If you liked this video make sure to check out my other ones as well kzbin.info/www/bejne/fYmpeGWlZqpsjNEsi=Gzm6QcGQM7DqBkmO Mystery link: kzbin.info/www/bejne/rGnEapWBgb-JhKMsi=l24EyX4jN_WG7U8C
@stjepanlucman24210 ай бұрын
Hej, Janoš, gdje si kupio ovi majcu sa zastavom Armenije i Nagorno Karabaha, tražim ju svugdje?
@danilomitrovic395410 ай бұрын
So basically... your education got shafted Bigger than gayman in prison... that sucks, did you compensate at least? Read stuff that wasn't "deemed good" and learn stuff that wasn't in curriculum ?
@nlg5410 ай бұрын
I love in South Dakota I can verify it's all true
@gigica6910 ай бұрын
how many countries does this man live in
@LivingIronicallyinEurope10 ай бұрын
U Jermeniji haha
@Nostripe36110 ай бұрын
America is so eclectic that you can simultaneously love it and yet see it at as nightmarish wasteland depending on where what and why you deal with that day
@ivy_4710 ай бұрын
This happens multiple times while doing my 2 mile bike commute across the city LOL
@rap1df1r310 ай бұрын
There are maybe 2 states that are tolerable, the rest of the country is a messed up hellhole. Actually, pretty much all of it, cuz of NSA, fluoride in water, and incessant chemtrailing.
@JmKrokY10 ай бұрын
Fr
@Toileetpapr10 ай бұрын
It is an entire continent (excluding the northern syrupmen and Mexico) Fair enough.
@Chinothebad10 ай бұрын
As a statesian, I agree. I love my country in the sense I grew up in it but I hate various things anout like its healthcare and its politicians. Not to mention how its own military has ways to mess with its own members and those outside of it besides having its own industrial complex.
@neferiusnexus10 ай бұрын
Hello Yanoș, this is your CIA handler. Please go ahead and make that part two.
@Workingclassheros10 ай бұрын
Hahaha!! 😅
@MaxTheLazyCat10 ай бұрын
creaming
@III_three10 ай бұрын
Wake up from your depression nap
@TheLegend27Kekistani10 ай бұрын
So does the culture wars stuff you see from the obvious side in the US remind you of Eastern European/Soviet propaganda you have heard or seen before? This man is perfectly happy and does not want to kill himself. And I don't want to kill myself either ✊️
@physetermacrocephalus22099 ай бұрын
Why were you late for PT today? The director wants to know why your phone is off too.
@Vlad_-_-_10 ай бұрын
Let me tell you this, if any person could earn in the Balkans even half of what you earn in US and keep the same prices, the Balkans would be Paradise on earth.
@angelcabeza646410 ай бұрын
Hahahaha paradise lol
@HecClaytos495610 ай бұрын
But that will never happen because the Balkans are populated by backwards cultures.
@Vlad_-_-_10 ай бұрын
@@angelcabeza6464Can't read that well, can you ?
@iliriacum66610 ай бұрын
Half?! There are milions of people who earn not just half but even more...also safety in balkans are way better than in the US...Also don't mention that in US to not pay for edu is illegal, free healthcare is illegal but is legal to keep a gun into your pocket...gta...p
@Vlad_-_-_10 ай бұрын
@@iliriacum666And many, many, many more millions earn a lot less. So what is your point ?
@prettypuff110 ай бұрын
1:39 I’m from Chicago; this is the appropriate amount of anger towards snow
@sledgehog110 ай бұрын
Ah yes, the Polish state of Szikagu!
@aregularperson757310 ай бұрын
I’m from Wisconsin and I agree if you live in the Midwest long enough you will start to hate the snow with a passion
@Nostripe36110 ай бұрын
@@aregularperson7573it’s always amazing how much you guys get. I live in the south and people freak out about a couple inches of snow around here
@Hongobogologomo10 ай бұрын
Im surprised you survived Chicago long enough to type this comment
@MiguelDLewis10 ай бұрын
@@aregularperson7573 As someone who was born and raised in Milwaukee, I love the snow. I love shoveling, love the snowball fights, love the exercise. The Great Lakes region is awesome. Also, we have the best cheeseburgers here. I've traveled to many warmer places like Belize and central Japan but none compare to here.
@TyrantSolo10 ай бұрын
Things I hate about living in the Hungarian province of USA is the correct title
@LivingIronicallyinEurope10 ай бұрын
Fastest commenter in central Europe
@TyrantSolo10 ай бұрын
@LivingIronicallyinEurope well I see the notification and I just have to watch the video, from the greatest youtuber in the world
@craigzievis207410 ай бұрын
😂 He's right that it's the only place even remotely affordable.
@MrAsianPie10 ай бұрын
I thought Romania stole it
@yurm576710 ай бұрын
Exactly
@biedak10 ай бұрын
"Living ironically in europe" lives in usa I did not expected this kind of betrayal
@Recovery30510 ай бұрын
He LIVED in the US.
@Jay-pq7nf10 ай бұрын
He was born in US I think
@Takeawayjustin10 ай бұрын
I was actually confused if he was american ir european
@MvsicAdd7ct10 ай бұрын
He said (in this video) that he's lived in the USA for 4 years, he studied there. From 15 to 18 years old.
@aednil10 ай бұрын
He said he lived in the US for 9 years and moved to europe (he didn't say where specifically) at the age of 18 @@Jay-pq7nf
@DeadinsideCastlevania64810 ай бұрын
One thing that pisses me off about America and pretty similar in Canada is that teen spaces have been killed, and boomers and gen x say that teens nowadays are addicted to their phones. No we just want something to do.
@ymotechnopopfan10 ай бұрын
Yeah, people are really judgemental.
@rap1df1r310 ай бұрын
Like watching YT on your phone?
@Occam60110 ай бұрын
Yeah there are literally teen curfews where I live tf am I supposed to do
@muchomuchoman605010 ай бұрын
Hot Take: It's both. While a case can be made for other factors, it's pretty much undeniable at this point that screen addiction is pulling public interest away from other recreational activities.
@michaeltnk113510 ай бұрын
As a 20 year old, it’s our generations fault. Malls are dying because we don’t go as often as our parents did
@justcallmehaterik10 ай бұрын
Midwest is just the Balkans of the United States, Hungary is Florida honestly with how much unbelievable bs stunt ive witnessed.
@Bucky2Times10 ай бұрын
i see people say this a lot, makes me want to visit the Balkans even more. I'm from Ohio and I've seen (i assume as a joke i don't understand) that Ohio is the Bosnia of the states Lol
@prosquatter9 ай бұрын
@@Bucky2Timesa day doesn't go by that the city of Dayton, Ohio isn't mentioned on Bosnian TV.
@oskar66079 ай бұрын
“Hungary is Florida” - have you missed that Hungarian winters are crap and there’s no beach? “Balkans are the Midwest” ??? More like the USA Southeast. Germany would be the Midwest.
@MrZuga899 ай бұрын
Florida man... sounds better than Hungarian man... And also 1 lake, no sea
@artje908 ай бұрын
No florida is definitly poland. cause you guys have the florida man in Europe we have the polish guy
@hughjanus713110 ай бұрын
As an American currently in Hungary, I agree with every point made in this video. It’s a culture shock seeing how chill it is here in comparison to the Homeland.
@Lockfly10 ай бұрын
Isn't Hungary like the poorest country in Europe
@Cypekeh10 ай бұрын
@@Lockflyno
@OfficalF4nTaTv10 ай бұрын
@@Lockfly Living in it feels like one. But not yet.
@azminek715410 ай бұрын
@@LockflyNo. Not even the poorest in the EU. But give it some time. Another Orbán term or two and it will be.
@gergelyhangodi900810 ай бұрын
@@Lockfly Yes, keep away, don't bother checking.
@tiggytheimpaler548310 ай бұрын
Sorry you went through that bullshit as a student. I'm whiter than snow and my wife is Spaniard, so when my daughter had to write an introduction essay the teacher was actaully pissed off my daughter described "only her whiteness" instead of talking about growing up in mexico My wife's family is from Northern Spain, so she's more of a French woman with the wrong accent Her family lived in Ecuador because of the civil war in Spain My daughter has never even left the state in which she lives in because we are poor Man mama and abolita absolutely tore thay school a new asshole because if you have never seen a Spaniard accidentally get called a Colonia, woah boy it's fucking bad I've never seen a teacher fired before lol
@robertortiz-wilson158810 ай бұрын
lol! That is something.
@osasunaitor9 ай бұрын
Wait wait wait, where in Northern Spain? I'm from Northern Spain and we are definitely NOT "French with the wrong accent", mind you. France and Spain were already completely distinct nations many many centuries before the USA even existed, our paths diverged something like 1500 years ago. So please if you respect her family get this crazy "French with wrong accent" idea out of your mind
@jimbeam76369 ай бұрын
You're butt hurt on this strangers wife's behalf. Grow the fuck up. It's not your chair not your problem. Sounds like it's a joke she's made before.
@StarboyXL98 ай бұрын
Based race-mixer
@joelsnake88 ай бұрын
@@osasunaitor This. I'm from a town in Spain close to the Pyrenees, one hour drive from France, and people here has nothing french. Those are two very different national identities.
@whrlds10 ай бұрын
I'm swedish and i completely understand that bullshit called snow
@eduardomarques9110 ай бұрын
I'm Brazilian, and have never seen that bullshit in my whole life.
@areon40010 ай бұрын
Damn, seem so alien for me, that like half of human population never saw a single snowflake.@@eduardomarques91
@haisheauspforte163210 ай бұрын
@@eduardomarques91you love it for a day and then you want it to disappear again
@eduardomarques9110 ай бұрын
@@areon400 Some other things in the tropics that might seem alien to you is the sun making 90º shades on trees and the Moon appearing upside down.
@NAMELESSINTERNETADDICT10 ай бұрын
@@eduardomarques91 what do you mean the moon is upside down here lol i need to google that
@Fa1seG0d10 ай бұрын
The car centrism thing was the worst thing about moving to the US for me as a kid. Growing up in a German city, you could just meet your friends whenever, wherever. You could take the public transport if you had to. But moving to a US city, I was shocked about the fact that almost no public transport outside the city centers existed. I had a buddy of mine who lived an hour away by foot from my house in the suburbs. It was faster to walk/bike to his house than to take the bus, which would have taken me almost 2 and a half hours. Going to the mall or even Wal-Mart by your accord was almost like a highlight, if you could get your parents to drive you there. Otherwise, you would have to make do with the kids in your neighborhood. If you liked them that is. And there is only so many rounds of Football, Basketball or Baseball you can play, before you eventually get bored and tired of it.
@JonasGutenwald-yj8th9 ай бұрын
US has had a chronic case of Urban sprawl, meaning that public transportation has expanded and improved, so it’s not quite the same experience. There’s also the fact that you can just take a car over to your friends house or meet up with them at a city center. More and more Europeans are starting to move to Suburbs too, so it gets annoying in general
@StarboyXL98 ай бұрын
This is why I made friends with the nerds and we played Yugioh and Bakugan. Those games were always interesting.
@mbdg68106 ай бұрын
As an American i don’t like it either.
@proto5663 ай бұрын
Childhood should be the best time. But this sounds like a nightmare.
@HoshizakiYoshimasa3 ай бұрын
@@mbdg6810 Cars make things easier. No family having millennials Zoomers living crime infested US cities may not want self reliant long distance capable transportation. But families need cars in countries of large land areas and populations spread out like America and Australia
@maevethefox591210 ай бұрын
I took a job working for a US company after years working in Canada, assuming it would largely be the same, and a month in I got written up for "insubordination" for questioning my manager. And like I'm an *engineer* paid very well, and management treated me like a McDonalds worker trying to steal some fries, it was insane.
@bdml773 ай бұрын
That's what it's like working anywhere here
@ZagrasNixillis3 ай бұрын
America is very petty and dramatic. I would like to leave.
@unconventionalideas56833 ай бұрын
I do not know exactly what you said but that sounds like a particularly toxic company.
@krunoslavkovacec184210 ай бұрын
What I don't like about America is just how car-centric the life is over there. You can't walk to the supermarket but hop into your car and drive to it. And if you have kids that want to play outside, good luck. Best you can do is send them to the back yard
@maninanikittycat423810 ай бұрын
fr fr! I sometimes wish it wasn't so car centric because I don't have my driver's license
@craigzievis207410 ай бұрын
It's a total money trap. Cars are like mobile phones in the US: you MUST own one to exist at the average annual cost of $11,000.... This is among many money traps that exist here. What I hate about this country is that it seems like everything is a scam or unnecessary reality (from healthcare to education, to the tax code and filing requirements to the horrific food system) that just bleeds and bleeds it's citizens while making them unhealthy... Unless you're wealthy... then it's fukin awesome...
@singular910 ай бұрын
Can't drive, get off the road. There is nothing wrong with cars, its just most people are r3tarded.
@friedrichwilhelmvonhohenzo596210 ай бұрын
I understand why people have this perspective, but personally I really prefer living in a car driving society rather than a bus riding one. I’d rather drive a car and take the inconveniences that come with it, rather than have to take a bus and deal with those inconvenience.
@thevis546510 ай бұрын
@ichwilhelmvonhohenzo5962 Are you hearing yourself? People have cars in Europe, we just have the choice to not use them... Our cities are walkable and don't require you to drive but you STILL CAN, how slow in the head do you have to be to think a 5 minute walk to the shops is worse than a 20 minute drive??
@jerry250ify10 ай бұрын
I just like to imagine you cussing the teachers out in Serbian after that
@A_Haunted_Pancake20 күн бұрын
Speaking of horrible things in America: The word 'cussing'. It's the verbal equivalent of wearing 2 pairs of underpants, just to make really sure you're not angering the Alsmighty.
@martonlerant56725 күн бұрын
Wait till you learn about the holy underpants of mormons - nope, i am not joking.
@RenanMendes-zd8hj10 ай бұрын
Bro, I'm from Brazil, the work culture in Brazil is nearly identical to the US, if not identical to the US, that's one of the reasons I wanted to get the hell out of this place. It's hard to put a smile in your face when you don't want to, specially when you are bullied by your superiors to work more hours than you should and do something even if there is nothing to do LOL
@random_the_man10 ай бұрын
I feel like the car problem is also similar here in brazil
@ivospironello645110 ай бұрын
without mentioning that the minimum salary wage is 50% lower than the us haha
@arthurgabriel262510 ай бұрын
As a brazilian that hasn't worked yet, i can confirm it
@diogomelo789710 ай бұрын
@@random_the_man to an extent, but at least where I live, I think it's more because public transport is shit instead of having to walk for 40 minutes to go anywhere
@pro550lol10 ай бұрын
é foda mesmo
@artifactsandfungus142410 ай бұрын
As an American, so many of these grievances are so ingrained in my everyday life that I forget to hate them lol. Every once in a while I'll take a step back and think "it doesn't have to be like this," envy some other place, then get back to my everyday life and forget about it.
@Flyingclam10 ай бұрын
As an American the Architecture issue is my biggest gripe. Charlotte NC once was the home to amazing Art Deco which they slowly replaced with bland modernism. That being said I still love it here for all different reasons Art Deco is America's east coast style and it shall be returned to it!
@adrianseanheidmann45595 ай бұрын
it's weird, art-deco isnt' even an "expensive" architecture style, but it looks so elegant and sleak. I have the feeling in some areas, pockets and in some "minds" we slowly turn away from the horrors of "modern" architecture".
@IkeSan10 ай бұрын
I am surprised you did not talk about how the customer had to pay waiters with the tipping toxic culture instead of you know... the actual company they are working for.
@hansmohammed548610 ай бұрын
You would be the one paying it anyway
@ИннокентьевАлексей10 ай бұрын
@@hansmohammed5486yeah, but it would eliminate this awkward interaction, at least. + Eliminate uncertainty of wages for waiters
@ezrabuchanan158610 ай бұрын
Tipping is a nice thing to do, but it must be emphasized that it is completely optional and the waiters are not entitled to it whatsoever.
@AModernRogue10 ай бұрын
Most servers would make far less without the tipping system. It turns what would be a job with unlivable wages into one people can do for the long haul
@IkeSan10 ай бұрын
@@AModernRogue The problem comes from their bosses lowering the actual income they agreed upon and that with the tips will actually achieve their minimun waged they agreed. The Tipping is fine it is just the toxic way USA and their companies use it to not paying their minimun wage. I know this because my brother was looking for a job in USA as someone who got a scholarship but wanted to make some cash.
@JmKrokY10 ай бұрын
Bro coudn't wait until he turned 18 to leave US for Serbia immediately 💀
@Joe32beatz4 ай бұрын
I mean to have a privilege to go to states at 18 legally as Serbian citizen is a huge flex tbh
@lucianoosorio594210 ай бұрын
“I don’t know Roman, it’s the same as other places but only louder.” Niko Bellic
@suzannemacmillan913510 ай бұрын
In Massachusetts, there is a large Balkan population specifically living in my town. Overall, you are a lot more empathic to the problems we have here, and unlike a lot of youtubers, you actually listed the reasons with due respect and good humor while mentioning a lot of cool things we have. And yeah, our culture war is extremely toxic especially when an anchorman decided your culture is enemy of the year then people start thinking you're an acceptable target. Being ethnically Armenian on my mother's side and my mom being from Lebanon and her mom being from Syria, I always had to watch my back when I was growing up in case some classmate or teacher thinks it's ok to target me. I still do to this day. Oh, and what I mean when my town has a large Balkan population, we have a lot of Albanian, Croatian, Greek, Serbian, and Turkish people in town. Much respect!
@Realtheoderich10 ай бұрын
1 - has a character in a german outfit with a STEROTYPICALY japanese artstyle 2 - lives in romania 3 - born in america 4 - loves europe mr worldwide.
@georgeoldsterd89948 ай бұрын
Just like Mario. 😏
@alexbulza505 ай бұрын
5 - Ethnically Bosniak 6 - Identifies as a Serb 7 - Posts about the Balkans and beyond.
@jamesjeager129Ай бұрын
A man of culture ☕️🗿
@kgrace145910 ай бұрын
It's so easy to make videos to slam the US, would love to see a video about what you liked there. Szép napot!
@monkofdarktimes10 ай бұрын
I remember a man making a video how the USA is blessed People complained about it so he made how America sucks and ranted a little on the US hate train
@innocento.155210 ай бұрын
What are you going on about? He slams different places for our entertainment. If you think it is too easy then don't watch it FFS.
@kgrace145910 ай бұрын
@@innocento.1552 What! I thought these were documentaries! The point of the comment is more that this is an easy one. Low hanging fruit.
@walkelftexasranger10 ай бұрын
It's hard to make video about qualities of US. You make positive video about US -> it gets immediately compared to Europe and "loses". I don't want to be unfair towards Americans, but there aren't many interesting things in US except nature. It just feels like "worse Europe" to me.
@Carthodon10 ай бұрын
@@walkelftexasranger There's the freedom. I lived in the Netherlands for a few years and compare it to the US, anyone who has trouble thinking of the things that are better in the US is someone who doesn't care about those benefits but they are there. Free speech is something I value tremendously which in Europe it is frankly not given the restrictions on things like publishing, laws on slander/libel (I'm more familiar with the UK than Europe on this part), etc. Guns is another obvious one which I don't care about though it is nice to know I can buy one if I so choose. Starting and running a business is also easier not just because of access to loans but just culturally. I also happen to prefer the culture of being ambitious and having that drive you to work hard rather than the concept of a "work/life balance" which dominates Europe (as an example, if you ask a European what their dreams are those dreams tend to be very achievable, no one wants to be an astronaut or a president or anything where most likely they will fail). Probably the biggest advantage of the US is the capacity to carve out a little niche for yourself. There isn't really an equivalent to the Amish in Europe, even though the Amish came from Europe, because in Europe there are so many forces that push you to homogenize with the rest of society even if you don't want to. There are steep limits to how you can choose to educate your children, home schooling is virtually non-existent, and while Europe does have "communes" their ability to control their own function is very limited compared to the US. Even something as basic as language differs, in the US with NO official language you are not required to speak or learn English whereas most countries in Europe will tell you otherwise. Personally, I think this is all a moot point given that a system should be judged based on how sustainable it is and while the US is not sustainable, Europe is fading away and the people there seem to be in full on denial as to why that is whereas in the US there is a debate which circles the truth.
@attilavarga318810 ай бұрын
I live in the Austrian alps. The weather is pretty schizophrenic here. The last two weeks we’ve had snow, rain, sunshine changing almost daily.
@eyzmin10 ай бұрын
after watching some videos online about the Tirol Raiders, i can say i want to vacation in Tirol so bad, truly a magical place, the rural parts look like something out of a fairy tale
@HPSmugscraft6 ай бұрын
It's like that here in Kansas. We'll get a morning of biblical-tier downpours and flooding, followed by a hot sunny day in the afternoon, then tornadoes in the evening.
@aregularperson757310 ай бұрын
As someone who lives in the Great Lakes region I can confirm THE WEATHER SUCKS Especially in Winter
@linuxman777710 ай бұрын
If you think the US Midwest is bad when it comes to snow, just wait until you see Hokkaido, Tohoku and Hokuriku Japan. Literal walls of snow.
@honeycomblord938410 ай бұрын
I've heard parts of upstate New York (Buffalo, Syracuse) can also get walls of snow fairly often.
@linuxman777710 ай бұрын
@@honeycomblord9384Yes, I have been their too, it is very bad, but not as bad as North Japan, it is probably 70% as bad.
@Szili010 ай бұрын
Hungarian living in Tōhoku here, I just love the snow so much here, so different compared to Europe. The powder snow is amazing! Also look up Zaō Snow Monsters (frozen trees)
@bonda_racing357910 ай бұрын
@@linuxman7777yeah Sapporo, Hakodate get valleys of snow. At that point just hibernate til spring !
@eyzmin10 ай бұрын
@@honeycomblord9384buffalo and watertown are the bad ones, cuse is pretty bad but not like them
@samueldickey833310 ай бұрын
Buses that come every twenty minutes? In the USA? Consider yourself lucky! The buses in my city are usually every hour.
@JonathanWrightZA9 ай бұрын
It does not snow where I live in Africa, and a friend of mine visited Sweden in winter. On his return, he said to me: "Jonathan. You know how snow seems so great? Well, it actually fucking SUCKS. It's COLD. It's WET. And it weighs a metric SHIT ton. Be GRATEFUL we don't get that shit here!". I think landing in Europe to a blizzard while wearing African summer attire, and trudging a kilometre through ankle deep snow in flip flops, shorts, and a T shirt, may have traumatised him.
@martonlerant56725 күн бұрын
Tbh. "What the fuck was he thinking?". "Dress like the locals" is always a good idea. And when you aint acclimated to the new location, you will still suffer, regarsless if new location is much colder, much hotter, has much thinner air ...etc.
@poeticider10 ай бұрын
I am a Brit who spent 3 years living in French Canada. The hardest thing I found by far was having to rely on a car and not being able to walk into town- I found this pretty depressing. Likewise the GIANT souless megastores (walmart/costco etc) felt like something out of some dystopian corporate nightmare... I'm also going to add people often thought I was Serbian because of my pronounciation of Québec French...
@neringalukoseviciute178710 ай бұрын
Livening in the USA or Canada is basically playing cyberpunk 2077 in real life
@juliansmith42959 ай бұрын
Where did you live? I've never seen a Costco or Walmart in Québec (or anywhere else, for that matter).
@poeticider9 ай бұрын
@@juliansmith4295 bizarre you say that, they are everywhere. search Walmart / Costco + town name on Google maps if you don't believe me. I lived in Montreal (Longueuil + Verdun) as well as in Sherbrooke.
@quatreunhuit9 ай бұрын
J'sais pas dans quelle ville t'habites, mais à Québec il y a des Walmart et un Costco.
@ender72788 ай бұрын
@@juliansmith4295 There are loads. Walmart in particular is everywhere.
@yoshilovesyoshi10 ай бұрын
I thank God I was born in America every day. But I agree that the extreme political nonsense and car centric culture is pretty annoying to me too. Also, hot take but I'm really annoyed by the fact that unhealthy lifestyle choices are socially acceptable here.
@Dragoncam1310 ай бұрын
The car stuff isn't that bad,depends on the city honestly but the political bs is absolutely terrible
@neringalukoseviciute178710 ай бұрын
@@Dragoncam13 get a bike man
@Dragoncam1310 ай бұрын
@@neringalukoseviciute1787 who the hell is biking almost an hour to the next actual city when living in a rural area?
@yoshilovesyoshi10 ай бұрын
@@Dragoncam13 Only one hour? that's crazy. Most places in US is like way more on a bike.
@yoshilovesyoshi10 ай бұрын
@@Dragoncam13 I like in Bay Area(by San Francisco) and it has one of the best public transit systems in the US behind NYC and maybe DC, and it still sucks because of the suburban areas. Most places in the US I've lived in like Chicago, Atlanta, and Dallas have completely useless public transit systems because everyone has a car, especially Dallas, because you would need a car to get to the nearest bus stop (20 min drive away, imagine trying to walk 1 hour to get out of your suburb). Car centric culture is the worst, especially if you're an immigrant or a foreign tourist and you can't just get a car.
@MoaRider9 ай бұрын
I love living in America but I agreed with pretty much everything in this video, especially the part about how dogshit America's infrastructure is. Visiting the average city here is a nightmare and its borderline impossible to be able to walk anywhere because car companies brought out politians years ago and lobbied (bribed) them into purposefully making everything terrible so people would have to rely on cars.
@aregularperson757310 ай бұрын
As an American all of your complaints are valid and they do lead to many shenanigans
@jeffslote967129 күн бұрын
Complaining about the snow isn’t a valid complaint. Neither is complaining about being expected to be a productive employee. People like him are why the EU and the rest of Europe are falling behind America
@diegocolli8610 ай бұрын
About work culture, in south America you will have the American culture with the European salary (actually smaller) but you can get the picture
@rap1df1r310 ай бұрын
Which European salary? It ranges from like 0.25x to 1.5x of the avg. US salary depending on the country...
@danielbruceagra902210 ай бұрын
@@rap1df1r3 the eastern european one
@diegocolli8610 ай бұрын
@@rap1df1r3 the 0.25% if you are lucky. The average salary for a Macdonald s employee is around 350 Usd per month
@PresidentFlip10 ай бұрын
@@danielbruceagra9022lol
@BeetlejuiceBeetlejuiceJr10 ай бұрын
As an Albanian living in the Northeast, one thing I miss is the warm Mediterranean climate, which is not unpredictable and doesn't include much snow.
@majonezeman10 ай бұрын
Hello Albanian from Northeast, coming from an Albanian from the First Coast. You'll definitely get the Mediterranean temperature in Florida
@aquss3310 ай бұрын
Me in rural eastern Europe: I still have to walk 40 minutes to the nearest grocery store and like 1h to school, car "dependency"
@roxyroxelle10 ай бұрын
or 20-30 min to the bus station, take the bus for like 2 hours (1,5 h if you're lucky and the bus is ok and almost no traffic) just to get to the city where you fill up 2-4 big bags in a hurry, go back to the bus station which is quite hard to do with like 4 bags (or 2 if you have a big trolley), fight the mob to get a dusty seat. don't forget to have enough cash for the ride but not too much because the driver doesn't have enough change.
@davidz26909 ай бұрын
Me in rural western europe: school bus picks me up from my village
@yesec98 ай бұрын
@@davidz2690 Same here in the US (until university when you have to arrange your own transportation, by either living on campus in walking distance, or commuting to university)
@catriona_drummond7 ай бұрын
The thing about America is not just the walking distance. It's the absence of walkways, too. You are simply not supposed to walk anywhere by design.
@NotMe-f5l10 ай бұрын
You ever heard a mf say “I love Indiana”?
@craigzievis207410 ай бұрын
A friend of mine who makes $40k a year has a job offer to move there and make $100k. He is seriously struggling with the decision. That's how much Indiana sucks!
@nickklavdianos513610 ай бұрын
Indycar fans.
@expio425710 ай бұрын
I have....while looking in the mirror.
@crives152510 ай бұрын
DON'T COME HERE PLEASE.
@ryanvinklarek808010 ай бұрын
Yes actually
@neringalukoseviciute178710 ай бұрын
If there’s one problem about this country, it’s that all presidential candidates are old enough to be my grandparents and have probably been to that one island which had a lot of kids in it
@alexhulsebos540110 ай бұрын
Disclaimer: yes the vast majority of areas in the United States is dependent on cars. That is due to the fact that politicians and developers knew that they could make more money off of doing this. Ironically enough though, the “solutions” always involve giving more money and power, to the same people that made the car dependent style.
@Dragoncam1310 ай бұрын
My area is car dependent cause people originally had to ride to the city proper on horseback before everyone owned cars,a large problem is alot of people refused to give up their farmland for city development and cause of that many cities simply didn't
@alexhulsebos540110 ай бұрын
@@Dragoncam13 what area what that be? Just curious.
@Dragoncam1310 ай бұрын
@@alexhulsebos5401 A rural area in South Western Louisiana that's a 10 minute car ride from the city proper and another nearby city,and 20 minutes away from the nearest "major" city which is Lafayette,Louisiana. Took me about 35-40 minutes just to walk to my uncle's house who lived the next street over
@alexhulsebos540110 ай бұрын
@@Dragoncam13 definitely putting the far, in the phrase “far out.” At least on the bright side, at least there’s (I’d imagine at least) less worry about dealing with potentially obnoxious neighbors. 🤷🏻♂️
@Dragoncam1310 ай бұрын
@alexhulsebos5401 there used to be a bunch of sex crimes (youd be suprised how much is incestual) and then getting covered up since the regions are much more morally corrupt than the average city
@lekntakfs107110 ай бұрын
IDK how it is in other parts of europe, but in spain, working face out to the public is still a living hell. Poor salaries and the most unhinged and self entitled people you can encounter every day. It drains your life.
@let_me_explain85729 ай бұрын
An American teacher refusing to teach American national literature is borderline incomprehensible to anyone from any other country in the world
@CocoHutzpah10 ай бұрын
I pretty much agree with everything. I went to college on the coast of Lake Erie and I liked the snow. Without it, winter is dark, cold, and gray with a cloud that stretches over you for weeks.
@smorrow10 ай бұрын
I like snow. It sequesters humidity and puts on the ground and you get that "crisp winter air" that American refer to. Americans talk about high humidity as something you get in hot weather, or being worse when it's hot, but what I HATE, living in a Gulf Stream country is the soggy winters. In Ireland you get snow once a year, for two days, in January. I find it refreshing.
@koldrix10 ай бұрын
4:00 gives me flashbacks of "yOu ShOulD woRk iN tHe ClUj IT iNdUsTrY".
@gimbur692110 ай бұрын
What I hate about america is. How suburbs are designed building walkable suburbs would be illegal in most of america. How bad public transportation is. The way cities are designed. How the highway is designed. The politics.
@michaelsilver25310 ай бұрын
The bit about teachers forcing their politics on kids is funny to me since I got it in the other direction. I realize the difference since it was a private, religious school rather than a state one but a) It's not like I had any choice to be there and b) still sucks being 12 and having your Karen math teacher go on an autistic rant at the top of the day because the state went for a pro-choice candidate in the election the night before
@rap1df1r310 ай бұрын
Maybe it's justified to be upset when baby-murderers are elected...
@spencegame9 ай бұрын
Ive lived all over the US and the worst places always coincide with high population density. Living in the USA is best (for me) when you are in a small community working as a skilled laborer or technician and you embody independence and resilience. When I lived in a city where I didnt need a car, my grocery store was 5 min walking distance, and my commute was a 10 min bike ride I was depressed and hated life. When I lived in a literal cabin fending off wolves, hunting for sustenance, and driving several hours for work I was in constant euphoria. I have a happy medium in a farming community now with my family.
@cattysplat6 ай бұрын
"There's too many men, too many people Making too many problems And not much love to go 'round Can't you see this is a land of confusion?"
@Pisii-chan10 ай бұрын
4:00 damn dude u good?
@LivingIronicallyinEurope10 ай бұрын
No
@Pisii-chan10 ай бұрын
@@LivingIronicallyinEurope :(
@miliba10 ай бұрын
Average Balkan dad 1.97 meters tall, PTSD from the wars, slightly racist and nationalistic, yells at his kids a lot but loves them deep down in his heart, worked his ass off in the forest as a child, smokes and drinks raki regularly
@cze4ever10 ай бұрын
@@LivingIronicallyinEurope Best of luck and as small amount of stress as possible (bots, copyright claims ....)
@friedlemon517210 ай бұрын
@@miliba nailed it
@MemeAnt10 ай бұрын
3:54 As someone who does indeed have some quite extreme political beliefs, no, you are quite justified here. I can see how disruptive the at can be towards your everyday life.
@moriturama966 ай бұрын
Same
@acatacho9 ай бұрын
Ye that was a pretty solid list, shit weather, shit cities, shit school system, shit work culture, shit entertainment options. To that I would add shit food, shit healthcare, and finally shit dating. And to add a bit in that car bit, you are forced to get a car, that you are forced to insure and of course insurance is not cheap, and if you get car payments, God help you.
@The_Foxxo10 ай бұрын
As a romanian who wants to move in US someday Id love to see what you loved about it , and if u recommend any state to move in Edit: Thanks for the people commenting, any comment is useful information and I appreciate you for giving it
@Hongobogologomo10 ай бұрын
Dont do it!!! Save yourself
@TheMarshallCraft10 ай бұрын
Washington state is very nice with lots of good jobs, but it is expensive.
@glorioustigereye10 ай бұрын
I love North Carolina and we are growing very fast and have a very diverse geography and the people are nice. The barrier islands look cool until you realize you spent a fuck ton of money on a sand bar which gets decimated by hurricanes every couple years and the ripe tides on the beaches are a death trap. Now we just use South Carolina's beaches while we mock them for their poor roads. There is a wide range of history here from Native burial mounds, slave plantations and Battleship North Carolina. Blackbeard and the first airplane flight is also pretty cool. We also have the Biltmore mansion (rich guy builds a semi modern castle with an indoor swimming pool). The forests are nice till they get eaten by the wave of kudzu. The Appalachians is one of the oldest mountain ranges on earth which makes it very short. At one point someone had the idea to flood a civil war battlefield and make a lake. Mean while in Eden North Carolina someone duped mountains of radioactive coal ash on the minorities. Speaking of radiation the government dropped 2 nukes here by accident, they didn't go off so it was pretty funny.
@rap1df1r310 ай бұрын
@@TheMarshallCraft And commies and crazy laws... In other words, it sucks donkey balls...
@nik582310 ай бұрын
Whatever you do... do not and I repeat do not move to New Jersey. Avoid it at all costs if you want to keep both your sanity and your wallet intact. Everywhere else is pretty fine tho. Especially the Northwest.
@andreimircea225410 ай бұрын
I would love a video about what you liked about living in the US, because I know that despite their issues, the US still have a ton of great things.
@zhuyu92684 ай бұрын
Do we?
@baller84milw10 ай бұрын
1:17 That's hilarious, because just watching your videos I always thought you kinda had the same spirit/vibe as us up here.
@ridinwithjake4 күн бұрын
I’m also an East European living in the USA and TBH I love the car culture. Love the wide open spaces and daily drives - where I live it happens to be beautiful. It gives you a sense of independence that you could never get with only public transport. Public transport is usually overridden with drugged out losers or weirdos, no thanks.
@caseyjones514510 ай бұрын
Nailed it dude, good video. Part 2 would be fun. Love from N.C.
@ImBadAtNames287610 ай бұрын
i live in south michigan, where we just got ~60 degrees a few days ago, late february. but ive been to the UP where the weather is hardly temperate in the warmest of summers, and combined with the much warmer balkans, i understand your pain.
@Predator2035710 ай бұрын
This video just makes me appreciate that I live in a Wyoming Town and not a City. Except for the Wyoming Winds, those can make cars into temporary Mary Poppins if it feels like it.
@MrAsianPie10 ай бұрын
3:49 I think you're upset about the wrong part of the weather, Midwestern summers fucking suck... Every states in that area is the worst when it comes to allergies acting up. For me specifically my throat acts up and makes it really difficult for me to swallow. I would gladly freeze to death if it means I can drink water without the a searing pain in my throat.
@davidmajer365210 ай бұрын
Please do a what you like about America. You are the rare person who can do both an entertaining hatchet job, and a glowing review. There is no faulting your analysis. Due to affordability, your comment, you would probably end up in the Midwest is probably accurate, though the deep south is cheapest.
@smaevie10 ай бұрын
Mate your depth of meme video historian content is unmatched. Your videos are some of the best on YoutTube recently. Keep pushin!!!!
@slavicgerman510410 ай бұрын
yeah our government is really fucking good at distracting us with bullshit, meanwhile many points in this vid is very fixable if we could focus and force our local governments to cooperate. Many of us Americans share these points, including me. Visiting Germany really helped me both appreciate some things we have, and hate what we have to deal with.
@kosmosXcannon7 күн бұрын
I feel like government decisions often don't align with the interests of the people. It seems like divisions in our society became more pronounced over the past decade. One shift I remember is how the unity during events like Occupy Wall Street faded, and identity politics seemed to take center stage. It feels like that shift was amplified by social media and tech platforms. I've read that changes to regulations, like the Smith-Mundt Act in 2012 and the Telecommunications Act in 1996, may have played a role in how media and information are handled today.
@Spyder31079 ай бұрын
As someone from Houston seeing so much of my city as b-footage was surreal. Despite being the 4th largest city in the US it basically gets 0 screen time compared to any others on the list.
@hugoslavia367010 ай бұрын
dawg, waiting 20 minutes for the bus is nothing. In Australia It used to take me an hour and a half to commute to work via public transport, and my work at the time was within my own city council area. People would drive there from outside the city in the same amount of time.
@craigzievis207410 ай бұрын
It won't get as many views, but the things you liked about the US would be interesting. Great video BTW!
@danieles48209 ай бұрын
Hungarian here who moved to lapland inside Finland. I understand your pain about snow.
@titojuani2010 ай бұрын
As an person ironically living in Asia, I am a proud citizen of USA (That USA is actually a 'barangay' in our town in the Philippines)
@LordDanielG10 ай бұрын
There is a reason why teachers in Germany are not allowed to spread their political beliefs in class. The only politics we were taught are either historical or more neutral. For example when we learned about the Dombass crisis we only learned it like "There might have been russian troops involved but it's unconfirmed"
@colonelfustercluck4869 ай бұрын
even that situation is bad, as we all know Russian troops were involved. I think the story should be factually told, but without embellishment. Especially personal opinion. So, if the Russians invaded Dombass, just tell it that way. The students can make up their own opinions of that. The amount of personal opinion taught in 'history' in my country is staggering and breathtakingly ignorant. Things that never happened are 'confirmed', and things that did happen, denied.... and they are bring up ignorant, woke young citizens who don't know much about recent (last 2 or 3 hundred years) history. IT is quite political, whether you talk the prescribed and approved history (which is often quite wrong), or question some of it. If you question, you can be in for a bad time.
@LordDanielG9 ай бұрын
@@colonelfustercluck486 what country?
@colonelfustercluck4869 ай бұрын
@@LordDanielG..... in New Zealand, history is not a neutral subject and can be politicized. And often is. Mainly about NZ history, but a lot of our media people are straight out liars and spin BS stories about a lot of situations around the world. If there is a 'situation', there will be background stories about the lead-up to the situation.... often blaming the wrong side. Whether it is deliberate or ignorance I do not know for sure. They will cut or edit crucial bits from stories to give an incorrect slant.... so it is quite bad here.
@war-painter6 ай бұрын
“Might” have been russian troops involved. Might have been a whole lot of russian propaganda and fake news inserted in the local newspapers in Donbas convincing the locals that Ukraine was bombing Ukraine. All the while russia was happily bombing Donbas and blaming Ukrainians. Yeah, that was quite a bunch of smoke and mirrors…..
@Baneb19849 ай бұрын
As an American, these are all valid and real criticisms.
@mydogisfast998710 ай бұрын
As someone who lives in Illinois, a former mcdonalds worker, a current walmart worker and high school student, I completely agree with you. Cant wait to get out of here
@Verwaist19989 ай бұрын
As an American, watching an Eastern European start verbally meme-slapping my country is one of the funniest things I've seen in a long time. Pls do more of this, I loved it.
@thehayze25910 ай бұрын
The Culture War stuff got waaaaay worse after 2016. I understand why it's annoying, but you have to understand how unbelievably politically polarized we are right now
@bornabudic139910 ай бұрын
The weather part sounds like that old audio clip Mujo in Canada when he curses the snow that falls every day
@FilipPopovic-oj2fz10 ай бұрын
I'd love a "Everything great about living in US"
@untitled56810 ай бұрын
Ten second video of "absolutely nothing this is the worst place on Earth"
@aestronk-hungryball10 ай бұрын
@@untitled568 he said us not uk
@untitled56810 ай бұрын
@@aestronk-hungryball Thats why I said the worst place, not the second worst place..
@majonezeman10 ай бұрын
@@untitled568"USA is the worst place on earth" people when they see Syria and North Korea
@untitled56810 ай бұрын
@@majonezeman at least people in Syria don’t claim to be greatest country to ever exist
@Ecumenomachy9 ай бұрын
The winters in the Great Lakes are much more mild than they used to be. When I was younger we kept a shovel inside the house to dig our way out in case there was a huge snow storm. Now there’s 1-2 weeks with snow
@martonlerant56725 күн бұрын
Looks like this year you gonna have your "fun", in the dwarf fortress sense of the expression.
@BladeTheWatcher7 ай бұрын
Yeah, I second the toxic work culture - not only in the US, but in US companies worldwide. You need to look busy all the time, everyone smiles at you, but nobody is really friendly. Everyone says health and family first, but everyone expects you to actually put work first, second, and third too. And, of course, everything shouts at you *THE MESSAGE*. Pretty disgusting.
@sjm851010 ай бұрын
Well, since every Hungarian I met living and working in America came from the glorious magnificent capital of the universe, Budapeshhht (even those from Nyiregyhaza) and of course not one of them used to not be a millionaire, I understand your struggle. Kitartas my friend, kitartas!
@SamGarcia10 ай бұрын
Central Ohio, our winters are more or less mild. We had like three days of winter this year versus weeks just 3 hours north in northern Ohio/Cleveland area.
@staccatofootsteps10 ай бұрын
You forgot about option 4 of transportation… the bicycle. Not practical at all times of the year or in certain states, but the combo of biking and throwing your bike on a bus is super efficient. You always avoid the problem of drinking and driving. I mean it’s still dangerous if you’re TOO drunk and you can get a DWI, but it’s a better alternate to getting behind the wheel.
@ggbpartystarter595810 ай бұрын
On the next live, visit the whole ferentari neighborhood in Bucharest.
@Whobgobblin8 ай бұрын
After having lived in an old historic town that was actually very walkable in the US for ~5 years that car dependence really has become like my one never ending gripe about this country, it gets really frustrating
@stinsaaan414610 ай бұрын
I'm surprised you didn't mention the terrible bread they have in the US
@PkmnMasterNeb8 ай бұрын
As an American who can’t drive, the over reliance on cars is horrible. Public transport is either non existent in rural areas or dangerous/seedy in large cities.
@type-1010 ай бұрын
As a Finn, I can 110% agree with your hatred of winter. Not because of overturned cars or whatever since here in Finland we have these things called "nastarenkaat", but because of the "loskapaska", "peilijää" and "kylmä ku ryssän helvetissä"
@SkywarpG1X10 ай бұрын
The non-walkable cities are a actual valid argument. The fact its takes me 40min at best to walk to the closest grocery. Is absurd, I might go run for public office.
@SkywarpG1X10 ай бұрын
1:38 He's never been to the south or Southern California/Nevada. If he did then Serbian man would moaning about the extreme heat. Lets be honest lol.
@war-painter6 ай бұрын
It’s been extremely COLD all autumn, winter and spring this year with rain nonstop, unusual for Southern CA. June Gloom has started in January and not let up…..the heatwaves have been a major disappointment, barely topping 85 degrees at the beach, so hardly extreme heat. I’ve been comparing temps in Eastern Europe and LA and they have been almost the same. The American Midwest has been scorching however, as has the East Coast and South. I think LA is reverting into a rain forest.
@SkywarpG1X6 ай бұрын
Are you talking about Northern Cali? Southern Cali doesn't get that cold during the winter. Compared to the east coast. Also nah LA isn't turning into a rainforest were just not in a drought anymore. Then we got more rain. The past 5 years in southern CA is cooler than it usual is. Unless you live in Riverside or in Fresno. Then nothing you for changed much lol.
@Nero_Jero10 ай бұрын
I am so so glad Croatian immigrants moved to San Pedro, California. The weather for all of February has been mild and balmy, with some rain.
@DreadMindforyou8 ай бұрын
I think it is really sad that pride Flags are a political Sign. Your Sexuality should not be something Political.
@spoons6419 ай бұрын
As a United States citizen. I live in state of Pennsylvania and I 100% agree with all of these you cannot be more right. And I'm 20 I have to deal with this stuff you can't buy a house jobs really don't care for you and everybody wants to do political s*** that's why I don't even have any social media I literally got rid of it. There is some good things please make a second video. Oh and if you are going to visit the US Pennsylvania has nicer people are friendlier as long as you just do your thing and just not cause problems. The best way I can sum up Pennsylvania is we're just that one friendly grandparent that just sits there and watches all the grandkids Who just tries to stay out of family drama. a bit stubborn to change at times but wise.
@AlvySinger10 ай бұрын
0:42 Maybe he ends up not doing the video, so I'll write the complete script down here: It's not the balkans
@lavender_verandah10 ай бұрын
Wait you spent NINE years in USA??? My deepest condolences bro.
@PG3DWinner3510 ай бұрын
10:09 and they say our public transit is bad. Hehehehe...
@rexdevereux664810 ай бұрын
Im Canadian living in Serbia for some reason. I love America, has a lot of issues I hope theyll solve. It has great nature, with good career opportunities, and its founding ethos (that they've strayed from) is eagle-screeching beautiful. Long live the land of the free.
@hestan72310 ай бұрын
Dude understood well that americans needed the snow to be measured in big macs 😂
>"too poor to live in NY or LA" my brother, those are 2 of the 4 worst places in the US.
@majonezeman10 ай бұрын
NYC is fine tbh, other than crackheads, high prices, a bunch of homeless people, and illegal migrants (except Staten Islanders, they're against illegal immigration). NYC is probably the only city in the USA that actually has a working public transportation system. Been to the MTA and it was fine. Didn't get a bad experience out of it. Most I got was a quiet ride to the next stop.
@chardeemacdennis35710 ай бұрын
@@majonezeman "my car is fine except for the bullet holes, overheating, gas leak, slashed tires, and black mold under the unholstery" lookinass
@majonezeman10 ай бұрын
@@chardeemacdennis357 yeah fair point, but if I had to pick between NYC or LA, NYC is the better option. Very walkable and actually has a better transportation system from where I'm from. Also what other 2 cities were you talking about?
@chardeemacdennis35710 ай бұрын
@@majonezeman true, LA is still worse haha. Spent a fair bit of time in both and you're correct about walkability/transportation. *edit. four worst are: San Fransisco Los Angeles Chicago New York Somehow I forgot about SF, probably because I stopped considering it a city a long time ago and more of a debauched hellscape instead, which just happens to have structures within its boundaries. lol
@railroadforest3010 ай бұрын
NY better
@jean-philippedoyon99046 ай бұрын
As a Canadian...looking at that cute weather, my first reaction was just that little of snow in Michigan ? Home Alone lied to me !! Can't imagine in Europe how apocalyptic Montréal or Sherbrooke weather would be...Weak lolll !!
@7luckvlada10 ай бұрын
Congrats in advance for your new viral video🎉🎉🎉🎉
@menschman146410 ай бұрын
My favorite memory of living in a very snowy area of the u.s (New England)was when I was driving up to Vermont to get to university, using speech to text with my mom so I could still look at the road. I was driving up during a blizzard (because I’m a genius). I was nervous about the weather and my mom texted me something about being careful, and something like “don’t worry honey you’ll be fine” and literally the next second I drove by a flipped upside down totaled police cruiser, followed by some dudes car hydroplaning on the slush and smashing into the highway rail. Got to school fine tho and McDonald’s was still open.
@airabinovich10 ай бұрын
On top of that put having to get a second mortgage because you got sick and can't afford the ridiculous health care system