_Hero Huh. Interesting. As a disabled person I can see it might be helpful. I tend to just order stuff to my house
@machintelligenceАй бұрын
A proper rural mud room would have a half bathroom attached That way, if you were working in the barn or the shop, you could relieve yourself and wash up, or wash up before meals without traipsing through the house. (The kitchen was usually off of the mud room.)
@karenk2409Ай бұрын
The best! A brilliant invention.
@eringalin2075Ай бұрын
We had stairs that led down to the basement where there was a toilet and a washer sink.
@seameologyАй бұрын
We were dairy farmers. Our mud room contained a shower and doubled as a laundry room as well. It was the only area in the house without carpeting. It had a closet where only overalls were hung in because they were dirty. Rather, s*tty.
@JeanWatson-y3hАй бұрын
Don't kid yourself. You need a small bath in your shop. Who is cleaning up after you (floors) remove your dirty boots and clothing? Are you married and if so, for how long. I suppose some women are good with cleaning floors every day.
@williamjones7163Ай бұрын
I was born and raised in Billings, Montana. We never had AC in my home. We had central heating but no AC. The Summers got hot but not as hot as they do now. I moved to Phoenix and AC was everywhere. I retired back home and my Mom had installed central AC. I can't live without it now.
@jinxcrafterАй бұрын
Also born & raised in Montana (north-central). Never had AC until I was in my mid-twenties. We always did just fine growing up with window fans (& both doors open if we had locking screen doors) overnight & a regular fan for air circulation during the day. Now, with the warmer summers we have, AC is essential; just a few months ago my AC wasn't working at the start of a bad heatwave and I couldn't get my bedroom cooler than 82 degrees even with a window open all night (& an alarm to close it before the outside temp exceeded the inside temp).
@gabagool_and_psychiatry4856Ай бұрын
we didnt need A/C at night in south texas in the 90's. now? i have extra window units incase the central dies during the night.
@eddienothing9610Ай бұрын
Floridian here and none of us could live without it. One of the public schools in my city is named after an inventor that was important in the development of AC 😂
@psycher7Ай бұрын
Yeah. I grew up in Alabama and Mississippi, so AC was a necessity. Then I moved up to Seattle in 2007, and NOBODY has AC. At first I didn't even miss it. There would be only two, three weeks where it got into the 80s, so I'd just put the floor fans on full blast. Now we are actively considering putting in central air conditioning because of how damn hot it gets for most of the summer.
@eldibsАй бұрын
This type of thing is exactly why I love traveling. There are so many different cultures, and sometimes you find one has a brilliant solution for a problem you didn't even know you had, because it's essentially a cultural blind spot. For example, in Mexico they put a big label on all the junk food to let you know if it has a lot of sodium, sugar, etc... and it's right on front where you can't miss it. Makes it where if you're avoiding something like sodium, you can tell at a glance what snacks to avoid without having to spend all day reading labels.
@brw3079Ай бұрын
I'm 70 years old now, so when I was growing up all older houses had separate hot and cold taps. The secret was to plug the drain and run a basin of mixed water, and wash your hands comfortably with that. As a lazy (energy efficient) youth, I usually just gritted my teeth and endured the cold water, unless I was really ❄️ cold 🥶 😅
@justalittlebitmoАй бұрын
When my husband and I were house hunting years ago, I didn't realize how much I cared about a mudroom initially. But the more houses we saw, the more I found myself liking the mudroom houses more than the others. It wasn't on my must-have list, but we ended up with one! Hurrah!
@catw6998Ай бұрын
@@justalittlebitmo My Mom’s prerequisite to getting a house, garage and kitchen near each other.
@marjoriejohnson6535Ай бұрын
Lucky you.
@ian3580Ай бұрын
An attached garage is basically an enormous mudroom, and is very common.
@stephenschneekloth1535Ай бұрын
@@catw6998 Ours is the house must have a 2 car garage. We live in a state where it snows a lot in the winter and we don't want to have to leave either car on the street.
@ToshiannaJones-l7yАй бұрын
@@ian3580I disagree. A garage is a garage. It can turn into a “man-cave” but it isn’t a mud room. Plus they don’t always have an extra entrance specifically in the front.
@richardsuggs8108Ай бұрын
The invention of air conditioning is credited to Willis Haviland Carrier, an American engineer whose ingenuity revolutionized the way we experience indoor environments Hope he has a bronze statue erected in his honor.
@courtneyraymer6586Ай бұрын
I don’t think so, but he has a lovely granddaughter who married my cousin in 1967. They gave him some wonderful grandchildren too. 😀
@courtneyraymer6586Ай бұрын
Oops, I meant to say GREATgrandhiildren !🫢
@nthgthАй бұрын
@@courtneyraymer6586 that's really cool! I live and work very close to the Carrier plant in East Syracuse (DeWitt), NY. It used to be humongous, but they knocked down a lot of it by the time I got here. Probably laid off lots of good people too.
@susanhewitt6359Ай бұрын
I live in Florida, and I wholeheartedly agree! Give the man a medal!🥇
@hfjjor3681Күн бұрын
Yes. Air conditioning is a major invention that allowed the economy of the US South to thrive beyond just growing crops.
@waldo1967Ай бұрын
The Adirondack chair gets its name from the Adirondack Mountain range in upstate New York. One legend speculates that the name was chosen for the chair because guests of a convalescent home for tuberculosis patients in the Adirondack Mountains enjoyed sitting in the chair to take in the therapeutic fresh mountain air.
@rnokmhАй бұрын
it's not a legend. they were invented in saranac lake when it was a tb cure village. the chairs are designed like that to accommodate sitting while wrapped in a blanket. a flat bottom chair would cause the patients to pitch forward and possibly fall. source: i'm from saranac lake
@robwilliams2410Ай бұрын
@@rnokmh Saranac Lake: the coolest village in the Adirondacks. There are so many great reasons to visit this part of the world. It’s my happy place.
@sneakerbabefulАй бұрын
Adirondack chairs are pure awesome. The perfect chair for watching a sunset, reading a book, or anything outside.
@Equivocal-squiggleАй бұрын
I wonder if John Green knows about this. (He probably does)
@dragonbowlsupperАй бұрын
@Equivocal-squiggle I thought of him too. DFTBA
@eetadakimasuАй бұрын
Glad to have you as one of us❤
@JeanWatson-y3hАй бұрын
Be great if Americans could order up 10 million Lawrence's and Laura's. Instead, we are not getting..., what we are getting and paying for it dearly. Welcome Laurence!
@deidrebingham3856Ай бұрын
Please continue, your commentary points out things I take for granted. The reminders are appreciated.
@JDChengАй бұрын
For the ultimate in outdoor laziness, some Adirondack chairs come with a reverse-sloped footrest or ottoman. So you can put your feet up, but not have them out horizontally and keep your knees bent.
@montananerd8244Ай бұрын
Oh that is a good laze…
@thomasdjonesnАй бұрын
Yeahhh those are real nice
@w.reidripley1968Ай бұрын
Thus the Adirondacks conquer the world.
@WoodworkingforAnyoneАй бұрын
And then you can't get up
@kentalanleeАй бұрын
@@WoodworkingforAnyone That's why you have kids. They can get you a beer while you're stuck in there.
@LordDustinDeWyndАй бұрын
7:36 "Mud room" is where you change out of muddy clothes, usually has the laundry and cold-weather outerwear storage.
@cg9612Ай бұрын
And usually has unused sporting equipment.
@emilynelson5646Ай бұрын
don't forget the boots!
@dannymac6368Ай бұрын
Also, a broken umbrella and another one that might be alright.
@pamb440Ай бұрын
Yep, my washer and dryer are in the back room (mud room) that leads to the back yard of my house. My son calls it the utility room. All the winter coats and other winter clothes are on coat racks on the wall along with the dogs leash. Winter boots, multiple shovels and gardening tools, shop vac, tool box and various other items we grab at different times through out the year on our way out the back door that leads to the car port. It’s a handy space that’s nice to enter into when coming into the back of the house. Couldn’t live without it.
@WelshmaninNorthCarolinaАй бұрын
Our mudroom is where everything we don't use is kept, it's also the laundry and our rear door, I keep threatening to clear it out, but I'm still waiting for my wife to tell me what to keep or throw away, why do Americans want to hold on to stuff they will never use!!
@Ineden774Ай бұрын
I sent my British friends a photo of when I was using the drive through pharmacy, just to give them a chuckle! 😉
@maidenminnesota1Ай бұрын
Don't you mean the "drive through chemist"? I'm sure they have no idea what a "pharmacy/pharmacist" is.😉
@eringalin2075Ай бұрын
Those are essential when you are sick and gross picking up your Rx. The only thing open during COVID too.
@sofa_king_koolАй бұрын
If you ever find yourself in Wisconsin you can experience the Drive-Thru Liquor Store. Always nice having a neighboring state that's juuuust a bit trashier than your own...
@roy.mcleanАй бұрын
Everyone in the pharmacy is a sick person picking up an Rx. That's the last place you want to be or have to work.
@LoganBeaupreАй бұрын
@@sofa_king_kool ohio has drive-thru liquor stores as well. amazing
@vegasbltАй бұрын
I love mud rooms but I hated when we had two faucets. It makes no sense. I like to always remind my friends that English, both US and UK, is always evolving. Learn to adapt
@jovetjАй бұрын
My house has two faucets except in the kitchen and main floor bathroom. The builders were cheap, I guess. Unfortunately there is also a distinct lack of shut-off valves under the sinks, so changing the rest of the bathrooms isn't as straightforward as a good afternoon's work.
@GottaculatАй бұрын
The fact he's lived in America for 16 years and still has a British accent is just further proof the British accent is a speech impediment. I kid! I kid! ... Well, half kidding. I love your content, and your dry humor! Never change, man!
@elizabethschurwan5146Ай бұрын
His accent is adorable
@kkerr1953Ай бұрын
My step-grandson moved from Britain to America when he was six. He’s now 26 and still has a British accent. His half brother, born to an American mother and British father, has an American accent with a few British-isms thrown in. We’ve broken him of saying to-mahto, but he still says garrage instead of garage! 😂
@XannthasАй бұрын
TBH it kinda sounds like he's exaggerating his accent a bit for the channel. Dunno if that's true or not, but he's probably the only British person he interacts with since moving here and lots of people switch accents in far less than 16 years. Heck, I flunked a 1-year Japanese class in school and still ended up mispronouncing several American words thanks to it, like letting slip "Foon-koh Pops" when making fun of Funko Pops with a friend of mine once.
@juzoliАй бұрын
The cutoff date for properly learning the language is 18. I have immigrant friends with kids of all ages (born here, came as small kids, came as highschoolers, came for college, work…). If they have a few school years here, then they learn local english very well, and lose lot of the accent. After school years, we keep our accent we imported.
@johnjakson444Ай бұрын
@@juzoli Excellent example is John Barrymore, a Glaswegian Scot that went to the US at 15 and can code switch perfectly between US, UK and Scottish as he did in Dr Who shows before doing Arrow. Me I got to US at 26 so mostly too late, mixed accent and mixed word use, most US and UK people people pick up on it but don't give me any pain over being out of place.
@slimypebble9892Ай бұрын
Most accurate turning forty transition ever. I approve
@susandevinenapoli7649Ай бұрын
Faucets in Houston Texas in summer have almost no cold water. It tends to heat in the pipes. Surprised me when I moved from the Midwest about 40 years ago.
@LoveClassicMusic0205Ай бұрын
I've noticed the same thing when in Florida. I've lived my whole life in Michigan and the pipes are buried deep down below the frost line, so the water gets cold. It seems like the pipes in Florida are close to the surface and get heat from the environment, thus never getting cold.
@vickiephilpitt7697Ай бұрын
When I was a kid growing up in NJ, our mudroom was the garage. We hung up our winter coats, etc. under the stairs (split level house), then we entered the house. Just the other day, I said to my husband that Florida is the only place I know where you run the cold water in the summer & it gets hotter.
@luke_cohen1Ай бұрын
A similar thing happens in California but the cold water just stops at a little above lukewarm (ie 70-75 Fahrenheit instead of 68 Fahrenheit).
@sandybruce9092Ай бұрын
@@LoveClassicMusic0205Arizona is the same - well the southern part,of the state!!!
@Jody-kt9evАй бұрын
I also live in Texas. The sun heats the water in my outside above ground hoses so hot it almost burns me.
@StephenProcter-bt3suАй бұрын
Things that I like about the US, space (both indoors & outdoors), basements (agreed, they aren't ubiquitous), rural life (you don't have to be caught up into farming).
@rock-t3d2kАй бұрын
Mudrooms are more of a thing where you have those nasty winters or live out on a farm or ranch. We have what I call the utility room (holds the washer, dryer, and freezer) that is a room between the garage and the kitchen or the back yard and the kitchen. Sorta isolates the rest of the house from the cold or keeps us from bringing all the outside to the inside.
@kathygreer2097Ай бұрын
We have a combination. It’s a mud room/entryway/utility room with the laundry on one side (behind doors) and catch-all on the other (behind doors). We just call it the back room. 😊
@DelphinusWАй бұрын
I feel like in a lot of US homes, the garage serves the same purpose as a mud room. It's sort of an in-between space that you aren't afraid to get dirty, and it tends to collect clutter and trash for which you don't otherwise have space.
@mrboxy3970Ай бұрын
Current house had no mudroom, but an extended cement landing over a cold storage to a set of stairs. Ripped the crappy vinyl railings off, installed framing and a door. Then took off the wall torch/light, replaced with electric heater. Cut recessed lighting into the ceiling for four led soft lights with shielding (prevents spiders/bugs nesting), and various light filters on the windows before adding lounge furniture. It's now a nice multi-season relax room.
@mrnobody-unowenАй бұрын
Adirondack chairs are really excellent. They’re a very convivial type of seat - I always imagine having them around a fire pit, drinking and chatting with friends.
@RecklessFablesАй бұрын
They are miserable without a good pad. My buddy has both a fire pit and Adirondack chairs (with good padding) around it and they are great for conversation. Plus his have cup holders drilled into the arms. Perfection.
@maidenminnesota1Ай бұрын
Hard to get out of when you get older and have arthritis and bad knees, though.
@GrimKreeperАй бұрын
As an American, the only house I've seen with a mudroom was my grandparents' house. Even then, it's a porch that was converted into a mudroom. So I think mudrooms are most common on some older houses, but I with all houses had them because they're amazing.
@EdwardoLoverАй бұрын
This is a very true thing. It's gone the way of a breezeway. I came home from the hospital to a house with a breezeway and my mom still lives there. If you don't know what it is, in the midwest where it's flat, and before air conditioning, it was used to cool the house and by god it works. It can be 100 degrees later in the day and I'm FREEZING in her house in the morning. Just stopped being made cause of the ac
@AntfarmerАй бұрын
I think mud rooms also must be/have been more of Eastern/Northern US things. I never saw one in Southern California growing up...maybe 'cos it never rains in California 😉😉 Now in Oregon, where it rains 9/3 (9 months on 3 months off LOL) I've seen 1 or 2 in older houses.
@claudiadarling9441Ай бұрын
@@Antfarmer Live in Minnesota. Even in houses that don't have full mudrooms, there is usually an entrance that opens to an area that serves a similar purpose. Despite the name it's really more for winter when you're tracking in snow and dirt on your boots. Also gives a place to stow your winter coats, hats, mittens, snow pants, etc.
@ShonjiPowerOf2Ай бұрын
I'm in Alaska, we call them arctic entries. Very common
@dfx13...Ай бұрын
I think it has more to do with climate. I live in Southern California and don't know anyone with a mud room.
@lindaedwards6683Ай бұрын
re mud room, we always had one in the houses I grew up in (in the midwest), but we always called it the back porch.
@scheddocАй бұрын
must be an eastern US thing. i'm from California and have never seen or even heard of this concept before
@EdwardoLoverАй бұрын
@@scheddoc it probably is. We have a lot of weird house features that stopped being built when modern tech came to be. It's a very old house feature like a coal chute
@dlxmarksАй бұрын
@@scheddoc They are meant for regions with distinct snow and mud seasons. The space is a transition area for seasonal wear between the outside and inside of the home.
@sybariticcupboardrat3763Ай бұрын
I'm from northern california, we have them too. Lived in two houses with the mudroom being the front entrance.
@AzraelThanatosАй бұрын
@@scheddoc Mudrooms are more of a thing for wetter areas as well as colder areas, being more of a place where you can pull stuff off that's soaked or covered in muck without tramping it through the rest of the house. A lot of places combine the mudroom with their laundry as well for the same reason. The mudroom is not, normally, the main entrance though which tends to still be more formal, but one where the backyard or garage (if attached) enters from that the people living there tend to use most often.
@valiumtwoАй бұрын
When I was a child here in the states, every one had the two taps with one for hot and one for cold. Glad someone came up with the one faucet design!
@Hagop64Ай бұрын
Maybe get a shade or umbrella over the chair to help block some of the bird droppings?
@heartofthematterlanguageАй бұрын
Mud rooms are highly regional. They’re a great idea, but I’ve never seen one in Texas (or California, but my sample size is much smaller there).
@AppalachianLadyАй бұрын
All the mud rooms I have seen, have been on Farms or in old farm houses for pretty obvious reasons who wants manure tracked through the house.
@louisedykes4794Ай бұрын
I tend to see them on house where there is snow and lots of rain. Have seen them on beach house or cottages by lakes or rivers.
@AntfarmerАй бұрын
heartofthematterlanguage You're right about California--grew up there, never saw one in my life! but then mud was rare 😉
@DougGlendowerАй бұрын
Great grandma's farm house in CA had one. It's the only one I've seen that wasn't a converted porch.
@richardpetty9159Ай бұрын
Something else that you don’t see in Texas are basements. Probably true of a lot the country.
@StevenBishop-c9rАй бұрын
I grew up in a house in Iowa that didn't have AC until I was about 14...we just closed up the house the first thing in the morning and ran a dehumidifier during the heat of the day...at night, we opened up the house and turned on the humongous Westinghouse floor fan, pulling a cool breeze through the upstairs windows. It was great until the fan caught on fire one night... As for Mud Rooms...they are slightly different than Back Porches, usually not as large...common in older farm houses so that you didn't bring mud and muck in from the barn. We had friends who milked cows and their mud room was fully equipped with a shower, toilet, and a washer/dryer and a closet with clean clothes! As for your Adirondack chairs....they will last a lot longer if you bring them inside and keep at least one of them in your Mud Room in the winter. Put the others in the Living Room and dream about Spring when it's warm enough to put them back outside.😉
@maidenminnesota1Ай бұрын
As a Minnesotan of a certain age, I approve this message.
@seameologyАй бұрын
Minnesota here as well. But no dehumidifier. Really wasn't necessary except for maybe one week out of the summer, usually July. Northern, near the Canadian border.
@kpz1234Ай бұрын
My dad's house has a fan like that in the ceiling, so it pulls the cold air in from the outside and blows it up into the attic.
@coffee.candy.therapyАй бұрын
Dude, in my 35 years spent solely in the U.S., I have never seen a mudroom! 😲 I now desire a house with both a mudroom and a sunroom.
@miowacityАй бұрын
Don't get a sunroof. Build a real room if you want the extra space. They cost almost as much as a real room, don't add value to the property, settle over time so the windows no longer close and the roof needs to be resealed every 5 years or they leak. Plus we have air but it is way to cold for winter and because it isn't as insulated expensive to cool.
@ESUSAMEXАй бұрын
Mudrooms are common in areas with a lot of snow. No one wants snow all through their home. And if the mudroom is not heated, it becomes a large fridge and freezer during winter. My friend has cases of beer in his mudroom because it was colder than his fridge on most days.
@jeanaprewitt9658Ай бұрын
Mud rooms are more for the northern half of the US. In the older homes in the southern half, they'd be call back porches.
@microusb42069Ай бұрын
Clearly you've stayed in one spot in your entire 35 years. What a waste. Seen dozens of sun and mud rooms. Nothing special. Travel more.
@tenofivelipsАй бұрын
Yes, two essential rooms for us in the messy seasons regions. One for mud/snow gear and one for winter warmth, plant growing, and relaxation.
@StinkinFilthy-ks6dsАй бұрын
Dog by my side, Cicadas screaming, Comfortable chair in the shade. I’ve spent countless days there.
@NorthernChevАй бұрын
VANS: I worked for Roger Penske back in the 1990s when he sold half of Diesel Technology Corporation to Bosch, who promptly imported dozens of their own German engineers to America. Every one of them immediately bought a brand new Dodge Grand Caravan and had it exported back to Germany. The Germans went NUTS for these things; and as soon as the deal on one was complete they’d immediately buy another one and ship it to their friends in Europe for a huge profit. This practice went on for YEARS, as they apparently couldn’t get passenger vans like these there. This helps explain why Mercedes shortly thereafter bought Chrysler and imported the technology themselves.
@EXROBOWIDOWАй бұрын
Funny, when he put up the title for VANS, somehow I thought of the shoes. Then I thought about the vehicles. But no, it was the shoes. I've never tried Vans, because I can tell that the style is one that will hurt my feet. But they are really popular shoes. Did you completely zone out into automobile land when you saw the title? The shoe brand is from a family name; the automobile type is a shortening of the British word "caravan," meaning a covered freight wagon.
@TheFonzieCommunityАй бұрын
I know you talk about the differences between the states and uk, I’d love to see you talk about the uk on your trip visiting family. Glad you talk about things you can’t live without from America.
@catw6998Ай бұрын
@@TheFonzieCommunity Where’s Uncle Toby in all this?I’d have expected to hear his name mentioned at least once.
@TheFonzieCommunityАй бұрын
@@catw6998 maybe he didn't want to use the bit
@sweethomealamandaАй бұрын
Hey Laurence! I hope you have a wonderful weekend!👋🏻💜🍁
@LMN021Ай бұрын
I went to Spain in high school (2017) as an American and the fact that 1.) hotels didn’t guarantee a/c 2.) water not being free refills at restaurants 3.) portion sizes were way smaller 4.) local transit being much better all blew my mind
@oz_jonesАй бұрын
I live in Finland, have been my whole life (40 years) and water refills have always been free (to my knowledge) in restaurants. Fast food places not so much
@GeoffRileyАй бұрын
A/C is slowly increasing in 'popularity', possibly as more people perceive (rightly or wrongly) the effects of climate change? Many would argue that increasing the use of A/C actually exacerbates the problems of global warming. 🥵 I've never encountered (tap) water that is not free, but we never hear stories about people being fined for collecting rainwater. It's a funny old world, and the differences keep it entertaining. 😁 As a Brit, restaurant portion sizes are already too big. I was brought up when you cleaned your plate and ate everything set before you. Very much a post-war 'thank goodness the rationing has gone, but we don't want to take too much advantage of it' kind of thinking. That has persisted and has led to me becoming way overweight: I try to eat carefully, but it's a tragedy in my eyes to leave a half-eaten plate of food, especially in a restaurant. 🍖
@nekrataaliАй бұрын
@@GeoffRiley Personal air conditioning in houses isn't really an issue because they're such a small portion of carbon emissions. The real culprits are things like office buildings and stadiums that aren't always in use but have air conditioning running 24/7 anyway. Or the wealthy with multiple homes who have those homes running air conditioning even as they aren't living in them. An entire suburb of people using air conditioning is producing less carbon emissions than the local mall with 25% occupancy.
@janelleg597Ай бұрын
@nekrataali blah blah doesn't matter. China is producing more than ever and Taylor swifts jet emits more than your sorry little examples. Regular people aren't the frickn problem
@nekrataaliАй бұрын
@@janelleg597 Where did I say regular people were the problem? Calm down and re-read what I wrote lmao.
@JulianaBlewettАй бұрын
British people don't generally get the hot and humid weather that we get here in the US. Summers can be especially brutal. I was working in a fast food restaurant. It was 111° outside in July, it was very humid and lightning had struck the air conditioning unit of the restaurant and rather than shut it down, the manager insisted we all work. The inside temperature was 132° f in the kitchen.
@LFTRnowАй бұрын
Put an umbrella or pergola between the tree and the chair. You'll get some mess on that, but it keeps you and the chair clean. Its also great for extra shade. Most people get those large umbrellas that have a holding point on one side (rather than up through the middle) as they can be easily tilted and there isn't a pole in the way of the area you want to use. Being tiltable means as the sun changes angle, you just adjust it and go on enjoying the yard.
@tatteredquiltАй бұрын
60+ yrs old (American born and stuck) and have never lived in a dwelling (25 addresses) with a mud room. If it couldn't be wiped off on a doormat, it stayed outside.
@dlxmarksАй бұрын
Were any of those homes in rural or suburban areas with distinct snow and mud seasons?
@RickyMaveetyАй бұрын
Wait, what? If it couldn’t be scrapped off, it stayed outside? So, if it could be scrapped off, it came inside? I’m having trouble with that logic.
@dj6756Ай бұрын
I'm opposite I never lived in a house without a mudroom. I think it might be a farm country thing. I don't know what I would do without one.
@davidwilkins5932Ай бұрын
Mud rooms might be more of a Midwestern thing. I lived in the South for my first 35 years and never saw one down there. For one thing, consistently heavy winter weather seems to make them more essential. A place to knock off all the snow, slush and muck before walking onto the nice carpet and wooden floors is VERY practical. All the messy boots and shoes tend to stay in the mud room.
@sugarplum5824Ай бұрын
I have never had a mud room, either. I don't think it's a big thing in the American South, where I've lived all my life, though I can certainly see the advantages of having one. I would have probably spent less hours of my life sweeping, vacuuming and mopping floors if I'd had one, especially in fall and winter.
@bigeaststarlight6915Ай бұрын
In middle school, my sister was wearing lace up vans & got her foot run over by a speeding van. The shoe only had a scuff mark & her foot wasn't broken at all. Vans are great shoes.
@jillkoop5682Ай бұрын
I am so proud of you, Laurence. I am so happy you became a citizen and proud to call you a fellow American and a Midwestern neighbor...cheesehead here! You are a great addition to the U. S. of A!!!
@sbccmichaelkellyАй бұрын
Now I can travel to the UK and understand what they’re saying, thanks to Mondly.
@EiferBrennanАй бұрын
This is the earliest I've ever been to one of your videos. Great content as usual!
@dr.johndoe1603Ай бұрын
The beard is looking good !!!
@marcosguillen6511Ай бұрын
Part 2 pls, it’s nice to hear that we don’t hate each others cultures as much
@MikeRice-lh1qkАй бұрын
I climbed 2 Adirondack High Peaks yesterday. Phelps and tabletop. The fall colors are amazing this year. I live in the Adirondacks, and yes, the chairs are amazing. We have an Adk. Porch swing. Thanks for including the Adirondacks! Love your program. Keep up the good work
@matthewteague623Ай бұрын
I never had a mud room as a kid, but we did have a sunporch / back porch. it was semi-mud friendly, but only semi, because my Dad was like "Mr. Clean" and wanted everything spotless. It also had lots of windows and a table and chairs to sit out and enjoy some sunlight during spring and fall.
@mirthiful1Ай бұрын
I loved how your wife nonchalantly hid during the Mondly spot (that is so something I would do as well) and then the next frame your pup was such a cute backdrop. Good way to keep your viewers engaged in the ad. 😁 Love your channel! Cheers!
@valeriecoopet9897Ай бұрын
We had two taps when I was growing up. We must have been geniuses. We filled the sink with hot and cold and washed up in the sink water.
@elaexplorerАй бұрын
That's what they were designed to do 😂
@PhiyedoughАй бұрын
All the food additives must have addled his brain!
@ToastyMozartАй бұрын
Using more water and not getting a clean rinse.
@danhutson3460Ай бұрын
Loved your video! I grew up at a time when there were no drive thrus, mainly the 1950's & 60's and we rarely went to a fast food place any way, as they were few & far between. My mother was a housewife & cooked most meals. Those were the days! I miss them & the people too. Congratulations on becoming a US citizen!
@MaryEvans-e5z14 күн бұрын
My grandparent’s house, built in 1938, had the 2 faucets, one for hot and one for cold, in the bathrooms. The kitchen had 2 handles that fed into a single faucet. The water pipes came out of the vertical wall about 8 inches above the sink. Each pipe had a on/off valve and a pipe that lead to a single pipe that held the faucet.
@quickattackfilms7923Ай бұрын
8:02 Oh no... He’s storing junk boxes in the mud room. A true American 😂
@francesmeyer8478Ай бұрын
I highly recommend Adirondack chairs. The wind here in the Midwest won't blow them away and they are very comfortable.🇺🇸🍂🍁🍂🍁🍂🍁🍂🍁🍂🍁
@sugarplum5824Ай бұрын
I love the comfort of an Adirondack chair until I have to get out of it. Arthritis in my knees makes it extremely painful. 😖
@Hollandsemum2Ай бұрын
Lawrence, I believe you will appreciate this. 23 years ago, on a trip to visit family in Netherlands, we had gone to visit the replica Batavia. On the way back, my then 7 year old son stated he was hungry. As we drove through Lelystad, we saw a brand new McDonald's (from the pick-up window side). As we turned into the drive through entrance we could see very bright lights & some sort of commotion near the turn past the order window. As we got to the window, we saw that it was a TV newscrew. My son asked why they would film a drive through, a very ordinary item for him. My father explained that this was the first drive-through in the area and as such it was newsworthy. Have you ever gone to the Adirondack Mountains in upstate NY?
@AntfarmerАй бұрын
@Hollandsemum2 Cute!
@RhysDavies-n9fАй бұрын
jj
@jovetjАй бұрын
*Laurence I mean, read his shirt already
@janerkenbrack3373Ай бұрын
Mud rooms don't need to be muddy. You live in the northern part of the USA. Up here all houses should have a vestibule between the outdoors and the indoors. This allows you to limit the amount of heat that escapes from the house during the cold months (they occur during winter).
@stephenlitten1789Ай бұрын
Sounds more like an airlock
@janerkenbrack3373Ай бұрын
@@stephenlitten1789 They work like that. A small coatroom or mudroom so you're not exchanging so much heat and cold when coming in and out.
@JicoriАй бұрын
I love how unique this list is! Mud rooms aren’t as common here in Eastern NC, but I wish I had one! More often here (mostly in older homes) you will see a “stoop” or a side or back porch that serves a similar purpose.
@doubleleterladyАй бұрын
You look so American in the thumbnail. Hats off to you, good sir, for keeping your native accent. It's quite enjoyable.
@Fortepiano666Ай бұрын
My old house in NJ was built in 1920, so the bathroom sink had two taps. Washing my hands, brushing my teeth, etc, was a study in speedily going back and forth to achieve warm water. So happy when my dad finally installed a new vanity with a single faucet.
@Xubuntu47Ай бұрын
I am curious about the original shower. It must have been mixed, while the sink had two taps. Or did houses just have bathtubs without showers back then?
@Fortepiano666Ай бұрын
We had a giant rectangular tub that was deep. It was FANTASTIC! And, no spillover drain. No shower, though. It had a single faucet. It was so heavy, especially when full, that the original builders had to pour six inches of concrete to support it.
@lindahoganson8721Ай бұрын
A rubber plug with a fancy chain was attached to our double-faucet sink, and when it plugged the sink drain the nicely warmed water was available for hand washing and sponge baths. The cold-water water faucet tap was for drinking water and tooth brushing.
@lindahoganson8721Ай бұрын
@@Xubuntu47 Shower spouts were regulated by the hot and cold water knobs that also regulated bath water from a single spout. No shower = two water spouts.
@catw6998Ай бұрын
Mud room: my only recollection of a mud room, when we lived up in NY. We had a split level. The mud room was straight back after entering the front door. I think there was a door in the mud room. I see Artur is getting taller and bigger.
@Jefff72Ай бұрын
As an American stationed in the UK in the 90s, I missed things in the UK when I went back to the US. One was medium-sized cities and towns where things such as pubs and clubs were within crawling distance of each other. I could go out with my friends, or my mates, and we could go to a city like Cambridge and walk around and pubs were everywhere. We didn't need to drive from one to another like I did in the suburbs of Minneapolis-St. Paul.
@stevenS1973Ай бұрын
Thanks for the mentioning of Vans. I have been wearing vans since 1977. My first pair were checkerboard black-and-white. I was amazed to see Jeff Spicolli in fast Times at Ridgemont high smacking himself in the forehead with my shoe!
@beefgoat80Ай бұрын
My wife is a first generation Asian American. I now feel weird wearing shoes indoors. The only time I wear shoes with laces is when I'm dressing up.
@ferretyluvАй бұрын
When I was a kid, we rented from an Asian lady so we had to take our shoes off. It became a habit for many years to just take my shoes off when going inside a house. It was only when I visited friends in England that I got weird looks when I took off my shoes, like I was getting too comfortable or something. I don’t do it as religiously as I used to in my parents’ house (mostly because my dad smokes indoors so there’s always a thin layer of ash on the floor).
@claudiadarling9441Ай бұрын
I think wearing or not wearing shoes indoors is regional in America. Here in the upper midwest anyway we take our shoes off indoors. But our weather means if we didn't our floors would get filthy fast.
@beefgoat80Ай бұрын
@@claudiadarling9441 one of my wife's aunts said "if you go barefoot outside, you might as well wear your shoes inside".🤣
@pamb440Ай бұрын
I’m in the Midwest (Ohio) and we never wear our shoes in the house.
@briebel2684Ай бұрын
Growing up in Kansas, I was taught to take my shoes off inside because black widow spiders really like to set up a nest in shoes. We have three species of black widow here.
@Colorado_NativeАй бұрын
I am retired USAF and got to visit and live in many countries (12 including North Korea). Here in the US if you have an older home with water spigots, the hot is on the left and cold on the right. In Japan they run the pipes up through the wall without a crossover. The taps on on side will have the hot water on the left, such as the kitchen, but go into the room on the other side of the wall and the hot water is on the right side. Also, the toilet is often in a separate room from the bathroom. Also, my closets in Japan had a light bulb that was in the back near the floor and stayed on all the time. It wasn't for the light, the heat helped reduce mildew.
@donhoverson6348Ай бұрын
The light will also prevent monster infestation.
@Colorado_NativeАй бұрын
@@donhoverson6348 You sre right. Not even one monster. If you leave the closet door cracked it can prevent those terrible monsters under the bed too. Great observation.
@reliantncc1864Ай бұрын
You lived in North Korea? Don't you mean South Korea, or are you an escapee?
@Colorado_NativeАй бұрын
No, I lived in South Korea for two years, my job took me into North Korea. If I had have lived there I would have escaped. The DMZ is very interesting place to cross. There are farmers who live in the very northern part of South Korea and get paid to report anything 'unusual' going on. They are required to be in their houses by 8 pm. The military live in tents to remind them they are at the front. There are incursions both ways at night. The friendly forces keep their vehicles running so they're ready if needed. You can tell the friendly outposts from the North Koreans by their color - the friendly is a light blue, the North's are gray. The biggest binoculars I have ever seen were there. I am 6 feet tall, many of their gusrds are that tall, if not a little taller. The country is quite beautiful, but the leadership/laws are quite demanding. There is an old locomotive 'stranded' there among a bunch of wildlife.What's very interesting is there's a display for three (if I remember correctly) of our servicemen who were killed in 1976. It is called 'The Tree Chopping Incident'. If you want to make a million dollsrs, the North has a flag there that is huge. If you can capture it, you get some money. Thanks for the reply.
@reliantncc1864Ай бұрын
@@Colorado_Native OK, so you didn't live in North Korea. Thanks for correcting that. I also really doubt you went into North Korea as part of your job, not past the DMZ anyway. If you met a 6' North Korean, he'd be their record holder. The average height of their military recruits (presumably their most fit people) is a foot and a half shorter than that. I find it hard to believe a word out of your mouth.
@DianeCasanovaАй бұрын
There are Michigan shaped Adirondack chairs, with UP tables.
@RandomNonsense1985Ай бұрын
Funny you mention that, because we have Michigan Hot Dogs in the Adirondacks, which are kinda sorta like chili dogs.
@rnokmhАй бұрын
@@RandomNonsense1985 mmm...glaziers...
@RatInCage-E102Ай бұрын
@@RandomNonsense1985michigan dog aka coney dog should be just-meat chili, onions, mustard, and the hotdog
@pkmcnett5649Ай бұрын
Our neighbors have some of those Michigan ones.
@ashleycnossen3157Ай бұрын
Lawrence, you're one of us!
@W_T.FАй бұрын
You will never lose your British sense of humor, and as an American, I love that.
@JeanWatson-y3hАй бұрын
You are correct! The Brit's do have better humor than Americans. Kudos to the Brits for that! Go Laurence! We definitely love your wit and brilliant sense of humor.
@FishareFriendsNotFood972Ай бұрын
'Things you could live without, if you weren't lazy' is indeed a great summation of the perks of many American innovations
@pjschmid2251Ай бұрын
😂 as soon as he said Vans, my first thought was "the shoes?"
@kenlandroverАй бұрын
Drive thru ATMs were my first culture shock. I step foot i side a bank maybe once a year now. Been a glorious 13 years living in the US.
@glenchapman3899Ай бұрын
Yeah, I have been here for 16 years. When I first got here I thought drive throughs were just for lazy people. Then I enjoyed my first mid west winter - and it all made complete sense lol
@What1zTymeАй бұрын
Nothing like Brit Wit! Well done!
@wyrdstoneАй бұрын
Our laundry room doubles as a mud room. We could release our dogs through that via a door in the garage, but prefer to let them out the back patio way. Two large rugs, one in and one out, help with keeping their paws dry, and a towel acting as a measure against mud.
@Summerbunny15Ай бұрын
Lawrence, you really have been in the States too long if you think people in the UK still mostly use separate taps (faucets) to wash our hands. I live in a Victorian era flat (built in 1897) and even that has been modernised so only the bath has separate taps for running a bath (but I also have an electric shower). Granted, some people do still like to use separate taps, but most new builds will have mixer taps, and the idea of separate taps is to mix the hot and cold water in the sink (basin) for washing your face or hands (although I personally think it's too much trouble as you have clean the sink each time and not practical for public sinks). For washing dishes, the water will also be mixed in a bowl whether it comes from a mixer tap or separate taps too.
@jovetjАй бұрын
*Laurence Separate taps are still common in the midwest. Depends on how old the house is and how cheap the builder/renovator was.
@Summerbunny15Ай бұрын
I don't think separate taps are a question of money, since mixer taps really aren't that expensive. It's more to do with people's preferences. BTW, it's more usual to spell his name as 'Lawrence' in the UK, although I notice he spells it as 'Laurence'.
@dianefiske-foy4717Ай бұрын
I’ve heard the term “mud room” since I was a kid 71 now) while visiting my aunt and uncle’s Dairy farm. I do believe they had one of those rooms in the entryway of their home, small area. I’ve also visited family and friends who had areas designated in their entryway for hanging coats and placing their wet, snowy or muddy shoes/boots, and so on, though they weren’t called mud rooms. In most cases, they were just part of the entryway, using a hallway area when you come in the door. I don’t think those areas even had a name, just the entryway or entry hall leading into the house. Also, most of these areas were by the back door or the side door. Some people never even used the front door. I’ve even seen people have the front door blocked with a large piece of furniture. I even saw a home once that had a long curtain hanging in front of the door like it was a window and a China cabinet setting in front of it.
@Ecclectic_citcelccEАй бұрын
Having recent back pain I'm liking my pharmacy's drive thru.
@rich7934Ай бұрын
Mudrooms are mainly for 2 uses, normally. One purpose is to allow you to knock the weather off you before entering the house itself, wiether it be snow in the winter or rain during the rest of the year. Also it allows you to keep the mud & dust out of the house, most of the year, by giving you a place to exchange your shoes/boots for slippers/house shoes. The second purpose is as a climate break or air lock between outside and inside, traditionally that would be to keep the heat inside during the winter in northern climates, but now it includes keeping the heat out when you are running the AC in the summer.
@jchow5966Ай бұрын
Great episode. I cannot live without AC and good customer service and drive throughs. ☮️💟
@georgejohnson1492Ай бұрын
Yay first few comments! Love the videos, keep it up!
@katrinagreely5399Ай бұрын
You should check out Adirondack gliders and Adirondack porch swings. Building on a good thing. ☺️
@melanieburgess6382Ай бұрын
I can't speak for all Canadians, but in my region what you call a "mudroom" we call a "porch". I always found it confusing that American "porches" are outdoors!
@LordDustinDeWyndАй бұрын
In South Dakota, often called "Air locks".
@AntfarmerАй бұрын
@melanieburgess6382 Visting Canada, I quickly learned that you also take your shoes off at the entryway also (at least all my friends in Vancouver area did.) Being from S Calif we didn't often have mud 😉so never gave it a thought. I thought it was a great concept tho--especially with all the grime that is on the bottom of shoes!--that I usually do it to this day.
@cg9612Ай бұрын
Except for a sun porch which a porch enclosed on three sides by windows
@shannthraxАй бұрын
Northern WI, I have a porch that I use as an entryway/mudroom. It's unheated, mostly windows on the external walls. Some might call it a sun porch lol
@seameologyАй бұрын
As a kid in the 70's in Minnesota, we called them porches. But, when traveling, I get accused of being Canadian so...
@marygillespie2028Ай бұрын
I lived in England 5 years and had your experience backwards. There is so much to love about each country! Keep it coming, Lawrence!
@jovetjАй бұрын
*Laurence (you can even read his shirt...)
@patti9339Ай бұрын
I don’t have a mudroom, but I do have a sunroom and love it.
@santamanoneАй бұрын
RADAR is a good acronym that’s been around so long nobody remembers it’s an acronym. Just like LASER (Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation) or COP (Constable On Patrol)
@jasonrodgers9063Ай бұрын
I was told that "cop" was short for "copper", referring to the shiny copper buttons on many police uniforms.
@doctornova3015Ай бұрын
cat 🐈😺 on patrol
@sdrc92126Ай бұрын
And it was invented in England
@dlxmarksАй бұрын
Except that "Constable On Patrol" is a backronym. Cop has meant to seize or take in English for centuries ("cop a feel" or "cop a plea" for examples) and has been associated with being arrested since the 19th century. The phrase "it's a fair cop" meaning "caught me fair and square" has been in use in Britain for generations. Police officers, as the ones doing the copping, became coppers and then shortened back to cop as a noun.
@merrygrammarian1591Ай бұрын
@@dlxmarks That's really interesting. I always thought it was from the word "copper" because of the badge worn by the sheriff!