Next time you do a video like this, say temperatures in centigrade as well. Most of planet earth aren’t as backward as Americans. Sort it out!
@10ishPodАй бұрын
Or, I could serve my audience, who is about 80% U.S.-based 🤷
@jimgreen5788Ай бұрын
10ish Podcast, did you really need to use the terminology at 2:46, as well as 3 or 4 times more during the video? I won't return. You could increase your viewership much more quickly by curbing the color of your speech. Many people don't care, but a lot more than you apparently realize do care. Your call. When I was on vacation to AK from here in IL back in '84, I took a tour to the Arctic--Nome and Kotzebue. The night I was in the latter, I got to see the midnight sun on the back deck of the hotel I was in--not the Aurora Borealis, but still quite amazing. This is free: Ulaanbaatar = oo-lahn-BAAT-er, which separates Russia from China. Same for the next entry--Utqiaġvik = oot-key-AH-vick/known as Barrow until 10/4/16. Harbin, China got the em-PHA-sis on the wrong syl-LA-ble (😀), in that it's har-BIN. At 7:01 is a shot of their annual ice sculpture festival. Nunavut = NEW-nuh-voot [as in ‘boot’]. Putting houses on stilts, as they do in Yakutsk, is also done in arctic AK, and probably anywhere in the Arctic. I've had these other pronunciations on my computer for at least 5 years, since I started collecting them from all over the US and Canada, after watching a video here of people from 1 state trying to pronounce place names in another state, and thought I could add to it. The US part is sitting at 2589, with the Canadian version at 345. However, the final entry I remember from a TV program decades ago about the place. Oymyakon = oim-yah-CONE. No charge.😀