As a Westerner, I found the number of seating areas in the flat interesting 🧐 - It’s always good to have space, bright rooms are always best, nice to see most rooms are light filled & bright 👍😉🇺🇸
Hi guys, Is this your second home? 3:50 isn't this the type of real Italian coffee maker. My house is over 100 years old and the ceilings are 3.60 metres high and it's difficult to heat. Luckily it is not often cold.
When i first went to Italy, that is my first time to see the bidet, haha.. Totally dunno what is the function haha..but I just use it Btw, your house is so big haha..
@こーぎー30004 жыл бұрын
どんどん編集の技術が上がってて毎回と驚きます!編集のソフト何使ってるか、よければお聞きしたいです!
@achiochannel33484 жыл бұрын
ありがとうございます🙇♂️✨ フィモーラー9という編集ソフト使ってます😊
@しばーちびー4 жыл бұрын
いや、家広っしかもおしゃれ。仏壇はインテリアですねw
@achiochannel33484 жыл бұрын
暖炉のなかにいれるなんてかなり無作法なことしていて、お叱りを受けないか心配ですw
@jmdieke4 жыл бұрын
Avete un posto carinissimo! Che invidia... il room tour che posso fare col mio ragazzo durerebbe tipo 3 minuti 😂 a Londra gli spazi sono decisamente ridotti
@achiochannel33484 жыл бұрын
Pur di stare a Londra, credo ne valga assolutamente la pena!(^o^)/
@komixgame59234 жыл бұрын
Vamos com l'home tour 🤣🤣🤣❤️❤️ Parabéns galera
@montalbanovittoria4 жыл бұрын
Siete molto simpatici 👍
@jolay29204 жыл бұрын
Bidet moment 😂😂😂, i miss japanese washlet! As always great video. You re very funny ♥️
@chi-hayao4 жыл бұрын
アレさんの澁澤龍彥好きにもっていかれました 相当な読書量と察します…
@nicholasjohnson59444 жыл бұрын
Fantastic!!! :D Home tours are one of my favorites, and I absolutely love the layout of your place!!! The bookshelves are my favorite, as I love to read and I like to see what other genres people like!!! Big hugs to you from Minnesota, super Mr. Achio and super Mr. Are!!!!! ✨💫🤩
@fedoradorazio12214 жыл бұрын
La tipica concezione di casa dei nostri nonni, con spazi quadrati che fanno da corridoi sulle stanze. È davvero spaziosa però e l'ultima stanza è davvero molto carina. 😊 Grazie per il tour ragazzi! 😁
@achiochannel33484 жыл бұрын
Ciao Fedora! ^o^ Hai colto il tratto distintivo delle case di mezzo secolo fa! Ora le fanno tutte open space! Il che non è comunque un male!
@misa3174 жыл бұрын
The vase behind fake fireplace looks cool, could be sort of a teracotta? It'd be amazing if Are could share his interests in literature, like what he reads, what are his all-time favourites etc. I suppose he has very unique perspective in terms of the comparison between Western (or Catholic, you may say) and Eastern values..would love to hear how such person reads things, either in Italian or Japanese. Now looking Adelphi's website, wish I could read in Italian! They have interesting titles in wide range of topics plus cool book design indeed...kinda reminded me Iwanami of Japan :0
@achiochannel33484 жыл бұрын
Thanks for your comment! It's Are replying. I will try to formulate a meaningful and not too verbose answer! (lol) First, you asked me how I assimilated two distant cultures. I must say that I've never perceived the geographical distance separating my dear old Europe from Japan. Instead of the differences due to more or less random historical accidents, I have always loved to explore the similarities between cultures. There is a constant human datum that unites all languages, all cultures, all artistic expressions. It is all right to look closely and be amazed at variety of human beings, but it is also important to look from afar to have an overall, generous and inclusive view. In this way, authors such as Murasaki Shikibu, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Jorge Luis Borges, Francesco Petrarca, Herodotus and Snorri Sturluson - seemingly irreconcilable - will appear like shards of a single, great creative explosion. The approach is reminiscent of Goethe's so-called "weltliteratur", or world literature. This approach allows you to bypass languages instead of being glued to their charm like flies on honey. That's why I love the Adelphi catalogue which, as you say, is very similar in terms of editorial spirit to Iwanami's! Adelphi provides very specific texts, from Vedic tradition to Norse saga (I should say sögur), from Tang poetry to Lappish anthropology. Everything! It sums up very well the written history of the world and the spirit of mankind, if there is one. As for religion, I apply a similar approach, although I don't want to be too cold and analytical (lol) The philosophical vision (indeed, the meditative praxis) that best sums up the extra-sensitive dimension of the human beings, I believe, is Shingon Buddhism. Through very concrete exercises one can increase one's deep vision. Also Vipassana meditation offers very convincing tools to understand "the world as it is". Christianity has been transformed into a universal cult, but it was not originally. For this reason I greatly appreciate Christian sacred art, especially Catholic art, but I have little sympathy for the ethical content built on Christian foundations. I hope I have given you an exhaustive answer (^o^)/ by Are
@yoasobi94454 жыл бұрын
ルームツアー待ってました! ビデ子、なんか変な感じですね~笑
@jimjimgl34 жыл бұрын
"Probably purchased thanks to the Marshall Plan..."...😂
@edoardozamarra75154 жыл бұрын
Una bella casa signorile, spaziosa, ben arredata, non c'è che dire...e invece c'è. Mi siete crollati un momento, quando ho visto in cucina l'olio Sasso. A mia nonna, che viveva in un paesetto irpino, il cui olio di qualità ha ricevuto il riconoscimento della UE, amava l'olio Sasso perchè era più leggero! E suo padre produceva e vendeva quello paesano, eccellente ! Con quel nome lì leggero? Magari Sassolino pure pure...Della stessa genia dell'Olio Carli... Mi sono ripreso con il resto della casa. Insomma, non facciamo errori di stile, detto tra noi. Correte a comprare gli oli storici di Canino (VT) o di Fara Sabina (RI), che ricordano in bocca l'arte olearia degli antichi romani, tanto e solo per restare nel Lazio.
@achiochannel33484 жыл бұрын
Buongiorno Edoardo! L'olio Sasso, mannaggia! A nostra discolpa possiamo dirti che, collocato accanto al fornello, serve solo a ungere le teglie! Per tutti i condimenti a freddo usiamo olio del Garda - se anche quello del Garda è un problema, non abbiamo più scuse - meno viscoso degli olii meridionali, che comunque amiamo molto, nonché, dal basso delle mie (di Are) facoltà gustative compromesse da una rinite cronica, apparentemente fruttato. Per ragioni geografiche, contribuiamo a mantenere vive le limitate risorse agroalimentari del Veneto! Anche se col vino, meglio scappare in tirolo o al sud! Comunque abbiamo preso nota dell'olio di Canino e di Fara Sabina! Settimana prossima andiamo a Napoli, per cui faremo una sosta a Roma! Un abbraccio!!!
@carmelapellecchia93204 жыл бұрын
Xche are nn parla mai l italiano?xche nn lo insegna anche a te? Visto che lui parla giapponese e poi vivete in Italia?siete simpaticissimi.kiss
@achiochannel33484 жыл бұрын
Ciao Carmela! Grazie mille per il commento! Sono Are! Il canale l'abbiamo pensato inizialmente per un pubblico giapponese, ma un po' per volta abbiamo intenzione di orientarlo anche con video più "italiani"! Appena Achio inizierà a padroneggiare meglio l'italiano, sono sicuro che faremo più video non solo in giapponese. Chiediamo ancora un po' di pazienza! A prestissimo(^o^)/
Achio and Are, nice to see your living arrangements, comfortable, stylish and VERY clean (special for the video😸?) I have a question about how you communicate with each other. Especially in translating sounds. For example, the following are sounds in English, then Italian and then Japanese. Sound of surprise: Uh-oh!...ay-may!...aa-ah! Talking to a baby: coochy coochy coo!...keeri-keeri-keeri!...kocho-kocho! A mouse: squeek-squeek!...squit-squit!...choo-choo! A sneeze: Ah-choo!...ekchee!...hakshon! That sleeping sound: zzzzzzzzz...ronf-ronf!...gah-gah! So, if someone is ringing the door bell, would Are say"Drin!" and Achio "Reen-reen!" and would each of you understand the other?
@achiochannel33484 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the funny comment! (^o^)/ Usually I (ARE) always use Japanese onomatopoeia for convenience reasons! Anyway Achio is learning Italian ones little by little! Although, I admit, the Japanese ones are more expressive and, above all, more numerous and precise! I don't know if you knew this, but Japanese is the language with the most onomatopoeia in the world! (^o^)/
@stuarteverett41284 жыл бұрын
@@achiochannel3348 No I didn't know that. Worth exploring. I wonder if that's one of the reasons why when Achio speaks his voice sounds very musical. Last question: I notice plenty of sardonic humour and sarcasm in your banter together and it doesn't appear scripted but spontaneous. Does Japanese sarcasm cross over to Italian mindset easily? Or can it lead to a "ciaf / pashi" ?
@achiochannel33484 жыл бұрын
@@stuarteverett4128 As you may have noticed, many references strongly connoted in a Euro-American background are not transferable in Japanese. Moreover, Japanese is a language that is not very good for humour (lol) This is because irony and humour are products of the Greek world, not a universal trait of the human being, like laughter. Generalizing, in Japan one laughs at farcical situations, as in the pantomimes of ancient Rome. Fortunately Achio has a long experience abroad so he has absorbed a typically Italian cynical and desecrating irony ^O^
@stuarteverett41284 жыл бұрын
@@achiochannel3348 Ha ha nice 😸😸😸My partner is from Eastern Europe so sarcasm and ridicule are second nature to him, and despite a small language barrier, laughter is our best medicine😄
@hansyharris61484 жыл бұрын
"If you showed your face it would be easier", Achio said. And I support 100%. just show your face for your fans.
@achiochannel33484 жыл бұрын
Exactly!!!
@slocad114 жыл бұрын
It's bizarre and distracting to just see someone's chin.