Not knowing why other countries don't celebrate Thanksgiving isn't about not knowing other cultures, it's not knowing your own culture.
@stefaniaori30799 ай бұрын
That’s what i was thinking
@Lord_Ronin_The_Compassionate9 ай бұрын
Sorry but American with culture is quite easily the best oxymoron I’ve come across in a while.
@Diablo_Himself9 ай бұрын
Ah, Thanksgiving, the celebration of lying to Indians before wiping them out! And now insulting them by calling them "Native Americans". Calling Thanksgiving "Turkey Day" is also stupid, for obvious reasons.
@paulavitoria17989 ай бұрын
I was just about to write that... For Pete's sake, Thanksgiving is the most foundational american holiday, maybe even more than the 4th of July (in the sense that it was the first truly American holiday, all the others they celebrate at the time were European holidays).
@karenshields19749 ай бұрын
Bitta both I think.
@jameslewis263510 ай бұрын
I used to have an American housemate and I was talking to him about how George W Bush came over as an idiot. I quoted him as saying 'the problem with the French is that they have no word for entrepreneur'. He didn't think there was anything wrong with that statement until I told him 'It's a French word' that we adopted into English.
@Shan_Dalamani10 ай бұрын
Yikes, what a facepalm moment!
@hikareti950310 ай бұрын
The real irony is that the French are actually more productive than Americans per hour worked. Americans work a lot more of them of course.
@MomoPersikka9 ай бұрын
And you thought it couldn't get worse than this right? But then they voted someone for president who thought it would be good idea to nuke a hurricane, raking forests to prevent fires, injecting desinfectant into our bodies, etc.
@stevetheduck14259 ай бұрын
I once heard an American car mechanic say he'd 'move that over a skosh.' 'Sukoshi' is Japanese for 'a little bit'. Been in US slang since WWII.
@martinyeomans33199 ай бұрын
Had a similar experience explaining kindergarten, wish I'd never mentioned it after being assured that in the USA they don't teach their young children in the German language. I was like , er no no , oh forget it.
@racsoleerf1248 ай бұрын
An actual conversation my dad had as a summer camp councilor in the Southern US in the late 90s. Kid at camp: Where are you from? My dad: Oh, Scotland! Kid:Oh!, my dad works in Russia! My Dad:... He was also asked if they have electricity and running water in Scotland.
@Shebeast36 ай бұрын
omfg😂
@eileendaly1310 ай бұрын
On a trip to USA having just having arrived I went to a large truck stop for food.Still jet lagged I got out my UK money.Realising my mistake I apologised and produced dollar notes.The assistant looked amazed and said don't all countries use USA dollars!
@dazza932610 ай бұрын
Hahahaha
@phoenix-xu9xj10 ай бұрын
OMFG
@breezy339210 ай бұрын
That person did not hear their own words.
@101steel410 ай бұрын
I was working in a shop in England, when an American woman asked the the price of something. When I said 10 pound, she replied "don't you mean dollars?"
@DeanPFC9 ай бұрын
No fuckin way 😂😂😂😂
@ogri2149 ай бұрын
The craziest thing an American has said to me was on a boat trip in Greece. She asked where I was from and I replied England, she then said I've seen those cute English cars, Morris Minors. do you drive one? I said no they stopped making those about 60 years ago, I have a B.M.W. she said Oh an American car. At that point I jumped overboard . lol
@Wolfsong27FlyHalfFullHeart8 ай бұрын
Germans everywhere:owwwww sorry just an aneurysm out of sheer stupidity
@vrenak7 ай бұрын
Maybe she thought it was Baltimore Motor Works, or Boston Motor Works....
@ogri2147 ай бұрын
@@vrenak 🤪
@Shebeast36 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂don't blame you,you can't cure the stupid lmao
@brittking39906 ай бұрын
Lolz one would think with a name like BAVARIAN MOTOR WORKS that it would clue some people to the facts…but not with Americans. 🤣
@sufferable7 ай бұрын
It's not the ignorance that's offensive, it's the downright arrogance that offends!
@sarahsnowe6 ай бұрын
It's the combination. Dunning-Kruger Effect: "The Dunning-Kruger effect is a cognitive bias wherein relatively unskilled individuals suffer from illusory superiority, mistakenly assessing their ability to be much higher than is accurate. Dunning and Kruger attributed this bias to a metacognitive inability of the unskilled to recognize their own ineptitude and evaluate their own ability accurately."
@GenerationNextNextNext6 ай бұрын
@@sarahsnowe I'm an American, and I approve this message.
@QueenMegaera5 ай бұрын
Right!? You don't know what you don't know, and those mistakes can be funny or even cute, but assuming you must know better than the person you're talking to and refusing to back down when you're corrected - that's the offensive part. At least when you're talking about the OTHER PERSON'S culture or country, or their profession. 🤦🏽
@pekojounin8 ай бұрын
On a discussion online about police brutality, an American told me: - Well, Spanish police is totally brutal and anti-democratic. You guys are not allowed to even walk in groups And I was: - Where did you get that from? - I was in Spain a few years ago and the police was completely over the line. - When exactly are we talking about? - In the 70s. He was talking about Spain, during Franco’s dictatorship. That ended in 1975. Before I was born. He was using that experience and extrapolating to the year 2023… Yeah.
@AIHumanEquality7 ай бұрын
He probably doesn't know Spain also helped America gain independence. Every American I've met didn't know this.
@Shebeast36 ай бұрын
😮😮😮😮🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯
@brittking39906 ай бұрын
Wow! Well I’m just amazed he knew where Spain was for starters…most Americans think it’s in South America!! And I would do back flips if he/she knew king Felipe or queen Letizia was….much less Leonor or Infanta Sofia. 🥹
@pekojounin6 ай бұрын
@@brittking3990 I would be surprised if he knew we are a monarchy.
@personincognito39895 ай бұрын
Just came back from Barcelona. It was freaking amazing. Beautiful city, good food, amazing historic buildings, Shopping, everything. I want to go back very badly. Canadian
@DavesFootballChannel10 ай бұрын
The problem is that Americans are drip fed all this BS about being the only country in the world that has anything worth having!
@MissRed928377 ай бұрын
Exactly! I live in the USA, but I’m from Switzerland. Most Americans are like, “I’m sure you love living in the US”, or “lucky you, that you were able to move to the US”. Nope! It’s terrible for me to live in the US. That’s why I’m moving back to safe, civilized Europe by the end of this year.
@DavesFootballChannel7 ай бұрын
@@MissRed92837 don't blame you
@haasteagle49256 ай бұрын
It's called American exceptionalism and it's a real shock to some when they realise other nations don't share this view or attitude.
@LydiaCavaleiro3 ай бұрын
Lived in Florida and when I said I was from Montreal, a few people said ,"Oh I love Europe!" Or "Wow! Is that in Paris?" 😮
@matthewmarshall-watson656910 ай бұрын
Will someone tell the bloke at about 6:18 that there isn't a British version of English. We ORIGINATED the bloody language!!!!!
@101steel410 ай бұрын
And the fact he's nodding along with him😂😂
@Shan_Dalamani10 ай бұрын
Somebody asked one of our Olympic athletes to "say something in Canadian."
@TheCornishCockney10 ай бұрын
Based on Gaul (French) Latin and the Germanic,with over 3,000 new words added by Shakespeare into everyday English language and a smattering of old Dane and Norse.
@101steel410 ай бұрын
@@Shan_Dalamani I've been asked to "Say something in British" 🙄
@Shan_Dalamani10 ай бұрын
@@TheCornishCockney Shakespeare deserves a retroactive Nobel Prize for literature.
@tussk.10 ай бұрын
Working in student services in the UK, I gathered a few American undergrads together at the start of term and explained the rules surrounding funding for foreign students. One girl took offence and started shouting at me that she wasn't foreign, she was American, and stormed out. I never saw her again. Another had brought a book of stamps with them, in case we didn't have a post office and she wanted to write home. The mind boggles.
@101steel410 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂 Americans don't have accents either. Apparently.
@diarmuidkuhle818110 ай бұрын
Hold on; there's people who don't understand that everyone is a foreigner everywhere but in their home country, and that you have to buy postage stamps in the country that you're actually sending the mail from?!
@tussk.10 ай бұрын
What got me was that if we didn't have a post office, how was she going to send a letter?@@diarmuidkuhle8181
@samanthakennedy40239 ай бұрын
You would struggle to buy stamps on the average high street in England now though if your not from uk as our post offices are mostly closed down as of end of 2023.
@valentinvas64549 ай бұрын
@@diarmuidkuhle8181 You underestimate how self centered some Americans can be.
@TiborgSGE9 ай бұрын
"You must be very rich if you have a computer over there in Serbia".I was told this online by an American few years ago.The ignorrance and arrogance of them is just shocking and scary at the same time.
@DavesFootballChannel7 ай бұрын
but you can understand it to a point when you consider how there media pushes the ''we are awesome and all the other countries suck'' mantra!
@gettingcalledoutontwitteri18826 ай бұрын
Oh Boze😅 neka onda saznaju za Nikolu Teslu😂
@andypandy901310 ай бұрын
Here in the UK we DO have a Thanksgiving Day. We hold ours on 4th July. 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@nolajoy775910 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@richardwani280310 ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣
@marleneperlette-Dannpatch10 ай бұрын
lol, love it!😂
@mmckenzie808510 ай бұрын
🤣😘
@Patrik692010 ай бұрын
omg Brilliant! 🤣😂😂😂😂
@JB-vr1vz9 ай бұрын
Queuing in the ladies toilets in Cheyenne, two American ladies heard my British accent and asked me if I knew their friends the Thompsons who lived in London!
@lumasters81979 ай бұрын
That's a common one
@fayewhite75419 ай бұрын
I live in Prince Edward Island a Canadian province on the Atlantic Coast. A woman from the United States commented on a social media page when I said I was from Canada. She asked if I knew so and so in Montreal. 😅
@naomhfermin9 ай бұрын
Bizarrely when I was in Australia as an Irishman, I was also asked did I know so and so from Ireland. 9 out of 10 times I actually did. Put it down to Ireland being relatively small but still 6 million people😅
@emmalisher25599 ай бұрын
Or if you know any members of the royal family is another.
@jilladams75739 ай бұрын
I would have pretended to know them 😂
@JudyB-tw2bp10 ай бұрын
75 year old educated in Canada.. we learned every country and its capital and president, prime minister, king etc in elementary andhjunior high.
@fayewhite75419 ай бұрын
Well, not exactly. I’m a 69 yr old Canadian. I was “taught” all this yes. But didn’t take an interest in “learning” in history & geography. I did begin to take an interest in later years when I dived into genealogy.
@JULOC059 ай бұрын
Wow...every country. Did you really know who the leaders of Liberia, Bulgaria, Australia, Mongolia, and Turkey were?
@JudyB-tw2bp9 ай бұрын
@@JULOC05 I knew it at the time but this was 60 years ago. The world has changed, countries have come and gone, obviously most leaders are no longer in power. We did learn them and their geography and we were tested on that knowledge. I admit I don’t remember a lot but still have a fair grip on country names and while I may not know exactly where they are on a map I do know which continent they are on and approximate location within that continent
@JULOC059 ай бұрын
@@JudyB-tw2bp That would be a long list of names and some are hard to spell. I'm still struggling with Phan Khắc Sửu, Ásgeir Ásgeirsson, Yingluck Shinawatra, Kwame Nkrumah, Yumjaagiin Tsedenbal and Hery Rajaonarimampianina Rakotoarimanana...🙂
@AIHumanEquality7 ай бұрын
As a 32 year old Canadian schools absolutely do not do that. Maybe they did before but we just learn about continents and major places. We don't learn about 200 countries and their rulers and there is no way that was ever part of Canadian curriculum. It would take too long. Junior High is also not a thing in Canada. Some Middle Schools exist but most places go from elementary to a place that's a mix of middle and high school.
@kookymonsta656610 ай бұрын
I have been asked before what the US Lottery numbers were ... I live in Australia which is 15-18 hours ahead of the US due to time zones ... Apparently according to him the numbers had already been drawn and we were keeping them from America ...
@davidmalarkey130210 ай бұрын
In a similar way my friend was asked why couldn't be warned about 9/11 absolutely dumb.
@kookymonsta656610 ай бұрын
@@davidmalarkey1302 Never had that one, thank God.
@charpost6210 ай бұрын
it is amzing when people who live in a country with 6 timezones dont understand timezones @@davidmalarkey1302
@TheCornishCockney10 ай бұрын
😂
@mmckenzie808510 ай бұрын
This comment deserves an award 👏 🤣
@TheCornishCockney10 ай бұрын
“Not as advanced as America” HAHAHAHAHAHAHA. Good one,hahahaaaa
@arianbyw38199 ай бұрын
Yes, America is so advanced that in Missouri, a pregnant woman can't get a divorce because she and the unborn children just property.
@Lady_Azkadelia10 ай бұрын
Some americans seem to take the idea of 'american exceptialism' to the extreme & assume the rest of the world is stuck in medieval times.
@101steel410 ай бұрын
When it's actually the opposite 😂
@vrenak10 ай бұрын
Apparently it's just Europe that gets to be stuck in the middleages, Asia and Africa and South America comes more of as if they're still in the ancient period, or even stone age. I wouldn't be surprised if someone asks an Egyptian on pyramid building tips, or ask a Brazilian on how to build the best mudhut.
@samanthakennedy40239 ай бұрын
Until they go abroad and realise the US is the only place that’s not made progress from old times!
@sarahglover32867 ай бұрын
@@vrenakWell of course, the pyramids are only 100 years old so Egypt can't have progressed since then! 😉 My Dad worked in America for a few years and was there when it was a big anniversary, 350 I think (80s I think it was) of America and he said to his colleagues "My school's older than that" and blew their minds!
@DavesFootballChannel7 ай бұрын
the whole idea of 'american exceptionalism' is extreme in itself
@vtbn5310 ай бұрын
The most dumbest thing I have heard an American say is "Americans don't know countries" but saying it in a way that they are actually proud of it.
@DavesFootballChannel7 ай бұрын
not knowing other countries helps maintain the illusion that they are the best one!
@vtbn537 ай бұрын
@@DavesFootballChannel I think you nailed it
@GenerationNextNextNext6 ай бұрын
@@DavesFootballChannel It helps prop up the American right wing agenda where they put themselves first.
@PloppyTheJailor-vi2uz9 ай бұрын
On holiday in Utah a few years ago. An American asked me about the Death Panels we have in the National Health Service in the UK that decide who gets to live and who gets to die. Scary and hilarious all at the same time.
"Death Panels?" No, not the UK. That's Utah. And mostly, Texas. And DPRK, Russia, China, Turkmenistan,but they choose based on ideology.
@PloppyTheJailor-vi2uz5 ай бұрын
@@clothilde1623 thanks. Spotters badge for you.
@breezy339210 ай бұрын
I had an American friend once whose mind was blown when I told her my country's Independence and Emancipation Days were in August, and that the 4th of July was not a holiday for me. I don't think it ever occurred to her that other countries have their own historical events
@Shan_Dalamani10 ай бұрын
Even on one of my gaming forums... sigh. It's run by a nice American lady who had to have some of our holidays explained to her. There are several Canadian members there and she wanted to honor our holidays. So she tried, and got Victoria Day a bit mangled. That was a couple of years ago, but after I explained it to her, she did it right the next time. And then there was the time when I was on the phone with a customer service person in the Philippines. This was for my telecom, which is based in British Columbia. This call happened to take place on the American Thanksgiving, which of course is just a regular day in Canada. The customer service person wished me "Happy Thanksgiving." I briefly considered explaining that Thanksgiving was 6 weeks earlier, but just opted to say "thank you."
@therealmckoy67724 ай бұрын
I wonder if the idea of July 4th has become so commercialised in the US that it just has lost almost all context.
@boogermaiden4 ай бұрын
@@Shan_Dalamaniyeah sorry. Customer service people usually are just learnings scripts
@christianosminroden78788 ай бұрын
Back in the mid-1990s, a friend of mine spent a year in America as an exchange student, and her host family in all seriousness first wanted to introduce her to „modern American cars“, in contrast to the cars from the 1940s they thought we had in Germany. Mind you, their family car was a Mercedes.
@fredericcharpentier6747 ай бұрын
I cannot imagine the level of vulgarity needed to think that the most interesting thing to brag about in your family is your car. This is something you expect from a parodic character embodied by Sasha Baron Cohen, not real people from real life.
@virtualal10 ай бұрын
Surely, Tyler, Americans not realising other countries do not celebrate Thanksgiving is not about them lacking in knowledge about other cultures but instead demonstrates a massive, enormous glaring lack of understanding about why you celebrate Thanksgiving ? They don’t even fully understand the basis of the celebration. If they did - and then thought about it for approx 2 seconds the question answers itself ?
@asilnorahc89109 ай бұрын
French here. In my english class when we were learning about american culture, the teacher said Thanksgiving was meant to be a festivity to show gratefulness to the natives who... welcomed and helped the colons..? A few history classes later, i kept thinking back on it and wondering if she was wrong, or if the history behind Thanksgiving was a massive 'fuck you' to natives? I then moved on to something else and never researched the answer since, but watching this vidéo brought that memory back and now i must know. What exactly IS thanksgiving and its history and is it as fucked up as my teacher told. On my way to ask google now
@virtualal9 ай бұрын
@@asilnorahc8910 will be interesting for you to research. In any event - why would any other Country bother to celebrate it ?
@naraseth9 ай бұрын
@@asilnorahc8910 It is a massive f*ck you, they are celebrating the slaughter of indigenous people, re-framed as a celebration of gratefulness to not look like a bunch of monsters.
@div33458 ай бұрын
@@virtualalCanada has Thanksgiving too, but on a different date. The reason for it is different too - we just spend the day being thankful we aren’t the USA.
@WhoamI276765 ай бұрын
@@asilnorahc8910 German here, our teacher said the same. I've read that it is true. For anyone wondering: here a link to the websit of the US-Embassy (Botschaft) in Switzerland on the topic: ch.usembassy.gov/holiday-calendar/thanksgiving-favorite-u-s-holiday/
@jessgibson479010 ай бұрын
In the UK we have a saying that you should engage your brain before your mouth. Americans don't learn too easy though. We were in Cambodia at a temple ruins. A guided tour had just finished telling it's batch of Americans the history of the place and one of them says to the rest, "Well you know aliens built the temples anyway".
@ronuss10 ай бұрын
i mean he has a point , just said it in a stupid way
@andysadler643210 ай бұрын
@@ronuss lol yeah right. educate yourself there were cultures for thousands of years before us euros sailed to usa
@Shan_Dalamani10 ай бұрын
@@ronuss I hope that's sarcasm. Aliens did not build anyone's temples.
@Patrik692010 ай бұрын
@@ronuss ..yup, we found the US American guys
@johnthompson4577 ай бұрын
I had a friend that went to auschwitz and told me that an American tourist when visiting the prisoners living barracks of the camp and seriously asked “where do they put all their stuff”.
@junecaffyn35710 ай бұрын
I know an American who said to me “Hey Americans have liberty, freedom of speech we can say what we want!” I said, “ We have liberty in UK too and we have freedom of speech and can say what we want too!”…. I don’t think I was believed!! Maybe they think the Monarchy is like the KGB LOL!!!!!!😅😂😊
@charlestaylor942410 ай бұрын
Not quite true, in the UK we have freedom of expression. We in the UK also have limits - my freedom does not trump yours.
@alexmonroe6139 ай бұрын
@@charlestaylor9424 If you want to stand outside the houses of parliament with a placard you don't have to ask the government for permission.... you do in the Ooh S.A. "land of the free"
@charlestaylor94249 ай бұрын
@@alexmonroe613 it depends which parliament, Holyrood you aren't allowed.
@naraseth9 ай бұрын
@@charlestaylor9424 Every country has limitations, you can't say everything in the US without consequences. In Germany we have freedom of opinion, as they are relative, but not the freedom to bully others or spread hateful misinformation.
@rjflores4389 ай бұрын
I remember visiting the States and telling .woman that I am from Manchester in the UK, she replied by saying, "isnt that in London".
@brittking39906 ай бұрын
Reminds me how every Frenchman is (by default) also a Parisian. 😆
@emiliajojo570310 ай бұрын
UNICEF should set up a program giving every american child a free globe.
@AnnaRamstrom10 ай бұрын
A very good idea
@Pomdownuder10 ай бұрын
Globe? But the world is flat 😅
@Soken509 ай бұрын
Given the quality of healthcare, the amount of drug abuse and state of infrastructure decay, I think the UN could start quite a few programs to help the US develop (only half joking)
@hawkpaul87357 ай бұрын
And then those flat earth weirdos would complain loudly.
@johnthompson4577 ай бұрын
@@Pomdownuderthen a map.
@BKKMekong10 ай бұрын
The Romanian President one was mild, I have heard Americans saying they thought the American President was President of the World.
@101steel410 ай бұрын
And ask people from other countries who are they voting for😂
@DavesFootballChannel7 ай бұрын
self imposed 'world police' i believe the call themselves
@gerardflynn73826 ай бұрын
Did you tell them that there are about 30 - 40 Presidents in the world?
@Shebeast36 ай бұрын
that's definitely a 'tell me your American without telling me your american' quote
@DavesFootballChannel6 ай бұрын
i was just thinking on that very thing
@Tony-c7z9t10 ай бұрын
Tyler we have a saying in the UK "Don't put down to malice, that which can be put down to stupidity".
@Hirotoro469210 ай бұрын
We? I've never heard that one in my life.
@Tony-c7z9t10 ай бұрын
@@Hirotoro4692 well you have now.
@lesleyvivien28766 ай бұрын
It's called Hanlon's Razor, and is attributed to a Mr Hanlon - from *Pennsylvania!* It may have spread to the UK, but it doesn't seem to have got very far.
@Tony-c7z9t6 ай бұрын
@@lesleyvivien2876 wrong the saying was used before he was born, and was only attributed to him by one his friends after he used it in one his publications in 80's , I myself remember using it in the 60's, so strange that I was using it before he was supposed to have used it for the first time, and my usage was picked up from my mother, again yanks claiming to be the first at something that happened well before they were born
@lesleyvivien28766 ай бұрын
@@Tony-c7z9t B-b-but Americans invented everything! I did say attributed. And FWIW I don't remember using or hearing it in the 60s, but then what do I know? I'm English, and we all know England didn't exist till Americans invented it.
@philleader68010 ай бұрын
I'm from the UK and I have been asked, in all seriousness, if we have bathtubs
@lizbignell781310 ай бұрын
What an odd thing to ask!
@breezy339210 ай бұрын
How do they even get that question into their heads?
@AnnaRamstrom10 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@valentinvas64549 ай бұрын
Okay I can kinda understand when Americans think some lesser known countries are underdeveloped but the freaking UK??? Why? How? It's part of the G7 countries and tons of movies and series were filmed in the UK. That is absolutely insane levels of ignorance.
@breezy33929 ай бұрын
@@valentinvas6454 But bathtubs, which have existed in some form since ancient times?
@gagada12410 ай бұрын
Sadly, I think the US is culterally spiralling downward, quickly. I was in the US in 1970 and found it friendly and the people especially teenagers well educated. I visited several times after with the last time being 2003. By 2003 the difference, to me, was huge. Not friendly at all, in fact aggressive, and the teenagers were just stupid and thoughtless with little knowledge of their own Country and even less about the world. I don't blame the people, but those in charge. By the way, I visited 7 states, and people had changed in all 7.
@manueltapia185910 ай бұрын
I really believe you. I used to spent my summer vacations a when I was kid (was 9-10 years old). Then when I was 21 came back in 2004 for Christmas vacations and yes the majority were rude and ignorant and that stay like that to years to come 😮
@Henrik4610 ай бұрын
Teachers' unions and critical theory has most of the blame. Bad teachers keep their jobs and trans Filipino war vets push out basic maths and English. 😏
@MisterEE10010 ай бұрын
The 80's were when America's food standards dropped and fast food took off. Come the 90's loads of banned substances were introduced to their food chain...
@Patrik692010 ай бұрын
..and it keeps getting worser... sadly
@Jill-mh2wn9 ай бұрын
@@MisterEE100 Ooh, interesting, definitely not just a coincidence. I wonder if health issues intensified after that, as well.
@steves99719 ай бұрын
When we moved to the US from the UK, my wife was asked, "What language do you speak?". She said, "English. Better than you." Ouch! But true.
@Diablo_Himself9 ай бұрын
Americans get ONE thing right...the back of the car IS the trunk. Where we got Boot, I have no clue!
@mljwaffle0079 ай бұрын
@@Diablo_HimselfI would guess that as we attribute cars as being female, and the front of the car (hood) is called a bonnet (a form of hat worn by women), that naturally the rear end became boot (like the boots worn on the other end of a women). But that is just a guess
@Kay-uy4xn9 ай бұрын
It's named after the back part of a horse drawn carriage called the boot where luggage was stored (sometimes there was one under the coachman's seat too) . I guess the trunk came from tying a trunk or large case to the back of a car before a covered part was invented. @@mljwaffle007
@iriscollins75839 ай бұрын
@@mljwaffle007At least you're being inventive.😊😊
@OEDODRAGON8 ай бұрын
@@Diablo_Himself Then why is an elephant's trunk at the front? xD
@aidanclarke610610 ай бұрын
Of course Portugal is a city in Spain which is in Europe, Canada.
@Maugirl210 ай бұрын
Lol
@dazza932610 ай бұрын
Hahahaha
@tacfoley444310 ай бұрын
Isn't that part of Africa? Or am I confusing it with Texas? 😁
@JyostnamayeeChoudhury10 ай бұрын
Bro I have heard Canada ins in Africa 😂
@drcl742910 ай бұрын
They speak Brazilian there don't they?
@AIHumanEquality7 ай бұрын
I'm Canadian and I've spoken to many Europeans. Nobody really assumes any American is from any state. Foreigners (to America) don't generally see the US as states. We just see it as Americans. We know there's different states and different sub cultures in the US but to most of the world an American is an American. So I don't think that guy was telling the truth saying anyone thinks Americans are from certain states. He also called it British English which no one does in Europe. It's just English.
@markovilla19 ай бұрын
I'm from the UK and I've visited the US on a number of occasions. Once I was asked "oh, you're from England! What language do y'all speak there??" and on another occasion - "do you guys have, like, countryside??"
@eastendbird41188 ай бұрын
Yup, when I worked in an American summer camp for children I was asked several times “How come you speak such great English?” This was the other camp counsellors btw, not the children!
@Nikki86_Snow9 ай бұрын
Im Brazilian and on the early 2000’s I’m guessing, I’d always go on US chats to practice my English. And I was asked how was I connected on the internet and how was living like Tarzan and living among alligators and monkeys. Yup. 👍🏻 I usually get “wow you don’t look Brazilian, you look like us” or “oh you must have a big butt and I bet you’re naughty” or the best one “Why is your English so good?? Trying to get with an American for a visa?HAHA” Ohhhh the home of the great. 😂😂😂😂😂😂
@Shebeast36 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂omg
@reggriffiths576910 ай бұрын
Well this is pretty much what we have to put up with in the UK - and it gets very wearing! They visit London (always their first stop), they will approach you without invitation and say "Hi, I'an Americam," as if that's supposed to have me in great awe. Then they want to show you a photo of their wife and kids, as if we should be interested. Sonner rather than later, they say where they're going to for their next stop, and ask the way. You give them the route/directions and they'll say "That's not what it says in this Guide." I answer "Well if the guide gives you the answer, why are you asking me?" It's then that the complaints begin to roll in - streets too narrow, streets too bendy, cars too small, hotels not very good, don't think we'll like the food....the list can go on and on, and they expect us to stand and take it!! I'm sorry, I try to be helpful and kind, but I inevitably get my hackles up and respond with heavy sarcasm..They just don't endear themselves to us. Bad manners, eat their food like pigs, and talk with their mouths full of food - and on the matter of mouths, the just cannot stop talking - yak, yak. yak, noon-stop. It seems their jaw has to keep moving all the time, if they're not talking, they're eating, if they're not eating they're chewing. I could write a book on it all.
@davidcronan407210 ай бұрын
I have heard about an American asking why Windsor Castle was built so close to Heathrow Airport.
@reggriffiths576910 ай бұрын
@@davidcronan4072 Yes, unfortunately there is no cure for stupidity!
@nathanblanc62077 ай бұрын
Wow. This is more racist than a lot of the things in this video. I’m Scottish and although I will admit that it seems the U.S.A school system is lacking, that will never be an excuse for you to assume that every person from one country is the way you describe
@reggriffiths57697 ай бұрын
@@nathanblanc6207 You've obviously led a very sheltered life and not met many Americans! Their educational system only teaches falsities like America being the greatest country in the world - forgetting that every innovation their country was built on was British, yet not many of them could point out Britain on a map. They've never won a war, and any major battles they ever won was with allied help. The only country in the world that worships a piece of cloth called a flag - its on their houses, their cars, their offices and shops, their cars, their buildings and even on their jackets. Above all, they love to brag about themselves.So that's not me being racist, it's me presenting the facts.
@shanellemurrey93007 ай бұрын
Oh man this makes me so glad to live somewhere that’s not London or anywhere else that people care about going to. I’ve never actually met an American lol
@adeledoyle66710 ай бұрын
Im irish. My pops used to say, "Everything is easy if you know the answer," so if you don't ask the question, you will never know the answer and live in ignorance ....... in conclusion, ask all the questions..... everyday is a schoolday 😊
@wessexdruid759810 ай бұрын
Since Tyler doesn't visit the comments and interact with people, he will continue happily in his ignorance, repeating the same errors.
@adeledoyle66710 ай бұрын
Maybe someone else will read it and understand that asking questions is not showing stupidly.. its showing a willingness to learn 😊
@wessexdruid759810 ай бұрын
@@adeledoyle667 Similarly, apologising for making an error is a sign of strength - not of weakness. I think a lot of the 'double-down' behaviour is based on being told the latter.
@babalonkie10 ай бұрын
"A healthy human is a human that learns something new everyday".
@ShizuruNakatsu10 ай бұрын
@wessexdruid7598 I've never understood that. When you kindly inform someone that they're wrong, and they get argumentative and defensive, insisting they're right. I am also from Ireland, and had to deal with somebody *insisting* that Ireland is the UK, no matter how much I tried to explain it.
@101steel410 ай бұрын
I had an American ask me if Manchester was an island. As he had spoken to someone on holiday in florida and he couldn't understand them.
@clothilde16236 ай бұрын
Lol 😂 Imagine what he’d have made of Glaswegian, that would be from a different planet!
@ehrmanehrmann71157 ай бұрын
The reverse ones are hilarious because they perfectly illustrate Americans totally missing the point of the post and making it all about them! 🤣
@mellowtopia53768 ай бұрын
I once had an American tell me there weren’t any doner kebap shops in Germany. Mind you, it’s a turkish street food invented in Germany by immigrants and it’s the most popular street food here. We have around 20.000 doner kebap shops in the country. He proceeded to tell me that those shops were not doner shops but gyro shops. Again, I told him no, gyros (with an s) is greek food, we do have some of these, but the vast majority of shops he saw were doner kebap shops. They are to be found all over Europe these days. He refused to believe me and proceeded to tell me that he had family in Italy and they‘ve never heard of doner kebap shops (how he found that out during our conversation was beyond me…) and also he had co-workers who went to Germany for a work trip and they never heard of kebap shops either …. The doubling down was what got to me. I was literally like «Dude, I live here!»…. Nope, he refused to admit he was wrong. Dumbest conversation with any person ever, to be honest.
@Shebeast36 ай бұрын
oy vey
@norwaybaba338110 ай бұрын
Speech is silver, silence is golden!
@neuralwarp10 ай бұрын
Silence is golden; duck tape is silver.
@i4gotchai4gotcha5710 ай бұрын
...and buckshots are leaden!
@CodeNascher_10 ай бұрын
speech is silence, silver is gold
@Shebeast36 ай бұрын
amen to that
@matthiascerebri33156 ай бұрын
Not for them
@sarahbockstege84528 ай бұрын
I’m American and I am disappointed that these things are coming out of peoples mouths 🤦🏼♀️
@101steel48 ай бұрын
You should be used to it by now😂
@sarahbockstege84527 ай бұрын
very true lol
@petermoate54126 ай бұрын
From where would you expect them to come ?
@HanChap26 ай бұрын
It happens everywhere. The dumb things I've heard fellow English people say 😂 Most of us know there are awesome, amazing and intelligent people all over the world ❤️
@val.the.fluffy.potato10 ай бұрын
To be fair, Americans aren't the only ones who think Portugal doesn't exist or think that Portugal belongs to Spain. Some countries need to update their History books, man, that hurt my Portuguese heart 😔
@annfrancoole3410 ай бұрын
Been to Portugal twice on Holidays,☘☘☘💚💚💚
@FuFightersStudio10 ай бұрын
Dont you mean European Brazil? :DDD (That's a one I heard unironically)
@val.the.fluffy.potato10 ай бұрын
@@FuFightersStudio That one I never heard 😭 I mean some people acknowledge Portuguese from Brazil but completely forget about European Portuguese. We are just a tiny rectangle in Europe 🥲
@FuFightersStudio10 ай бұрын
@@val.the.fluffy.potato hey at least people know your country's name - even if wrong context. :P Mine is still called by a name 30 years outdated :D
@gertstraatenvander468410 ай бұрын
I loved Portugal when I was there. The food, the wine, but mostly the people. You are very kind and hospitable.
@adrianpetyt916710 ай бұрын
Do you speak Asian? Yes, I've just taken my exam-in-Asian! (boom-boom)
@stephenlee592910 ай бұрын
Yeeees, close the door as you leave.
@valeireking47198 ай бұрын
My sister was on a tour of Anne Frank's house, There was a ladder to the attic and a long line of people were waiting for their turn to climb up the ladder to peek at the attic. A large woman came bustling from the back of the line up to the front, all the while shouting "Move aside, move aside. I'm an American." Entitled much? Let's just say, she was escorted back into line to wait her turn. I wish that this type of person had the capacity to understand that they are reenforcing a bad stereotype. Sigh.
@MsZumbah9 ай бұрын
President of The United States, Leader of the free world. As an Aussie, I don't remember voting on this one. Which ever team wins the baseball championship in the USA...World Champions... No other country plays in this championship. Had an American tourist yell me (loudly) that we should get Starbucks in Australia because it's the best coffee and the only coffee worth drinking...🤨
@Soken509 ай бұрын
You might not have voted for their presidents but they do make themselves at home in your country with NUMEROUS (not so) secret military bases.
@SnowyRVulpix8 ай бұрын
LOL Starbucks...
@jacquelinehecht72567 ай бұрын
Went to America & didn’t enjoy Starbucks at all, it’s really not good coffee
@arnolddavies67346 ай бұрын
Well, if that were true, it wouldn’t have FAILED HERE IN AuSTRALIA, hey ? I buy sachets of coffee from my local supermarket and it’s great coffee that I make at home for less than 50 cents a cup. Starbucks are trying to sell their coffee in sachets here in Australia. I don’t buy it. We already have good quality coffee here.
@Shebeast36 ай бұрын
🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯
@vallejomach672110 ай бұрын
What Americans need to learn is, when they don't know something, to just say they don't know...and not just spout the first thing that comes into their heads. That would cut instances of them looking stupid by quite a large amount. Q: What's the capital of Namibia A: I don't know Or Q: What's the capital of Namibia A: Is it pepperoni pizza? See the difference...
@CeiStockport-nx2qi10 ай бұрын
Is it still Windhoek or did they change the name after the South Africans pissed off?
@stephenlee592910 ай бұрын
I thought it was Hawaiian, or ham & pineapple.
@elizabethsellors904610 ай бұрын
@@CeiStockport-nx2qi😂😂
@ScpDrRisha9 ай бұрын
LOL 😂
@ExarkunCB7 ай бұрын
A buddy of mine a few years ago was arguing me and got upset because i told him that Democracy has been around for centuries, Greeks basically gave us democracy, he was upset because he was sure than the US invente democracy.
@gertstraatenvander468410 ай бұрын
Yeah, Dutch. Somebody American asked me if we celebrate 4th of July. Then again somebody from Croatia told me she loved Copenhagen after she heard I was Dutch. It's in Denmark in case you also didn't know.
@amyw68089 ай бұрын
Only last week, I saw a post where someone from USA was writing about German pancakes. When asked to what she was referring, she shared a screenshot of a recipe for Dutch pancakes. Apparently she and several other Americans on the page thought Dutch was ‘Deutsch’, so was German. It was an incomprehensible logic to me that they’d know a German word more than their own word for people from The Netherlands. (Btw I’m aware that what Americans call Dutch pancakes aren’t actually Dutch either…)
@soozb159 ай бұрын
Picture this: a university lecture hall in the North of England, 1988. The AIDS epidemic is in the news and a lecturer is talking about the virus and inviting questions from us students. An American student stands and her question is 'do you have a pool?' Stunned silence. The lecturer just moved on to someone else.
@Shebeast36 ай бұрын
🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯
@emiliajojo570310 ай бұрын
It's like wearing a cross,and hearing you can take it off,it's a safe space😂
@karlcx10 ай бұрын
i'm not american, and i know the US states. if i can do it, americans can do it. and they can learn things about the rest of the world too. no excuses.
@Soken509 ай бұрын
I'm not sure I could quite name and place all 50 of them but I'm pretty sure I could get more than half from memory and I'm from France where we already have to deal with 18 administrative divisions (régions) and a cool 101 subdivisions (départements) (no I cannot name and place all 119 from memory either but I know the general vicinity when the name comes up)
@mollydelacy90079 ай бұрын
I get this all the time, when ppl say "I see u look Asian are u Chinese?" I say, "no I'm Korean" and they proceed to ask me, "oh how did u escape?" I now just say I'm from SK instead lol.
@spectre7509 ай бұрын
While working as the manager of the IT department in a company that was purchased by an American company, I had to go to California and explain how our IT system worked and investigate how it could be integrated into the new parent company system. I was working with graduates from MIT, Brown and CalTech, who frankly were as dim as a 40 watt bulb. During one lunch time they seriously asked me if the British still stopped for tea and muffins at 3pm 😡 needless to say, I did all the heavy lifting integrating our MFGPro ERP into their Oracle based system.
@ESJonas7 ай бұрын
When a nation repeats over and over "we are the greatest nation in the world", its people starts ignoring all the rest of the world.
@allyjohnston315110 ай бұрын
old saying, best to keep your mouth shut and let people think you are stupid, than to open it and prove they are right. Some of those should take this saying to heart
@asilnorahc89109 ай бұрын
On the other hand, 'ask à question once, pass for stupid for 5min. Never ask questions, be stupid your whole life.' It really just comes down to humility. Keeping your mouth shut and listen when you don't know what you're talking about, but do ask your questions or you may never learn either.
@allyjohnston31519 ай бұрын
it so depends on the question right and the place and situation@@asilnorahc8910
@jcs20127 ай бұрын
I'm German, and I once met a nice American family moving here (around 2021). One time, the woman asked me where I'm from, and I said "I'm German" and she contiuned "Oh you don't look German. So where are you from?" - btw I'm half German and half South-Korean, but I was born and raised in Germany, so that's what I'm identifying with - and I explained to her everything. She was amazed because she didn't know that Germans were mixed cultures! I mean, Germany took in foreign laborers since the mid-50's and Germany is a very intercultural country. Another thing the women said was that she didn't know that disabled people are *allowed* to take the "normal" bus or a "normal" tram, and that they can move independently without any assisting person!! (FYI, I'm using a wheelchair since age 4) I asked her, what is a normal bus/tram? Here in Germany they're kind of handicap-friendly in bigger cities at the public transportations, so why shouldn't I just go around alone by myself??? I don't need assistance in most things just because I'm in a wheelchair. I just can't walk, that doesn't mean I'm a free person to use every public transportation I wanna use and do the things I want to independently without anyone always being around me 24/7.
@joykoski711110 ай бұрын
The technology thing totally amazes me. As a Canadian, I always find, when visiting the USA that their country is the one lagging in modernity. It always takes me off guard to see someone in a large grocery store paying by cheque (check) or those drive thru bank places that you put your money in a little tube or something. It just seems so 1950's to me. I don't even think my kids know how to write a cheque in Canada, they are that rare. Oh and cash. Not as rare but certainly not as common as it was 10 years ago. No one walks around with big wads of cash anymore. You might have a small amount for coffee or something. These have all been part of every day life in Canada and Europe (and most of the rest of the world) for a long time now. It may just be that Americans hate any change. They have the ability to process in this way but the population prefers the "old" way.
@Shan_Dalamani10 ай бұрын
Please don't assume your experiences are the norm in Canada. Cheques are still used for lots of reasons, and people still use them to pay for groceries (not often, but some stores allow it). And yes, some people still use cash. It's very useful if you want to buy something and the network or whatever you call it goes down. In times like that, cash is the only option.
@HyperDaveUK10 ай бұрын
Our thanksgiving is called Harvest Festival..
@johnsoden741910 ай бұрын
I took my family to Florida in the early eighties and we were in Orlando I was buying some trousers/pants and the chap that was serving me said were yer all from I said we are about twenty miles west of London he didn’t recognise London I then said England he still didn’t recognise England I finally said Europe he said you are all from Europe, I wonder if he new he was speaking English
@cheman57910 ай бұрын
I wonder if new you speaking English
@dazza932610 ай бұрын
You've got to be sh$ting me.
@pipercharms737410 ай бұрын
7:36 I actually thought he was going to say America isn’t a country, it’s a continent and you could be from other countries other than the US 😅
@nu2this_stuff8 ай бұрын
What a great channel I've just found! (instant sub!) I still find it so amazing that Americans know so little about other countries, their school system has failed them. You can't blame the student on the systems/teachers willing ignorance. ( I am not 'sorry' for being Canadian..eh)
@Shan_Dalamani10 ай бұрын
They don't think Europe is in Canada. They think Canada's in Europe. I've had the displeasure of talking to American customer service agents who try to trot out the excuse that they can't help me because they don't have anything to do with Europe or that something is the way it is because Canada is "overseas." I told one of them that Canada is most definitely not "overseas" unless she was based in Hawaii. But she was in one of the cities in one of the states that happens to be due south of here - and I told her that she could go outside, turn north (I was assuming she could figure out which way north was, though many people are clueless about that now), and she could WALK to my place. It would take awhile, but she would not have to cross any bodies of water that were not a lake or river. No oceans whatsoever.
@kirstimeretearnesen12028 ай бұрын
And the fact that your country is between their state Alaska and the rest of teinr states could have been mentioned?
@Shebeast36 ай бұрын
omfg😮
@beverlyhenderson1889 ай бұрын
I remember following 9/11 George W Bush listed "friendly countrys" . He NEVER mentioned Canada my aunt was fuming. "We are connected you know". I travelled to America from UK in 1975 a attendant on the plane asked "Do you have electricity yet?". No I said still candles.
@Vampirzaehnchen9 ай бұрын
American: "Oh this is a safe space you can put that down." Me, a German woman: "Damn I want to know where she got that beautiful hijab from.... but I don't know how to ask properly..." And I thought I was the weird one. O.o (And yes I am well aware that often I could just go and ask but it still feels rude to me to ask strangers where they got their clothes from.)
@UTubeAngelique4 ай бұрын
I remember commenting on a video here on KZbin quite a few years ago and an American ‘scorned’ at me and ‘told me off’ telling me I was a ‘racist’ because I referred (respectfully) to someone who was Indian as Asian!😂 I was like, I don’t know why, how, what, where and who… but Indian people are from Asia!😂 she was totally stood on her soapbox and preaching to the educated! The levels of ignorance blew my mind!
@101steel410 ай бұрын
When my English cousin lived in Florida, the locals were telling him thanksgiving was a Spanish holiday, celebrating the pilgrims journey from Spain.
@deleila_charlie20686 ай бұрын
I corrected a KZbinr who claimed he went to Europe and all he had seen was Rome and he said that everything is expensive in Europe. I told him Rome is a tourist trap and everything is expensive yes but that's not the whole of Europe. And to please make that distinction. So many Americans felt insulted and started insulting me on my comment and I had to delete it to stop the abuse. The ignorance is jarring.
@JenniferRussell-qw2co5 ай бұрын
The irony of some Americans implying that other nations are backward is that the US is lightyears behind most of the rest of the world in so many ways, ie tax systems, contactless cards, healthcare, education, need I go on? The cheek of it! 😂
@DesertRoamerUK10 ай бұрын
The difference in the use of the catchall word 'Asian' is because of immigration trends. In the US immigrants were mostly from East and South East Asia whereas in UK immigrants were mostly from South Asia. In the UK the term Oriental was used to describe people that would be called Asian in the US.
@ashhabimran23910 ай бұрын
Agreed. I just say Oriental if I don't know precisely where they're from. And a good chunk of the British population is made up of South Asians, like myself
@melanierhianna7 ай бұрын
We don't use Oriental any more because that's actually a racist colonialist term which they would never use themselves.
@DesertRoamerUK7 ай бұрын
@@melanierhianna Except for most of the Chinese supermarkets and restaurants! 😄There must be thousands of Chinese owned businesses in the UK called Oriental This or Oriental That. Probably the most popular term! My local takeaway is called Oriental Aroma so I guess that doesn't smell racist.
@Jane.21056 ай бұрын
Americans visiting outside Windsor Castle (UK). Aeroplanes flying fairly low and sounds are pretty loud. Their question was: why did they build the castle so near Heathrow airport ?
@Acelily21795 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂
@EmilyCheetham10 ай бұрын
I’m a brit and I know there are dozens of states. Most Brits know there are.
@JenniferRussell-qw2co6 ай бұрын
Sorry Tyler, I've another tale to tell after my previous one. On holiday in Munich, (a fabulous city by the way), from England, I met an American couple. They latched on to me, so that I could be their guide, (being European seemed to qualify me). Fortunately, I do have a fair working knowledge of the language, (another reason I was useful). They refused to even try a single word of German. At breakfast, in the hotel next morning, they made a beeline for me, and sat down. The man was dressed like a Texan Ranger, no kidding, complete with Stetson, thankfully no gun, (miracle! 2nd Ammendment and all that). I tried to point out, tactfully, that perhaps he should consider removing his hat at the table, it is bad manners to keep a hat on indoors, for men, in most European countries, certainly UK and Germany, particularly in restaurants, cafes & bars. He refused, stating that he was American and had "rights", I left the table, I couldn't stand the shame of all the people looking at us & thinking I was "with" them. I spent the rest of my holiday looking over my shoulder in case they were following me!! 😳🤠🙋♀️
@JenniferRussell-qw2co6 ай бұрын
Oh dear! Where to start? On a plane from London to the US, I was sitting next to a pleasant enough lady who wanted to talk. Fine with me, this will be interesting I thought. She told me that she was from Austin, (with a southern accent), to which I replied, "ah, the state capitol of Texas". She said, "is it? 😳, then, "how do you know that?" I told her we did geography at school. Moving on, I stated that I was from England, a bit obvious perhaps, but she seemed to need help. Her reply to me was, "which part of London is that?" I gave up at this point, it was too exhausting 😴........😂 I love your videos Tyler, I dread to think what Americans say about us, could be embarrassing 🙋♀️
@boosterbuster22978 ай бұрын
When I was at the airport and TSA agent was looking at my passport he was like "I thought ------- ------ is a woman's name?" And my response to him was immediate "Hmmm. I thought USA citizens are well educated - guess we're both wrong." and he just stares at me and taking offense accusing me mocking him - But I simply tell him that observation isn't mocking ;)
@Meme-df1km7 ай бұрын
The most funny thing is what we call bum bags, Americans call fanny packs now fanny to us is Va Jay Jay 😂😂😂
@scelluna8 ай бұрын
Once when i went to the post office in London this american lady cut in line and went straight to the clerk and wanted to buy some stamps. And when people in line started complaining that she cut in line she answered "it's ok im american". The clerk told the lady nicely to go stand in line and the lady just looked confused and repeated "but i'm american...".
@Shebeast36 ай бұрын
pure entitlement
@jang34122 ай бұрын
@scelluna I'm finding it harder and harder to believe some of these interactions; honestly! In all my meetings with citizens of the USA, here in the UK or in visiting the USA, none have behaved so oddly or arrogantly. Have I just been lucky?
@scelluna2 ай бұрын
@@jang3412 One interaction among millions doesnt really say much. But i have had a few odd once with american (USA) tourists. Once in Stockholm, Sweden, one couple (USA) was visiting and asked when the 4th of july firework where happening. They were baffled that Sweden didnt celebrate 4th of july.
@Tonyblack26110 ай бұрын
I spent a lot of time in the U.S. and for the most, never had any problems. People would hear my accent and ask if I was Irish or Scottish . . . neither, I'm Welsh. Again, for the most part, people knew that Wales was a part of the U.K., but some people did think that Wales was in "England". :)
@shirleyanneyoung95510 ай бұрын
Far too many people think England IS the UK.
@ashhabimran23910 ай бұрын
@@shirleyanneyoung955 Americans: London = England = Britain = UK
@charpost6210 ай бұрын
some thinks Wales is an animal
@drcl742910 ай бұрын
Heard of the Laws in Wales Acts? Technically it is part of England. Why do you think these is no representation on the Union Flag?
@shirleyanneyoung95510 ай бұрын
@@drcl7429 They couldn’t fit the dragon on the Union Jack, obviously. 😉
@sooskevington614410 ай бұрын
I always imagine an American globe or map of the world as showing the 48 mainland states in the middle of a vast empty ocean with no other land masses.
@iamgazz27569 ай бұрын
This was hilarious! Thank you. I'm South African. Here's some of the dumb shit I've been asked while in USA: Is South Africa a real country? Where is South Africa (literally the name of the country!) Do you live in mud huts? Do lions and elephants roam the streets? Are there white people there. (asking me - a white person). Why do you speak English? Do you speak "African"? Do you have electricity and running water? Do you hunt for your food? Do you have malls and stores? Do you have airports? Do you drive cars? Do you have tarred roads? Do you have internet/phones/computers? Do you have a pet {insert wild animal} Can you see Kilimanjaro from your house? (Tanzania is 2 countries away from South Africa). Americans.... you funny!
@solomonzuberi21186 ай бұрын
My first time in the States: the first day at an American University; I was asked if I rode a camel to school in Karachi, Pakistan. 🤣😂 And I remember the shock on his face when I told him: No, Honda Civic ... last year's model. Mind you I was surprised too, so surprised that I actually answered him instead of laughing at him.
@gamingtonight15264 ай бұрын
As a Brit I lived in Texas, I live in London normally. A Texas said if I knew a "Brian" living in Manchester? I pointed out Manchester was a city of a million people.
@EllenKlever-c7k6 ай бұрын
Being wrong is not a bad thing but not to aknowledge you are wrong after being corrected, is. That arrogant attitude is the thing that bothers people the most.
@martinm89919 ай бұрын
6:49 ...and also Venezuela, Brazil, Panama, etc. are in America too
@claudiafernandes11509 ай бұрын
This one came from an online discussion I had with an American. So basically they kept trying to convince me that portuguese people ( BTW IM FUCKING PORTUGUESE) were descendents from black people and that we weren't really european because our eyes are mostly brown... the fact that I explained how blue eyes were a mutation that came way after the first populations established themselves in Europe and that Portugal is actually considered a monoethnic country (95% of the population has the same cultural and genetic background) and still I was called a racist for saying that brown eyes have nothing to do with race
@boogermaiden4 ай бұрын
Oh, a lot of Americans think that way. Their idea that if you're dark skinned, then you must be automatically Black! 🤦🏻♀️
@SallyH2473 ай бұрын
I couldn't help but chuckle about the "Riding Elephants" in Asia one coz I was on holiday in Thailand a few years ago and as we were strolling back up the road to our hotel one evening, this Thai dude just casually sauntered past us ON AN ELEPHANT! then stopped and said "Taxi?" 😂😂😂😂
@robindude818710 ай бұрын
My favorite quote from these comes from, I think, the first one. "Stupidity is, by no means, a uniquely American thing. But when Americans do it... damn, they do it well."
@christinamann36409 ай бұрын
I was watching a video not long ago about Karens and cops. This one was spouting off about his rights as stated in the US constitution - while talking to an RCMP🇨🇦😂 so concerned about law but doesn’t know much geography 😂
@chineloanazodo23777 ай бұрын
Africa too... You say "I'm Nigerian", they say "I visited AFRICA last year". I'm like Nigeria is a COUNTRY! Africa is a CONTINENT! comprising of MANY COUNTRIES!!!😠 I really hope we will one day win this word battle!
@clothilde16236 ай бұрын
It’s truly staggering (and baffling) how many Americans think Africa is a country. It’s not like it’s a small continent with just a few countries!
@arnolddavies67346 ай бұрын
Geography teachers urgently needed in the USA………Residents of the USA need not apply.
@ankitamandal53016 ай бұрын
19:08 As an Indian 🇮🇳 if some American would ever ask me " How do you guys get around? " I would reply " You know what! We Indians have some special elephants with wings along with normal ones ✨ thus we do get around. But it's a secret, We don't share it with everyone but you know what U are spacial that's why I'm sharing 😉✨" 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@kykaf4 ай бұрын
I'm from Brazil (I live in the Amazon state) I was talking to some North American online...using a webcam... -from my house- At some point the person asked : Oh, wow! do you have internet there? Is there electricity? I got shocked 😮 (Duuuude, I am talking to you through the Internet! Using the same app you are! How come?!) So I said oh no, I'm using smoke signal here... 😒🙄🤣
@damiangordon88939 ай бұрын
most americans should sue their schools for not giving a correct education and for being self centered. the world doesnt end at the borders of america
@janolaful10 ай бұрын
A few years ago i was in a airport i just came in from Spain and got talking to a couple they asked where i was from i said i was born in new york Lincolnshire, then they said you have no american accent doh
@harvelle243210 ай бұрын
I think the majority of 'racists' just don't UNDERSTAND cultural people from MANY countries. It's education that is needed in schools. It's not an 'American people' thing. It's a whole world thing that needs to change.
@stufour8 ай бұрын
I think what many of us find frustrating is when they double down after being corrected.
@IceTea19834 ай бұрын
I've been guilty of culture ignorance, so I'll share the biggest piece of wisdom I learned from Benny Hill: Never Assume, because when you do you make an Ass out of U and Me!
@Sayitlikitiz1017 ай бұрын
I imagine the poor Chinchilla just roasting in the Western Australian heat. 🥵🥵
@paigemprice5 ай бұрын
Oh man, now Im imagining lines of elephants at traffic lights 😅 Also, the last one made me laugh because I was watching a trial and the captions read a "chinchilla of evidence" and later "motion in lemonade"
@janbuchener1927 ай бұрын
US girl with also mexican roots said: Oh you're from Switzerland alright, but it's not that good there anyway, I have visited. And when I asked where exactly, she said Paris. And she knew it's in France, but just claimed Switzerland was just like Paris. Come on, alps and cows and all.. It's just so different. And how would you even know two places are the same when you have just visited one of them? That was by far the dumbest thing any american has ever said to me. She also got very angry when everyone laughed at her when I made fun of her.