I loved the woman that called Americans colonialists. Coming from the original colonialist power in the world, that's rich.
@duncanbrown7310 Жыл бұрын
Colonialism existed long before the English started doing it.
@poggo7 Жыл бұрын
Lol America was a part of that, so technically, Americans were also that power for a time. (Ya know, because they were british)
@L-MIRL Жыл бұрын
My ancestors lived in New Mexico and Texas long before they became US states and that was because these people’s British and German cousins who went overseas and encroached on the indigenous land of my ancestors. I’m American just like anyone else born here but I don’t identify with an ultimately western European- derived American identity or pride.
@eduardogardin879 Жыл бұрын
After all has been said most of the world in on line to live in the US specially since here they have the liberty to criticize this country…????
@poggo7 Жыл бұрын
@Adam-tx1tr Yes, I was talking about European Americans. When it comes to Mexicans, they came from the amerindian populations with Europeans and Africans. When it comes to the indigenous Americans, that's a bit harder, but the first or amongst the first to colonise the amercas came from eastern eurasia around 30,000 years ago. That stuffs just been happening since the beginning of mankind.
@HallieEva Жыл бұрын
Too direct, too happy, too honest. I'll take that as a compliment.
@onlybygraceistand7886 Жыл бұрын
That’s exactly what I thought lol…. I didn’t realize that these were character flaws. They’re attributes I try to be better at.
@jorvikaengelskvinna7157 Жыл бұрын
If I may - these words have slightly different implications in England. 'Too direct' to us means you aren't tactful. 'Too happy' means emotionally shallow or attention-seeking. 'Too honest' means impertinent or blunt, or just over-sharing. Conversely, many people think that the English speak in euphemisms all the time, or are emotionally repressed. I'd suggest going further than London. Londoners aren't too keen on anyone outside of the home counties, either.
@Maitreya0208 Жыл бұрын
Too rich….you forgot too rich.
@djinnxx7050 Жыл бұрын
@@jorvikaengelskvinna7157 "if I may", really? And where were you raised with a silver spoon up your brass eye... That puts me in mind of two gentleman in sporting gear, shotguns folded over an arm as they both stare into the distance: "If I may old chap, I do say, i say, isn't the weather rather wonderful this time of year, absolutely delightful. The pink cyclops simply hasn't been so stiff since your wife left you... *awkward cough* ". Awful humour aside, you're right about the difference in implication, interpretation. I'd add that being too direct over here is often more about negative intention behind the words than the words themselves. If you call someone a cunt with a cheeky smirk, one that cannot be so easily faked, that's perfectly acceptable, but to call someone a cunt without any hint of amusement or a jovial attitude, even if it's a deserved and accurate observation, you're somewhat crossing a line. Not in the sense that it's wrong to be honest with people, but because things are potentially about to get more exciting than most would prefer, and we have a degree of civility to uphold. Being too direct risks shattering that particular illusion. There are better ways to be honest whilst retaining the illusion of civility, and it's called downplaying the severity of it or pretending not to be all that bothered, or politely communicating disapproval. "No, no, I'm not offended. I just think you could've warned me before you made such a decision." As opposed to "Oi, why'd you tell the gaffer that I've been leaving early, he's docked my pay now, ya bloody clagnut.". We have our class system to consider as the rules differ a little. As I laugh at your "if I may", and do so under the assumption its something you did with purposeful intent of amusement, there's a decent possibility that you are actually sincere and so we display the class divide. My amusement at your expense lacking tact, thus I'm too direct for the upper class, yet perfectly suitable to the lower class where such things are ridiculed. People here don't like when you talk fancy, say anything with more than three syllables and you're accused of using big words and being above your station. I once said to a colleague "hypothetically, you're a prick of such proportions as to be proficient at causing intense discomfort to others.", he said "Fuck off with your fancy words.", and apperently he won that one. These plebs have no appreciation of the language. The yanks don't have that class divide, nor the thick skin borne from the bleak existence of a Brit at the lower end of the system. Look at the toffs here, they can't handle it either, they're British but they're soft, pampered by excess, not hardened by bitterness as the average brit is. But perhaps much of that is fanciful and were just dicks.
@blindmown Жыл бұрын
@@onlybygraceistand7886 we have a very long history of being conquered, plagues, and generally dying in horrible ways. It's also constantly raining here as opposed to the endless sunshine in CA and parts of the US. We also have a pretty entrenched class system. This breeds a certain outlook on life. Don't rise above the crowd, don't betray your class, don't tempt fate by being overly optimistic, etc. American optimism is quite grating for Brits in general I think. I've been to the US a few times and the main thing I noticed there is that everyone I talked to thought they were going to "make it" and achieve their dreams. Despite the chances of that actually happening being small. In the UK we're more practical. We generally accept reality instead of trying to fight it. It can seem pessimistic maybe, but I'd argue that it is defensive, and actually quite effective. I watched a video that said you'd have to be optimistic to get on a boat and travel across the world to settle new land, so it makes sense why Americans are how they are. But give it another 1000 years, and we'll see if America still feels optimistic, haha.
@drcrocodile1 Жыл бұрын
Anyone who judges a person by the country they come from has not traveled enough. The US is HUGE. Are some of us annoying, and loud, and ignorant? Of course. And some of us are respectful, and nuanced, and educated. Just like people from everywhere else.
@garrypaton2763 Жыл бұрын
well said.
@Mandita1392 Жыл бұрын
Yes, well said!
@bluebellbeatnik4945 Жыл бұрын
yeh but most americans don't travel outside of america, so already there's a problem.
@pushslice Жыл бұрын
Absolutely, thank you for pointing this out. These interviews were much more clearly an indictment on the general ignorance of these specific Brits, than a comment on Americans or anyone else. Maybe that was actually the presenter’s objective for this video ??
@Mandita1392 Жыл бұрын
@@bluebellbeatnik4945 I don’t know if that’s necessarily true. There are many Americans who have traveled and don’t try to immerse themselves in whatever countries cultures and such. If you don’t actively try to learn while you travel to other places, you’ve done yourself a disservice. I say this from just my personal experience, knowing some folks who only travel to vacation spots. Also, I know plenty people who are “respectful, nuanced, and educated” but has never traveled out of the USA. But obviously, this is just my experience with people. Sorry for the long reply. Your comment made me think lol Edit: I felt the need to clarify my comment. It was a response to a commenter stating that most Americans don’t travel outside of the US. That just isn’t the case. ALSO, there are both Americans that have traveled and are still “annoying, loud and ignorant,“ and there are Americans who have not traveled and are “respectful, nuanced, and intelligent.” Basically you can’t judge someone based off of where they’re from. Hope that helps.
@dansouza1623Ай бұрын
Brits: "Americans rub me the wrong way" Americans: "We don't think about you at all"
@janpetsch6203 күн бұрын
😂
@bopeep863 күн бұрын
Ya, we really don't care. They must have some complex about attaining somethings better. Which is USA, AND I guess they are feeling insignificant?
@WingusXL2 күн бұрын
@@bopeep86Theyre attached while we just living life
@ryan_b_9382Күн бұрын
I mean that's not true at all though is it? 😅 Yanks are obsessed with our culture. Our history, actors, musical artists and royal family are constantly thought of in America. Maybe you don't think of us in general on a daily basis but neither do we think about you. This interviewer was specifically asking Brits what they think of Americans. It's not as if we go to bed thinking "damn Americans really rub me up the wrong way'. 😅
@arcadesurvival8469Күн бұрын
Well said. Who cares what anyone thinks. We have enough problems of our own
@999941397 ай бұрын
As an Arab middle eastern . I visited USA twice now and all the people I have met were nicest people I have ever met , welcoming , always smiling . perhapse the US are not the best in politics and foreign relations , but most people are nice and friendly , hope I will visit soon.
@brandonnguyen67187 ай бұрын
American here, thanks for the compliment, but you do kinda have to incorporate the tourist factor. If you stay in like the touristy parts of any country, they're going to treat you nicely, just by the virtue of you being a tourist.
@999941397 ай бұрын
@@brandonnguyen6718 my family visited Paris , France a few years ago and they went to the touristy areas , they weren't that nice even though they 100 % seems tourists and some people there weren't that nice and ocassionally racists (given the circumstances our religion and hijab) , compare that to US , the Americans are waaay much nicer and your customer services are unmatched , so again thank you USA.
@Liquidmetal7027 ай бұрын
Yeah are allies are starting to feel diminished so they’re beginning to badmouth us but as a tour guide ive come to found people who travel here always consider Americans some of the nicest most accommodating cultures of all time
@Liquidmetal7027 ай бұрын
If Americans are so dumb how are we the World power. Tell these foreign women to read a book
@EgoExit7 ай бұрын
Sending love and happiness to you from Connecticut, America
@Yewbzee Жыл бұрын
As a Brit having worked with many Americans over many years I would say the Brits that are critical of Americans will generally be those who don't know any on a personal level. Americans are great people and I personally have a lot of time for them.
@bigfootpart4therevengeancing Жыл бұрын
Thank you for that. I'd posted a pretty scathing comment about the royal family, the weather, and British arrogance, but that isn't fair to the lovely people I've met over the years in London and elsewhere. While I am no fan of the royals or the weather in the UK, I have met some great folks over there, and some snobby pricks in a KZbin video won't change how much I have valued knowing the people that I have personally met over the years.
@mylesgray3470 Жыл бұрын
I’m an American who worked with a handful of British near Manchester. The British were the must fun and most thoughtful/outgoing people I ever worked with. They were always cracking inappropriate jokes which were hilarious and they wanted to go get some lunch or dinner and a beer after work. You don’t get that in the American workplace very often. I should add, they were very hard working and helped greatly with the work project.
@DenaInWyo Жыл бұрын
Thank you. I am so frequently embarrassed at the easily generalized view of the "typical" American. I promise we're not all like that.
@isddesigner7 Жыл бұрын
My grandparents moved to the U.S. because my grandmother was slowly starving in Scotland. There wasn’t enough food for the family even though my grandfather had a trade and worked to support his son and wife. She had worked before marrying him as a lady’s maid but quit working after they married. Times were very hard for Scotland so many people moved temporarily to the U.S. and some people then decided to stay because there was loads of work for good tradesmen.
@zenstoriesandmore5393 Жыл бұрын
i thought british people and american people are same, may be related.. isnt it though?
@rpiereck74 Жыл бұрын
I was born in Brazil, learned English in England, then moved to the US. I have been all over the USA, 46 states so far, and anyone who makes any generalization about Americans had no clue what they are talking about. The USA is a huge country, with a very diverse cultural make up. You can't generalize any country, that is the definition of prejudice, a set of pre-conceived notions about a group of persons that isn't based on reality. Want to know Americans? Go spend a good amount of time traveling in the US, especially away from major urban areas.
@MarriedWithPizza Жыл бұрын
Hi, there. From Brazil, too. I moved here 15 years ago. The amount of friends and family that love to talk about Americans back home is insane, and they never even set foot in the country. I tell them, if Americans talked about brasilians the way some brasilians do, we would go to war.
@mj-np9sy11 ай бұрын
lol as an American absolutely do not travel away from the major urban areas, unless we're referring to the national parks and BLM land and things of that nature. The rural areas in like 80% of this country are bible belt hell or plains. Like, rural TX? Hell no. Dripping Springs or Cadot Lake? Sure America is NOT a "leave the tourist trap areas city/states it's better" unless we're referring to the outdoors, but those are tourist traps. Like, yes go to Austin, no don't go to Kileen.
@rpiereck7411 ай бұрын
@@mj-np9sy i prefer to stay away from major urban areas. America's countryside is an amazing place full of great people. There are pockets that suck with shitty people, but most are quite alright.
@Artist1974CH11 ай бұрын
I live in the US, and this country has a reputation of putting down other countries that does not worship US Imperialism, and most Americans go along with this crap! Not all Americans are good wholesome people as you think!
@rpiereck7411 ай бұрын
@@Artist1974CH I never said ALL are. Anywhere in the world you will find shitty people.
@maureen1413 сағат бұрын
After watching this, all I can say is Thank God I'm American! I am so happy and proud. 🇺🇸
@Lonesome__Dove Жыл бұрын
I love it when people in other countries tell us what its like to live in America. When all the information they have is from social media. Solid. Absolutely solid.
@cuckootown9478 Жыл бұрын
My point, too👍
@omniframe8612 Жыл бұрын
Exactly…But theyre so worldly and smarter …but cant come to that super common sense conclusion apparently.
@jayforrester5528 Жыл бұрын
Yeah your healthcare system is excellent and everyone can afford it and nobody is in danger in your schools. They just don't know that because they dont live there. They believe that people actually go bankrupt because of healthcare but that never happens because they don't even live there so...
@Utubedeletescomments Жыл бұрын
North America or South America?
@dhenderson1810 Жыл бұрын
@@jayforrester5528But the British gush over a family of people who rules over them based on no more than birthright.
@Louisa536 Жыл бұрын
I'm from Genève in Switzerland and worked in London and Paris as a hotel receptionist, next to Uni, for 3 years. I genuinely liked guests from the US, as they where usually very friendly and generous. The stereotype of the stupid and too loud American is very similar to the one about the arrogant and rude French or the boring and somber German and so on... you can find some truth in those stereotypes but they remain stereotypes at the end of the day and won't hold up for long when you find yourself face to face with real people. That being said, I will never not be amazed about the fact that only American guests used to ask me, completely flabbergasted, why I didn't speak any Swedish, you know, being from Switzerland and how French was my first language😂
@Jay_in_Japan Жыл бұрын
It's understandable that Americans wouldn't know as much about Switzerland as a European. Y'know, since America isn't in Europe. How much do you know about Mexican culture, for example?
@lexj23 Жыл бұрын
Americans, for the most part, remain woefully ignorant of geography and languages. This is a massive failure of our school system, among many others, which I sincerely hope changes in time.
@nicolasderhodes9164 Жыл бұрын
the average European won't ask a Latin American if they speak Mexican, whereas an average American would... @@Jay_in_Japan
@user-yb6xn3ut7o Жыл бұрын
@@lexj23Is this based on heresay? That's right, all 332 million Americans are woefully ignorant about geography. Interesting, because before I left the USA to live in Switzerland for 2.5 years not once did I think I was living in Sweden or wondered why the Swiss spoke German, French or Italian. The USA is a massive country with a wide range of school systems, some that have a lot of funding and are of a better quality and then some not so much. Those from relatively tiny, miniscule countries are woefully ignorant to the vast size and scope of the USA and how many millons live there resulting in a wide range of education levels. Also non North Americans are woefully ignorant to the fact that the majority of Americans aren't rich and live in million dollar homes. Some don't even eat McDonald's. Imagine that.
@lexj23 Жыл бұрын
@@user-yb6xn3ut7o 😂 Per another comment I made, it’s a generalization, and it’s based on my personal experience living in different parts of the US all my life, having many friends from different countries, and having traveled quite a bit of the world. I am also not ignorant and am a polyglotte, but I am not a “typical” American. I agree with your comments on the US being a large country which yes, many don’t understand outside of this country either. Your reaction is hilarious though. Why so upset at observations? What I said is of no shock to anyone but you, apparently.
@Rockhound6165 Жыл бұрын
Nothing makes me chuckle more when I hear a Brit talk about American imperialism.
@eduardogardin879 Жыл бұрын
You stole my comment. It’s also funny that the USSR called us imperialist why they subjugated so much of Europe
@Bugginout79 Жыл бұрын
Lol I know right, the place that colonized 3/4 of the world 🤣 It’s prob a little p envy. Because the mighty nation got their butts handed to them by a bunch of farmers who not only took their land but kicked them out and then became so powerful that they need us to help them all the time . It’s like being a cuck.
@Ego_Sum_Nemo Жыл бұрын
U maybe need to look up what imperialism means doodle dandy
@jeffharrison1621 Жыл бұрын
I think you do, because you obviously don't. @@Ego_Sum_Nemo
@Rockhound6165 Жыл бұрын
@@Ego_Sum_Nemo oh look. A keyboard kommando who likes to call people names over the internet because they're too much of a coward to do it to someone's face but I'll play along. Give me a country the United States has colonized. I'll wait.
@benderdy38933 күн бұрын
Imagine being in a place with so little freedom that one can't even carry a pocket knife, and looking down on much more free people.
@AquinoFamily992 күн бұрын
Yes! and our healthcare is still our choice. They talk about their healthcare but it comes out of their taxes and ultimately the government decides what healthcare they’re eligible for. I do think they’re mostly wonderful people just like most of us Americans.
@Gblonkers20 сағат бұрын
We can’t carry knives because we have a stabbing epidemic 😂
@tshandy112 сағат бұрын
Indeed. I am an American but also an anglophile. Nevertheless, the things I appreciate about Britain (England in particular) are the things of history. It seems their time has come and gone.
@GreasingTheUnion10 сағат бұрын
Can’t forget about the people being arrested for their social media posts.
@helixator39759 сағат бұрын
Imagine living in a country with 20% of the world's prison population, despite only having 5% of the global population.
@katerinejonhson44163 ай бұрын
I’m Dominican living in the United States. Americans are one of the most generous and friendly people I know. This taking under consideration that are come from a country that people are very welcoming. I have visited many states within the country and people are educated and very welcoming. Specially out side the big cities. They treat you like a person and actually enjoy knowing about other cultures and nationality. Yeah there are always some bad apples but that is in any country. I feel very grateful to be a US citizen and I love this country as much as a love my native country.
@jeabo0adhd2 ай бұрын
Nice to have you as a fellow American.
@michelleespino98142 ай бұрын
Coming from a Dominican American, this is very powerful. Your home country is very welcoming. To hear that you find us welcoming warms my heart. Cheers country mate.
@Madeleine-n4g2 ай бұрын
currently living in England honestly this country looks like a third world country.
@Irishlen642 ай бұрын
I am proud to call you a fellow American. Please do not vote for any MAGA because they will deport more good people like yourself.
@johnogrady24182 ай бұрын
@@Madeleine-n4g All of us have our bad bits.
@fraycrof5 ай бұрын
I’m an American and have been to Europe and the UK many times. I have met both rude and nice people on these trips. Of the people who were rude to me, I never thought it was because I was American. I just assumed that they were naturally rude people and hoped that they would one day find a way to be happy.
@Z_Victory_Z4 ай бұрын
You're naive. The absolutely hated you because of your accent.
@fatmaorsun4 ай бұрын
Love America because they showed the whole world that when a common man works hard, they can THRIVE. British can continue making movies of their queens and golden ages of history, how coming from a rich family or trying to marry rich family instead of contributing to the community and the world. Work Hard, Trust God, All will be well! Many Pharaohs and dynasties died because they taught they were special and minimized what is important. The character of a hard working man who trusts God and works honestly, spends for family, who shares with neighbors and who saves for future. That is golden here. Spend, Share, Save.The superior is the one who does their job WELL. Race or Rank is not important as your dedication and hard work. All will be well. God Bless America and The World!
@jamestrent-nw9zb4 ай бұрын
I am American and my best friend is a balloon called Gary🤠
@wendysullivan19094 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂 Gary.
@jayclarke66714 ай бұрын
The English are often rude, there's no surprise there. Also, they need more dentists 😅
@emilyrosealexandra Жыл бұрын
I feel like if you interviewed us outside of London you'd get very different answers - this is not a correct representation of people in the UK and how we feel. Some are bemused over here when I say this but I love Americans, they're my favourite people to meet whilst travelling in Europe. Sorry to sound cliché but their enthusiasm and happy nature is so endearing to me, compared to our natural pessimism as Brits. I've never met friendlier, kinder people when travelling. Yes you can hear them and spot them a mile off but I find that part of the charm. Every American I've met has openly invited me out to America and offered me a place to stay, so hospitable.
@SirHargreeves Жыл бұрын
It’s sad to see these kinds of videos that goad people into saying negative things about friends and allies. They are trying to drive a wedge between us. Don’t let them.
@tanyareavis787 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the kind words ma'am from a Southern American. I have had the opportunity to meet 1 British lady here in the south and I found her to be a really nice person. She didn't mind the small talk us southerners do all time 😂 I wish we got more British tourist here in the south I think y'all would love it here.
@mariusa.5863 Жыл бұрын
I like Americans too, but I wouldn’t be too sure the offer is genuine when a total stranger offers you a place to stay when you visit the US …
@TheRapnep Жыл бұрын
@@mariusa.5863You'd be pleasantly surprised. Americans are very hospitable and if they offered, they meant it.
@ribbonsinmyheart Жыл бұрын
@@mariusa.5863Coming from an American, yes it is genuine it’s just basic manners to offer.
@allisonoconnor8055Ай бұрын
I've met British folks like this. I think they hold a generational anger. After all we are the only country that ever beat them at war, twice.😂
@carlbyronthompson2 күн бұрын
And saved them from WWI and WWII. Ingrates.....
@tcarroll3954Күн бұрын
And they didn't mind the Americans standing with them against Hitler and later the Communists.
@solentsea421922 сағат бұрын
You do know that the US didn't win the war of 1812 don't you
@Libby-sw9yg7 сағат бұрын
. So true !! We're the first ones they call when things get ugly.
@sheridanjay Жыл бұрын
I’m British and I’ve visited the USA many, many times. I have to say that I have always enjoyed my trips to the USA and nearly all the Americans I have ever met have been great. 👍❤️
@Squidwardsangryface Жыл бұрын
As an American, I feel like we're more open to visitors as a whole. I wasn't born American, but I never felt any less American than an American born here. There are those racist, but It's not as common.
@eliquate Жыл бұрын
Come back anytime!!
@paigecat9104 Жыл бұрын
You can come over anytime you want and come down South to East Tennessee where I am from and live and go see the Smoky Mountains and visit Dollywood. Everyone will bend over backward to be pleasant and polite to you! We are known in the South for manners saying yes ma'am no ma'am yes sir no sir even southern children will address their father with a no sir out of respect. We are known for our Southern Hospitality and kindness to others. There is a British elderly man that goes regularly to Dollywood every year several times a year he lives in England and loves Dollywood that the employees have gotten to know him. Nicest man and my mother is retired from the HR Department in Dollywood and everytime he came in would swing by the office to say hey and everyone was excited to see him come and visit. I'll tell you what Americans love about the British is your accents are very pretty. Because most American accents are dull. I'm lucky I have a strong southern accent and I love being from the South and we have been made the most fun of by our own countrymen (Yankees) for being ignorant stupid dumb hicks because they don't like the way we talk whereas they are showing their own ignorance. So, Americans ride over other american cultures in the States.
@Gizziiusa Жыл бұрын
Hmm. Im American and as a seasoned world traveler, and expat...i've visited many a sports bar, British pub, etc. I have to say that the top three things Brits like to talk about are: #3 Football (aka Soccor) #2 Women #1 America and Americans. Be it geopolitics, culture, etc. All negative. It was weird seeing the trend formulate over the course of a decade, but make no mistake...it was there.
@seanwade8188 Жыл бұрын
@@Gizziiusathat’s sad. I don’t feel like any of my friends feel particularly negative towards Americans but my parents seem to enjoy complaining about Americans, and French, and Scottish and anyone else. I like to hope it’s a generational thing
@randomizer600010 ай бұрын
I’d love to see this survey taken again, but with two guys doing separate interviews; One American, and one Brit. See how people respond differently when they’re talking with “one of their own”.
@LoZPotatoOfTime10 ай бұрын
I concur 🤚🙋♀️
@RachaelMorgan-om4xw10 ай бұрын
I'd love to see that! ...Ooh!! How about Trump vs our National Treasure, Stephen Fry 🤔🤭😂
@patrickmurphy959710 ай бұрын
I wouldn't respond differently. I can't stand posh Brits. But I love ❤️ the obnoxious working class slime. 👏. Yeah, know the English-English, they love whisky 😜 beer 🍺 and fish 🐟 and chips 🍟. I especially like talking a lot when every second word is a curse word. 🤬 it's music 🎶 to my ears...posh...posh. It sounds like poop 💩 ...poop to me!
@SStupendous10 ай бұрын
@@RachaelMorgan-om4xw How did we get from perceptions of each others' countries to Trump & Stephen Fry? Genuinely curious.
@Jek24579 ай бұрын
YES.
@maharishi36 ай бұрын
I enjoyed watching the video. I'm an Englishman that has visited the USA several times, New York, California and Colorado. Wherever I went I was met with nothing but friendship. When they hear an English accent and they ask you where you're from and you say Surrey a place not far from London they all respond in the same way, "Awesome"! I felt very welcomed.
@billybussey6 ай бұрын
I'm californian and been to england. worst people i ever met. i was shocked how rude people are in the streets. no smiling. misery. I will never go back to that awful island.
@LeopoldMaysonet6 ай бұрын
@@billybussey Yeah cuz, you'll never see that on the Northeast part of the US😅 New Yorkers, Philadelphians, and New Jersey has the most polite people in the world..
@gingerail46056 ай бұрын
@@billybusseyCalifornians are definitely different breed😂
@mels.37506 ай бұрын
@@LeopoldMaysonet which makes sense because a lot of us are of English heritage.
@sosaDerrick6 ай бұрын
@billybussey that's sad but very true
@johnw3252Ай бұрын
As an American, I've had conversations with a number of people from Europe (different countries) who have never been to the USA and had to listen them tell me how life in the USA actually is. Seriously, they would tell me everything they know about the USA and if I describe something different than their perception about a certain topic they would get upset with me.
@Wolfenstein6992419 күн бұрын
I think I’ve lost count of how many times I’ve had to hear about how all our schools are like a shooting range.
@nitroxide17 Жыл бұрын
Being American is used as an insult? That’s horrible! I’m Chinese and grew up in Canada. I know how horrible is it for people to use your country of origin as an insult. People come in all types regardless of where they are from.
@prettycyber8332 Жыл бұрын
Thank you
@eleanora4879 Жыл бұрын
I'm British and I love Americans! MSM and social media influencers atm strive to divide by constantly documenting offensive remarks and fostering division based on race, gender, and nationality. Boooo 🤓❤️❤️
@GIJadaSmith Жыл бұрын
It is for Canadians too? Where did you grow up of I may ask? I’ve been to 3 provinces and Yukon. American hating is a past time. Don’t get me wrong, tons of lovely Canadians too!
@GIJadaSmith Жыл бұрын
@@eleanora4879True. I’m from Houston and worked in the BP tower one year in college so I was with Brits daily. And got to visit London. Most of y’all love Texas and know more about it than I thought. And I was treated very well when I was there! So I ignore the ones online who make fun of us lol. Most of y’all were sweet to me. 🤷🏿♀️ I had fun lol.
@enmenergy Жыл бұрын
I’m American and I don’t give a shit. So…. It’s not terrible. Trust me 😂😂
@vrushalidhongade5725 Жыл бұрын
I'm a foreign person living in America for school, and every American I've met has been nothing but friendly, funny, warm and kind. I don't understand why Europeans have such a bigoted perspective. Please travel and see for yourself, Americans are generally wonderful, hard working and lovely people!! Every country has its problems, but you can't judge 300 million people via social media or the news. :/
@Jennifr196611 ай бұрын
Thank you! I'm from South Carolina, and I was continously taught to be friendly and honest, but always in a respectful way. I've met others who are outspoken, but it seems to be only a handful.
@fluffyunicorn5711 ай бұрын
I think generally the negative perspective of Europeans comes from having so many American tourists. If there were tens of thousands of Italians flooding in to our cities and remaking the urban landscape and increasing prices, then Americans would likely have some anti-Italian sentiment. A lot of people are at their worst when they are traveling and unfamiliar with the cultural expectations of another country.
@TheSweetestThing12311 ай бұрын
4:08 the Brits can’t stand the striving American attitude because it reminds them of their conformity and mediocrity
@angelamalcomb137311 ай бұрын
Thank you
@richardoconnor182111 ай бұрын
Well-said!
@nothanks1239 Жыл бұрын
I'm British and have worked with americans and have an american married to the family. From my personal experience, americans are absolutely lovely. All so kind, laid back and friendly. We do have stereotyoes ingrained in us, that americans are fat, lazy and stupid. But, most people who believe this have probably never met an american. It definitely needs sorting out, as we are allies and should view each other more fondly.
@sweeeetteeeeth Жыл бұрын
as an american, i deeply resent your assertion that many of us aren't fat, lazy and stupid
@jasonwhite8537 Жыл бұрын
Tbh, that's because you found one that was willing to travel. I believe the stereotypes still massively applies to most of middle Americans
@nothanks1239 Жыл бұрын
@@jasonwhite8537 Could easily say the same about us Brits. There are also plenty of us who are fat, lazy and stupid. In fact, we are the fattest people in Europe.
@nothanks1239 Жыл бұрын
@@DG-lc6hc Don't let it get to you. You know it's not true. We are probably the most hated country in the world and many people stereotype us for having bad teeth, but that isn't true either. Actually, if you think about it, there aren't very many countries who would say nice things about others. I think it's territorial behaviour.
@KeesBoons Жыл бұрын
@@DG-lc6hc Factual at least the fat part is true, no matter which statistics you use.
@oriongear2499Ай бұрын
0:46 As an Autistic American man, I’m too quiet, too poor, too depressed, too lacking in self-worth, not at all direct and too dishonest.
@welfare_baybee2 күн бұрын
Go to the UK you will fit right in 😂
@victorseal90476 ай бұрын
Americans do not rub me the wrong way. Most times I find them polite and good mannered.😅
@Baldwin-iv4455 ай бұрын
The southern hospitality spread everywhere else.
@Olivia-jpa4 ай бұрын
I feel the same. Americans are for the most part warm and friendly
@Jaaj20094 ай бұрын
I agree until you get them behind a wheel or in a restaurant
@РазомСила-м2я4 ай бұрын
@@Olivia-jpathank you, from the states. We try to be very welcoming here and helpful if we know you’re from abroad. We do have our fair share of assholes here, but there are a ton of extremely friendly and loving people here. I do remind people that we might ask dumb questions, but it’s usually out of genuine curiosity and fascination, not intentional ignorance or arrogance.
@Thunor934 ай бұрын
@@Jaaj2009depends where in America they are from. I tend to find Americans from the east coast to be friendlier and better drivers compared to the west coast.... don't know how many times i almost got ran over when i was in California. People from Maine though tend to be really friendly and most of the time when i visit America was Rhode Island and it was like visiting London in a way. I'm from Norway.
@L-mo Жыл бұрын
As a Brit who lived in the US for years before returning to the UK I am constantly reminded of the casual anti-Americanism of many British and European people, my friends and relatives included. It’s an extreme form of projection and othering as most of what they say America is guilty of can equally be applied to their own country/ governments and citizens.
@dhenderson1810 Жыл бұрын
The UK is just jealous that the US was once more powerful than them.
@Rick-S-6063 Жыл бұрын
I'm also a Brit who has lived here in the States since the 1950s. Both of my parents were Brits, my dad being the more critical of Americans than mom was. In his case he never learned (or tried) to fit in. His body language and longer than socially acceptable gazes caused Americans to think he was looking to start trouble. He thought nothing of telling Americans "I don't want to see Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia," but would be surprised when people who had migrated from those states took offense to his criticism. I wonder how he would have reacted to someone from outside of England telling him they "didn't want to see Northampton, Bedford, Cambridge." I learned a lot from that lout and I'm glad I didn't adopt his offensive traits. ;)
@susanbaker8130 Жыл бұрын
I was in western Europe in 1966 and the arrogance was the same then. Remember, that was 20 years after liberating the French in WWII. The Viet Nam war was the excuse to forget. But that’s a mindless cover to avoid real life…then you meet real people and just adore them, no matter the country. God works in your individual life to FREE you! ❤
@L-mo Жыл бұрын
I was visited in London by a group of old US friends (all from Texas) and I took them to a nice/trendy restaurant for dinner. The (Italian) waiter when introducing himself said "oh Americans!, that's ok, I like Americans as long as they're not from Texas." They all laughed it off, but I was literally cringing. The waiter was mortified as he was so sure they couldn’t be Texans, presumably because they were not wearing Stetsons and carrying weapons. In spite of eagerly consuming a ton of American entertainment and culture, Europeans (including Brits) tend to be brainwashed into believing Americans are somehow worse or less than they are... most of them have never been to America and those that have have not really seen much of it or met many Americans properly. If they had they would realise American has some of the smartest and kindest people in the world and the country is a truly remarkable, beautiful and generally safe place to visit. I have otherwise intelligent friends who are well travelled who say they would never visit America... and no one ever challenges them.
@ptrsrfns Жыл бұрын
I agree with you. Canadian here who travels often to the US and let me tell you Americans are some of the friendliest and most social people I have ever met! Of course there are regional differences, but as a solo traveller to the US I've never been made to feel alone or lonely. They are lovely people. Canadians on the other hand, although nice they are kinda impersonal and love their personal space. Also, they love to go on about how "polite" they are (especially to non-Canadians) and I can't stand that either. I mean, to me that comes off as being smug or even arrogant.
@AsherIsbrucker Жыл бұрын
I'm Canadian and have lived in London for 5 years. When I meet Brits they always ask me "Where in America are you from?", and when I respond "Canada", they always profusely apologise as if they've committed the most shameful faux pas. I tell them not to worry - I actually tend to like Americans, and our accents do sound similar, so I'm not at all offended. But their apology speaks volumes. When I first moved here 5 years ago to start a new job, my boss gave me some insight into the British view of Americans. He told me that when Brits see a brash, loud, overly confident American taking over a room or a conversation they sneer and roll their eyes. Brits find this kind of sincere self-belief, ambition, and big, expressive personality to be off-putting and, in his words, arrogant. The British tend to value reservedness and politeness, staying in your lane, relentless self-deprecation and respect for authority and the common good. The difference is clear when you look at British vs. American comedy - to Americans, the joke is on somebody else; to Brits, the joke is on themselves. (Stephen Fry has an excellent bit on KZbin illustrating this). But I've also noticed something else. I think that deep down there is a tinge of something like envy, or perhaps a subdued admiration, towards Americans - or, at least, the American cultural identity and its perception. Think of some of the adjectives people in this video use - confident, honest, direct, unapologetic, ambitious, individualistic, striving for the best. That's not everybody's cup of tea, but those are positive attributes many, at least in Western countries, would aspire to. I think people can harbour a cognitive dissonance about this - mocking the American attitude for its unabashed, shameless self-advertising, while at the same holding that individualism in high regard and wanting to achieve that same level of confidence. So I've sensed a deep-seated admiration for and fascination with America and Americans that exists alongside the annoyance and disdain. I've noticed similar sentiments growing up in Canada, and when I've visited other parts of Europe. Everybody talks about Americans, even when they're not around. When people meet Americans, they want to know more about where they grew up and aspects of American culture from an insider's point of view. There's even a "cool" factor to being from America, especially if you're from an iconic city like New York or Los Angeles. These are places many, many people all over the world have dreamt of living, at least in passing.
@keithwallace1665 Жыл бұрын
I've lived in both countries and both sides have there prejudices but there's more critism of Americans than the other way by people who generally have never been there !God bless America
@norcalbry Жыл бұрын
I think this is spot on.
@lorijones564 Жыл бұрын
You nailed it.
@kevinw2592 Жыл бұрын
The UK WAS the big empire. The US IS the big empire. I think that's a lot of it. The UK used to think their shit didn't smell, but now everyone is commenting on the odor. The US is in that position now, but the rest of us have our Fabreeze cans at the ready.
@AltaicPride01 Жыл бұрын
So well articulated. Thank you for writing this. 1000% truth ❤❤❤
@anitavirginillo5 күн бұрын
That green sweater/red lipstick combo is everything!!!!
@SaxandRelax13 сағат бұрын
I was just looking at that! She looks so beautiful
@jamess.2491 Жыл бұрын
I spent a solid 5-6 years growing up in London because of my dad's job, and let me tell you: it's even worse as a kid. I went to a pretty posh English school, and I was completely ostracized from my peers for being the only American in my year. Even my teachers would make fun of me. I literally once had one of my teachers tell me "well all you Americans are just obese cows" when I was 7 years old. I was also probably the skinniest kid in my form, so that was pretty baffling to me at such an early age. I ended up having to change schools because it was so bad.
@MiaSummer-cm6cy Жыл бұрын
I’m London born and bred . My school certainly weren’t posh , had many different nationalities in my school
@ilikedots Жыл бұрын
@@MiaSummer-cm6cy cool story bro
@juliahello6673 Жыл бұрын
I had the same experience. One teacher had me stand up in class and read from a book and laughed at my accent. I can’t imagine any American teacher doing that to a British student.
@alexandergrant-qq2lj Жыл бұрын
(yawn) Why are Russian peasants so lazy and deceitful? Why are the lives of Western dogs both better and worth more than theirs?
@hershythechocolate Жыл бұрын
exactly, there is so many abroad students from europe in u.s highschools and they are treated nicely... I remember this one English guy came to our highschool and literally everyone was eager to go up to him and talk... they had many questions ready and were excited to meet him...
@MarkRodriguez-l4m2 ай бұрын
All I got to say is hate doesn't come from above. "too happy", "too confident", "too direct" yeahhhh
@aracelimalone11672 күн бұрын
Some of these Brits sound a little jealous….perhaps insecure
@historymaven Жыл бұрын
The British are supposedly known for their manners, but while in England, I was constantly expected to explain American politics and everything on the news to every random person I was introduced to. To me, that’s blunt and rude. Bro, I’m just trying to eat my potato jacket. I actually found Germans to be more like Americans in friendliness and acceptance.
@-______-______- Жыл бұрын
*Jacket potato
@historymaven Жыл бұрын
@@-______-______- Thanks, mate.
@liukin95 Жыл бұрын
I'm British and I totally feel you mate... some Brits just can't help themselves in that regard and I find that irritating too.
@Thaddeus-ml8if Жыл бұрын
Brits are known to be one of the rudest and loud tourists around the world. They don’t have the manners you think they do.
@Recusant_ Жыл бұрын
Ask them how they feel about autistic children being arrested for calling the police woman a lesbian… or the way hospitals demand sick children die and refuse to let the parents take their children to other countries for treatment.
@mth136816 күн бұрын
I've been to the UK at least five times and am heading back to visit Cornwall, the Lake District and Scotland. I just let the negativity run off my back. It is usually quite subtle tbh. An example. I was in a pub in a working class area of London and I got talking to an older guy in his 50's at the time. I was in my 30's. I asked him if he had any interest in visiting other parts of the world. He replied with a slight smirk and said "I'd love to see Canada but have no interest in seeing America at all. I would not step foot in America." The ONLY reason he said that is because he knew I was American. I just said something like Canada is very beautiful and walked away. He knew exactly what he was doing by saying that. I would never say to a brit oh I'd love to go to Europe but wouldn't step foot in the UK.
@patriciaorourke88507 ай бұрын
I’m English, and have 5 American grandchildren, one American daughter in law, one American sister in law and I love them all to bits….of course! We have lots of fun mocking one another because we’re different, even our language! Most Americans are great, a very generous people but not all. Same with people everywhere. You can’t judge everyone the same, making sweeping statements. That’s my view. 🎉
@jasonbudgeon53276 ай бұрын
Language lol it's English
@timkincade97636 ай бұрын
I'm American and my wife is English from Lakenheath , met her on deployment. My oldest daughter is born in Britain. I have a lot of ties to the UK . I ,have nothing but love for your nation.
@larryh.52296 ай бұрын
Much love to you from the colonists 🤗🇺🇸🇬🇧🇺🇸🇬🇧all day👍👍 together we stand!
@geraldlundgren88366 ай бұрын
And how do the Canadians play out in this conversation?
@chrisgroves40976 ай бұрын
@@jasonbudgeon5327 yes but the expressions, commonly used words and the culture behind are vastly different. It takes some getting used to
@Fortheloveoforthodoxing Жыл бұрын
Social media really warps peoples perspective and it does it quickly and so easily. Tends to confirm biases and solidify stereotypes and generalizations as completely true in all cases.
@sarasands5 Жыл бұрын
The news doesn't help. The things our country really does every day tends to confirm people's biases too.
@Jon-es-i6o Жыл бұрын
I’d say the “special relationship” between Britain and America ebbs and flows. At the moment it’s ebbing.👎🏻
@RandomRabbit007 Жыл бұрын
I find this true with almost anything, especially the "hate" you see for California on the internet by people that have never even visited. They swear we are the cause of all of America's problems haha. Don't people see the narrative is being pushed by big-media and social media?
@robertbooth36995 ай бұрын
Britons have had this attitude since medieval times. Their snobbery is ancient, long predating electronics.
@badgerattoadhall5 ай бұрын
Social media is not the root of all evil. I first visited London in 2000 and it was far worse than in 2020+
@AnaS-of8ri Жыл бұрын
It‘s crazy how we‘re always so focused on our differences instead of what we have in common. We‘d have a better world if we focused more on what we have in common and what great things we can do together.
@steven2183 Жыл бұрын
structural classism? a potemkin government run by financial hegemony? a misplaced pre-occupation with self-importance? love of naval power? beer and football? 🤣 I'm sure there's other things too
@markmuller7962 Жыл бұрын
They see themselves in the US so they're particularly bothered by the short comings. We humans tend to be very harsh towards ourselves both on a personal level and a society level
@avasco5918 Жыл бұрын
One thing that you two countries have in common in a very big way…you have invaded a lot of countries!
@mattvideoeditor Жыл бұрын
Define "focused".
@jsterling6805 Жыл бұрын
@@avasco5918 So if you are so educated then you would know that has occurred throughout History by many cultures in many countries.
@traviesoarcefan306321 сағат бұрын
I'm American from California and I always enjoy meeting English people during my travels. I like their sense of humor and communication skills. I like meeting the jokesters and the storytellers. It's always fun to see their reaction when I tell them I'm a long time Time Team fan. They usually think it's great or that I'm a lost cause. Either way, after a few pints we usually part smiling and happier for the experience. 🇬🇧❤🇺🇸
@FLAVCO11 ай бұрын
after having spent a lot of time in the US and being British the one difference I have noticed is that the Americans always seemed much more enthusiastic towards peoples ambitions and support them whereas in the UK they basically hate seeing anyone rise out of the gutter. Crabs in a bucket syndrome I think its called!
@guyring891211 ай бұрын
😂
@sabrinagonzales445611 ай бұрын
Canada is the same way, I love Americans. I met quite a bit of great ones in Dominican Republic.
@johnprager66210 ай бұрын
Tall poppy syndrome. Cut the bulbs off of the poppies that grow the tallest so the others don't feel inadequate
@EK-xz8ig10 ай бұрын
Being genuinely happy for someone's success is a good measure of character.
@itheuserfirst318610 ай бұрын
"We hate it when our friends become successful." - Morrissey
@steelemedia Жыл бұрын
Visiting Slovenia pre Covid and asked about American tourists being annoying. Was told that the British tourists were way worse than any American stereotype.
@GregoryHumphries Жыл бұрын
BUT EVERY TIME YOUR BUTTS GET IN TROUBLE YOU COME BEGGING! THE U.S.
@paulmcgrath6118 Жыл бұрын
@@GregoryHumphries are you ok ? Read the comment you are replying to and use your brain before typing
@DaniëllaKL1970 Жыл бұрын
@@paulmcgrath6118the last several months i can get myself wondering if many of them even have something between the ears.
@mbrady2329 Жыл бұрын
@@paulmcgrath6118 his braincell, you mean? 😉
@mbrady2329 Жыл бұрын
@@GregoryHumphries whenever the USA meddles in other people's conflicts, the British Army (the most highly trained in conventional warfare in the world) needs to be there in order to make sure that the US Army doesn't make a complete mess of things. 😉
@smithaupadhya Жыл бұрын
I am an Indian who lived in Argentina for some time, back in 2007 and 2008. I was set to move to USA for studies after my stint in Argentina. So whenever Argentinians discovered that I was moving to US, they would look confused and ask me why I would leave their beautiful country. They had all these perceptions about Americans being rude, unfriendly, dull, and dumb. It was interesting that they almost looked at me in pity and some even tried to change my mind about my plans of moving to US! They were okay to bash US in front of me as I wasn't American. Now that I have lived in USA for almost 15 years, Argentinians couldn’t be farther from the truth.
@sinsinsinat5377 Жыл бұрын
Exactly, they are very rude, and impudent...I generally have my guard up when dealing with them....I actually say this because for about a decade I was immersed in American culture...when I traveled back home, everyone rightfully noticed these attitudes in me, disrespectful to elders, impudent, inconsiderate, self opinionated and thinking you are always right... even though my countrymen treated me very right.
@lizcasazza8524 Жыл бұрын
Watching this video and hearing Brits complain about friendliness in the US is ironic as someone who has lived in Argentina as well and heard sooo many Argentineans say they wouldn’t move to the US because everyone is “cold” there. It truly boggles my mind because being from the South, the friendliness meter here is off the charts compared to any place I’ve been to in Argentina lol. By far! Argentineans have this perception of any northern countries being culturally cold, like Norway or Denmark, and they group US&Canada in this for some odd reason.
@berlyglobe7 Жыл бұрын
I came to the states when I was 6, I was born in Peru but did not know abt Peru's history. Anyway, when I was 12 I met this girl who i wanted to befriend, she was from Chile and I was like cool, never met someone from Chile. But when she found out I was from Peru, she became mean and insulted Peru.. I was like 😐Now I laugh about it because its just ridiculous
@lizcasazza8524 Жыл бұрын
@@berlyglobe7 I’m sorry you went through that. Latinos can be so xenophobic and racist against each other.
@allisonvz7932 Жыл бұрын
I’m American and I lived in Argentina for 3 years and I was never treated so poorly as I was in Argentina. I also lived in Italy and was treated very well. No issues about my nationality. I actually kind of hate Argentina now and would never go back to that dump. I even spoke their ridiculous castellano fluently. Sorry not sorry.
@guavaB523 сағат бұрын
I'm a California girl who's been married to an Englishman. I've spent the last 5 years there in Suffolk. So I can say firsthand what it's like living there. I was always asked where I was from, and I'd tell them San Francisco, and some of the English would tell me they'd been there. However..... I'm very open and friendly, and I loved old English pubs, and I loved being social, especially with the old codgers. And I would get comments about WW2. The most popular topic from these old pensioners was how the American soldiers took the British women away, with their money, and their chocolate, and stockings, all things they'd gone without. And I'd hear the complaint that America came in to WW2 too late. And I've hears from one veteran that the American soldiers, when they came over to help, didn't know how to shoot a gun or run up a hill. I didn't buy any of this, I've studied about America and how they helped end WW2. One more opinion, I was told by my British husband that I'm too social (he didn't like that), and yes, that is a huge difference between Americans and the English, and there was no way I was going to apologise for being me!
@thepenultimateninja57973 ай бұрын
I'm from the UK, but I live in America now. I'm constantly baffled by the opinion of the US held by some people in the UK. They have these weird ideas about what life in America is like, presumably arrived at via the media they consume. The truly bizarre part is that they will actually get angry with you if you try to tell them otherwise. It's like they somehow know more about life in America than someone who actualy lives here, despite never having set foot in the US themselves. I think part of the problem is that they don't understand how big America is, and they think the whole country is like Detroit. The US is 44 times the size of the UK. There are 50 states, and 11 of them are larger than the UK.
@fatherson59073 ай бұрын
Exactly. I lived in the UK for years and the people there have serious psychiatric issues.
@jeabo0adhd2 ай бұрын
I think we make a *big show* of things that grab our attention. Examples are crime, guns, oil, American food, NASA, football, pop culture, politics... Thus, the world thinks our culture is predominately comprised of them. Its kinda funny in my opinion.
@vickyfeller15002 ай бұрын
I was just in the UK for the 1st time in late August, and our coach driver was dumbfounded when we mentioned that it would take you 8+ hours to drive from one end of our state to the other end. That said, I tend to agree with you that the size of the US is incomprehensible for most UK residents. (Or any Europeans, for that matter) I encouraged everyone I met that said they wanted to visit America to go outside the big cities…they are not America, sorry. “We the people” are much more than New York, Chicago, or LA.
@nicolasr77062 ай бұрын
Yea, someone from California will have way much more in common with someone from Arizona. Same can be said for Kentucky and West Virgina. California and Kentucky are like two different countries however, absolutely nothing in common.
@johnogrady24182 ай бұрын
People should know these things. Geography should be taught in schools again. I'm shocked at how completely ignorant normal people are about the world they live in, from the global on down to the neighborhood.
@trith723 ай бұрын
It gives me great delight to know that someone who lives over 4500 miles from me has issues with the way I live my life. I'm afraid I cannot echo the sentiment, I don't spend even a minute out of the year thinking about the British.
@RainbowBoo42 Жыл бұрын
You should do a video about what people think about different US states. I’ve moved all over the US and currently live in Los Angeles and the United States sheer vastness and and diversity is incredible. I drove from the Midwest to start my new life in California and there’s so many perceptions Americans have about our own country. We’ve all heard these Californians are extremely liberal and have a sunny disposition,New Yorkers are jaded and rush through life, Floridians are crazy beach goers on jet skis, Texans are prideful and love their guns. In reality from what I’ve seen there’s a lot more conservatism in California than you might think, New Yorkers can be some of the most caring and generous people, Florida has some of the most passionate environmentalists in the US, Texas has an incredible art scene and Dallas is part of what’s known as silicon prairie. Even in the US we have biases of ourselves.
@lproth Жыл бұрын
Here is a old saying, Californians are friendly but not generous, New Yorkers are not friendly but are generous.
@LC-wv7tz Жыл бұрын
This is the more accurate comment. Anyone tries to generalize "Americans" as such, as if "Americans" are some cohesive group... you can pretty much ignore them instantly. There is nothing that unites or binds Americans. There is no real commonality or shared culture or values. It is the most diverse country in the world. Of course, all people are individuals and blah, blah, blah, but every European nation and the UK as well are far more homogenous than America both in deomgraphic makeup and in shared culture. Take "What do Americans think about the British?" Nothing, as such. There are a myriad of stereotpyes about the British. They are posh and elegant. They are crude, gruff, and uneducated. They are refined and enlightened Europeans. They have a laughable backwards Monarchy and trip over themselves to lick boots. They have a wonderful institutional heritage. They have bad teeth. They have terrible food. They have a wonderful beer. They have terrible weather. They have rich history of civilization. All of these views, many of them conflicting, are held by various people or the other. There's nothing I could say, as an American, that Americans think or believe about "The British" as such. It depends entirely on the Americans who you are asking. Whether they are obsessed with the royals or mock them. Whether they think they are posh and educated or streetswindling cockney spitting snaggle-toothed criminals.
@MrLulzim47 Жыл бұрын
Agree. Yes
@levin448 Жыл бұрын
New Yorkers are brusque and loud but scratch their surface and they are kind hearted and warm.
@OK-pi6fq Жыл бұрын
I’ve been all over the United States six times, and I totally agree. We are so vast, and diverse. I’ve been all over the world too, but the US has it all. What I’ve learned is most people are good. Inside the country and out, and it unites us to meet each other. I miss when gas was cheap, because it allowed us not to take a plane from a to b, and we went through. I look forward to and hope for better trains in the future.
@ReneeMcClain-c5cАй бұрын
Americans are fiercely proud and loyal. Most Americans believe in American exceptionalism. We get called in to solve the worlds problems and then are blamed for doing it.
@sardarnikaur62582 ай бұрын
I was at a concert on saturday in Oakland CA and there was a young britisher sitting behind me saying disparaging things about Americans and American companies ..loud enough for me to hear him clearly. Then he continued to chat with his companions through the concert until I was forced to ask him to be quiet. How ironic that he was being rude about Americans while displaying obnoxious behavior himself.
@margaretbonanno654 Жыл бұрын
Having family and friends in Europe the one thing that surprised them the most about us Americans was our easy going and friendly attitude. They really thought we faked being happy, saying hi to everyone and holding open doors for someone behind you…we really are genuinely happy and friendly as a general rule.
@Celisar1 Жыл бұрын
Having one of the highest crime rates, most prisoners and most firearms and severely segregated society I can almost feel your happiness.
@claybakin2478 Жыл бұрын
@@Celisar1 What you need to understand is that this "high crime rate" is not spread across the entire HUGE country that is the USA. You are repeating a narrative designed to denigrate the US for what reason? God knows why. Jealously maybe? I have lived here all my 65 years and have had an enormously happy life, as have just about every other person I know, of all colors and classes. Of course, there WERE shootings at 2 Walmarts in the US yesterday so that sucks. I do wish we did not have such lenient firearm laws but that is not likely to ever change for, reasons. I don't have time to explain it. There is open carry in the area where I live but I myself do not own a gun. Thinking about it though. Wasn't there a bombing in London a few years ago? And in Paris? Where in the world is really totally safe?!! Danger lurks everywhere. And you say we are "severely segregated"? America is a melting pot of dozens of nationalities and most really do tend to prefer being with others like them, who speak their language and share a common culture. Any segregation here can and is challenged by those not wanting to be segregated. There are laws in place to protect those individuals. Granted, they are often broken, but can and are quickly brought to light by the news media. America is changing, just give us a little more time. We did have a non white president leading our country a few years ago remember? But NONE of the negatives you are focused on makes the majority of us NOT happy people. I could go on and on defending my happy country, but I'm pretty certain it would fall on deaf ears.
@GTC4cam Жыл бұрын
Severely segregated! 🤣 Compared to whom?
@jasonshumake777 Жыл бұрын
@@Celisar1tell us you’ve never been to America without saying you’ve never been to America. The majority of America is very friendly and low crime, but the large cities account for most of the crime. If you go to the smaller cities the US, which is also where most of the legal guns are owned, you will find the nicest most helpful people around and almost no crime.
@deegee-zi5xm Жыл бұрын
Americans do fake happiness for the most part. Don't confuse happy and being polite. Americans might be polite in SOME instances but for the most part they are not truly and genuinely happy. Think about it. Americans have a very high suicide rate, drug overdose rate, mass shootings, alcoholism, domestic violence, murder rate, ... and I could go on and on. Happy people don't have the problems I just listed.
@krisb-travel Жыл бұрын
As a Brit living with Americans on a tropical island for 5 years, I loved their openness and sometimes I enjoyed their loudness too
@shaunsteele6926 Жыл бұрын
as an introverted American, I was always asked in the UK if I was Canadian. I guess they didn't realize not all Americans are "loud".
@krisb-travel Жыл бұрын
@@shaunsteele6926 yup i can see that happening lol
@TheAnnoyingBoss6 ай бұрын
Is there guns on this tropical island
@krisb-travel6 ай бұрын
@@TheAnnoyingBoss lol technically yes, but it’s not a threat to normal people. The only gun shootouts happen over land disputes (the island is boracay island in the Philippines) between owners or the owners security guards when it’s disputed land. The land on the island wasn’t worth much for a long time then it started to boom about 20 years ago and land shot up to be worth many millions which you can imagine caused issues.
@xpozen89946 ай бұрын
Their so called friendliness is fake, and they are particularly bad to minorities.
@1Melody1963Ай бұрын
As an American, I find it interesting that people from everywhere else are quick to talk down about us. But when there is a disaster, natural, war, etc., they seem to like all the aid we bring. On the flip side, when there is a disaster in the US, does any other country show up to help? Of course not.
@HJfmTex18 күн бұрын
Yep, noticed that long ago. The US takes care of it's own business. The rest of the world counts on the US helping them take care of theirs when the shit hits the fan. Yet, so many don't appreciate what the US does. On the flip side, so glad to see many comments that recognize how good the American people are.
@efrijim7009 күн бұрын
Truth
@theUSCensorsLikeNorthKorea6 күн бұрын
Yes, Palestinians are lovin' it - like McDonald's!
@thisguy72276 күн бұрын
Nope, we as Americans have to be resilient because if/when stuff hits the fan, there's no one coming to help.
@theUSCensorsLikeNorthKorea6 күн бұрын
@@thisguy7227 No one to help the poor Americans. 😟Used and exploited by the world, a world that will abandon thee in thy hour of need. 😢
@chillijoe8264 Жыл бұрын
i’ve travelled extensively in the US and my personal experience is the overwhelming majority of the people i’ve met are kind, generous and helpful… needless to say i have a lot of time for them.
@SunofYork Жыл бұрын
"Should of went" ? HAVE A NICE DAY...LOL
@antiquesewist4236 ай бұрын
Brits will land in JFK, spend 4 days in Manhattan, and think they can write a thesis on the American psyche 😂
@deepburrito5 ай бұрын
and where is the problem?
@T-Even_phage_destroyer5 ай бұрын
@@deepburritoin academia, a properly fleshed out, good quality thesis can take numerous days to numerous weeks and requires countless hours of work and research.
@damianjblack5 ай бұрын
some of us Brits have lived in the US for 16 years, are sick of having to declare bankruptcy every time we try to see a doctor, and are sick of religious whackos in politics trying to tell us to live according to the rules of THEIR religion. (Dominionist Christianity, to be precise...)
@parkso-dam5 ай бұрын
@@damianjblackone, that's just poor money management. Most people don't declare bankruptcy from a doctor visit and two, politics have little effect on religion in America? Sure some parties represent certain religions but freedom of religion is enshrined into the First Amendment and is tolerated in pretty much everywhere around the country
@parkso-dam5 ай бұрын
@@deepburritoin a country is 333 million people across millions of square miles. Its safe to assume that not all of them act the same or hold the same views
@AJPitty Жыл бұрын
When you talked about the "Narcissism of Small Diffferences" I found it extremely eye opening. This video looks largely at how that affects different nationalities, but in my experiences as an American this is even more accentuated inside of America too. As someone from Michigan I can't help but notice when I travel between states that are often considered "rivals" or "enemies" how similar the two are, and this extends to my own state with our long and constant rivalry with Ohio. My entire life i've learned to dislike Ohio just as much as any other Michigander, but if I was being honest, we are practically the same in almost every way. It's just the slight differences between us that we make into this giant gap that separates us. Thanks for the video!
@jokervienna643311 ай бұрын
There is so much of this going on. I´m a Swede, and Swedes, Danes and Norwegians always mock each other. But if you say anything bad (as an outsider) of any Scandinavian country, an we are all a big Viking Family. We will even include the Finns and the Icelanders. I am pretty sure that Americans from all states will join together if you talk bad about America, right? I live in Vienna since many years, and it is the same with the Austrians and Germans. They mock each other all the time too. BUT. Say anything bad about German culture in general, and they are best buddies. :)
@BarryBirther11 ай бұрын
The British have a “better health care system”….. ?😂😂😂 Oh, you ARE a fool🤡
@wonderwhy233511 ай бұрын
Sibling rivalry
@Nethanel77310 ай бұрын
It is strange indeed. I've heard the Buckeyes' fight song "We don't give a damn about the whole state of Michigan..." Can't imagine too many happy households where the husband and wife are from the rival states and both diehard fans of their teams.
@jokervienna643310 ай бұрын
@@Nethanel773 well, but those things can sometimes work in mysterious ways. I´m a Swede and we NEED to beat Finland in every icehockey game. But if Sweden loose, then I support Finland with my heart and soul. Because it is better that the Finns win over Canada or the US. Sweden-Finland, worst enemies in icehockey, but still buddies in the heart.
@thebernice60627 күн бұрын
The criticism for lack of genuineness when we talk is pretty valid. It's something I've heard a lot of Europeans complain about that I didn't understand until social media came around. As Americans, we are really good at talking without saying anything. I have no idea where that got into our society, but it is a thing. I don't believe we're louder on average, more noticeable when we're on British turf, perhaps. However, I've met a lot of Brits in the US who are quite loud in public, too. In my experience, French and Germans are way quieter than Brits.
@daren9718 Жыл бұрын
Years ago I used to drive a taxi in a tourist town in Canada. The town was named Banff in the province of Alberta. I had a British woman in my taxi, and she was telling me how overly friendly the U.S. folks were in the retail shops. I don’t recall what part of the United States she was visiting. She didn’t care for that. She wanted to get back to London, where she knew they would be a little less nice to her. It’s simply what she was used to. I thought it was interesting, a little bit odd, and a little bit funny.
@japjeetmehton9921 Жыл бұрын
Yea, I've also seen Canadians hating on Americans too, even though we are so similar. It's interesting how stereotyping some countries and people groups is seen as insensitive while doing that to others is seen as okay. I bet these people wouldn't say stuff like that about say... Japan, Philippines, India, etc. I was talking to this lady and she was super liberal but when it came to Americans she hated them.
@daren9718 Жыл бұрын
@@japjeetmehton9921 ya Canadians are far from perfect.
@JTR253 Жыл бұрын
@@japjeetmehton9921They do it off camera and behind closed doors. I have even heard the n word from white mouths but of course, I ain’t black so they didn’t have to be PC in front of me.
@feewaybilz Жыл бұрын
Brits are very passive, aggressive and will never stand up for themselves based on their years of class system. A partide amongst themselves. you could complain about a place or a restaurant or a person behind their back but never speak up and complain face-to-face.
@denisechappell3434 Жыл бұрын
Maybe it's being overly familiar that can be disconcerting to a stranger.
@alias7859 Жыл бұрын
I was born in SE Asia and am a naturalized US citizen, living in Northern CA for over 40 years. I have travelled quite a bit. Visited my relatives in Thailand a few times. Seen many foreign tourists from every where and some of the Brits are just as loud and rude IF not more than Americans over there. I believe one of the commenters said it, that drunk people are rude and obnoxious no matter what country. However, the mainland Chinese tourists has everyone beat by being the most obnoxious, rude, and loud. And that's when they are sober.
@glai5752 Жыл бұрын
Amen! That’s exactly my experience!
@anonygirly Жыл бұрын
Agree. A lot depends on where in the country you're from and the socioeconomic factors at play, including quality of education.
@peachychoc7905 Жыл бұрын
LOL! What an ignorant generalisation… I’m also born in SE Asia and I’ve come across a lot of polite, helpful Chinese. Just because of a handful of rude Chinese compounded by anti-China MSM does not mean majority of the 1.4B Chinese are rude
@KS0102 Жыл бұрын
@@peachychoc7905Shes not wrong. When I traveled to Stockholm, I booked a reservation for a Swedish Smorgasbord at Grand Hotel Stockholm about 7 years ago. The smorgasbord was supposed to be a wonderful experience. It was until a Chinese group strolled in an demolished the smorgasbord buffet like pigs in a trough.
@RosslynR Жыл бұрын
@@KS0102 You are generalizing because of a small group of Chinese tourists, this speaks volumes about your small little world you live in. Travel to Hong Kong, Macau, Taiwan and Mainland China, CHINA IS NOT SMALL to have such an ignorant closed minded opinion. You get to use appliances, electronics, and technology provided to you by western corporations through the millions of non tourist Chinese, who are literally perfectionist as they try to be a part of the western world in trade. Every English teacher from the US and the UK teaching in China will tell you this.
@jwin20234 ай бұрын
It’s difficult to be positive when the sun doesn’t appears but twice a year.
@elgatofelix89174 ай бұрын
And yet.. "the sun never sets on the British Empire" but you still complain. 😂
@rickshnizel41694 ай бұрын
And then on top of that the women are all “mid” at best, shii I’d be grumpy too if that’s all I had available. Man I got it made in Miami
@shrek19yearsago784 ай бұрын
It just looks very depressing and sad
@jimcook983 ай бұрын
For a hot day, a bo'ohw'o'wo'ah.
@adamwright3183 ай бұрын
Sounds like Michigan
@pelicanhead2 күн бұрын
As a Brit who lived in America for thirty years l found the American people to be very open, kind and friendly. After returning to the UK five years ago l have never really integrated back into British culture and l find my countrymen to be less welcoming and seem somewhat in fear of opening up.Iv'e found that the people here who criticise Americans have never visited the country. So I'll say thank you to all Americans out there, you have a beautiful country and the friends l made there l consider my best.
@tcarroll3954Күн бұрын
Thank you from Colorado.
@pelicanheadКүн бұрын
@@tcarroll3954 One of the places l lived was Estes Park from 93-96. Colorado is one of my favourite places in the US along with Montana. My daughter and her husband live in Fort Collins.
@austinbushnell7448 Жыл бұрын
I visted London a few years ago and was pretty shocked by how many Londoners approached me when they heard my American accent. Most asked if I was from Canada before I dropped the bombshell and told them I was from the US (surprise!!!). Then, I've gotten asked so many random questions about what it's like living in the US, etc. The curiosity levels were off the charts. I assumed they must get plenty of American tourists each year and thought "I'm just another American... why should they care?". I was amazed. What was even more amazing was how many people I've spoken with haven't even traveled outside the UK. I was like "What?! Paris is just a 2-hour train ride away...". Crazy. Why UK? Why?? Your only a 1-2 hour plane/train ride to pretty much EVERYWHERE else!!!!
@j2174 Жыл бұрын
They probably asked if you were Canadian because they know Canadians will be annoyed if they are asked if they are American, whereas Americans don’t care if they are thought to be Canadian.
@austinbushnell7448 Жыл бұрын
@@j2174 Perhaps. I was thinking they probably get more Canadian tourists than US tourists since the UK and Canada are more like close cousins and the US is more like the ugly step child 😢
@ponygirlusa Жыл бұрын
I experienced the same reception as you did. They were enthusiastic, kind and curious about America and what life was like here. Really nice people!
@@ponygirlusa As in Scooter Braun? Just meant that their questions/comments about the US were tongue and cheek. They asked about Trump, guns, crime, drugs, homelessness, etc. All of the negatives. Don't worry, I represent and keep shit 💯. USA all day 🇺🇲. Why? Cause merica, that's why... Flippin' the script since 1776.
@Blackbirddc4 ай бұрын
"The Narcissism of Small Differences" is exactly what I've been saying! We're basically just the same. And we're looking down on each other for no reason. We're basically just family fighting over stupid small little things.
@frankmorris47903 ай бұрын
Two people's separated by a common language"
@margaretlouise62003 ай бұрын
"Looking down" is a mental disorder caused by insecurity, not confidence. Maybe the Brits envy our confidence.
@nokateno3 ай бұрын
like foreigners in japan who hate foreigners in japan
@judithdelaugere38772 ай бұрын
I’m a Brit (Scot) living in the USA. I get so frustrated when British people make statements about America and Americans when they’ve never been to America or met an American. My experience in the USA is that Americans approach British people with caution and even deference sometimes, but are always respectful and polite. The British accents seem to have an effect on how we’re perceived also. P.S. I’m a therapist so I appreciated the shout out, and I think we’re more alike than different 😊
@johnogrady24182 ай бұрын
Show up with a British accent and your IQ goes WAY up!
@sandradee1579Ай бұрын
@@johnogrady2418😂 so right! Americans love all British accents. My parents & all family are from Scotland. I'm the only US born. I've asked my family the same question & they think Americans are friendlier, Convo & service industry. I disagree. British people are more polite. Everyone has a dif experience but rudest State to me 20 yrs visiting is NC. Hands down.
@MamitaMarieАй бұрын
That Scottish brogue tho!😂 They make Highlander romance novels for a reason!
@strawberrys0da714Ай бұрын
"Americans approach British people with caution" Don't worry, Americans can be quite friendly with people once they realize there's no danger. Keep low to the ground, avoid cornering them, and allow them to initiate contact. If they become familiar enough with you, they'll eat straight from your hand. Keep your fingers together in case of nips, as they might pull out their government-issued handgun when startled. This has been a guide on befriending your neighborhood American in the wild. Sincerely, An American
@TheSBleederАй бұрын
I'm an American who got to study at the University of Edinburgh for 6 months back in 2002. I was treated warmly by the British students (there were at least as many English students as there were Scots). I don't know what my biological heritage is (adopted at 8 days old), so I've kind of adopted Scotland as part of my ancestry.
@RSBurgener3 күн бұрын
I feel like the difference for me, as an American, is that I am from the south. My mother is from Alabama and she taught me a tremendous amount of social graces. It's literally closer to English culture than other regions. Plus I know my tea, I am steeped in English music, and I have depression. I think I would fit in fine, even though I am a bit "extra".
@charlesalexander17112 күн бұрын
lol this was a great comment 👏
@tcarroll3954Күн бұрын
People in the South are very friendly and hospitable.
@suzyt991110 ай бұрын
Im English and have visited America several times, and have found Americans warm friendly and helpful I would never "bad mouth" them
@amybrown71369 ай бұрын
@paulmorvantjr.80728 ай бұрын
From an American, or Yank, as it were, thank you!
@simonjones77278 ай бұрын
Yes, the US is a great country, Americans too.
@Darrenski8 ай бұрын
That's cause theyre not the tourist types, like the idiots we send to Spain
@jazzyje5ter2238 ай бұрын
@msmissy6888nope. AMERICA NUMBER 1 🦅🦅🦅🇺🇸🇺🇸🏈🏈
@tea-rex565811 ай бұрын
As an English lady, I don't judge people based on where they're from. I accept people for they actually are as a person. If an American is a good, open-minded person, then there's no problem and I would like to talk to them. The same goes for any country ! :)
@rivergladesgardenrailroad883411 ай бұрын
indeed
@Jennifr196611 ай бұрын
Well said!
@keepslayingthedayaway11 ай бұрын
People like you are what make the world great :)
@broncoteno718111 ай бұрын
How do you feel about gypsies
@MusicismoreImportant11 ай бұрын
🇬🇧👊🇺🇸
@deanstanley2125 Жыл бұрын
My father was from England, and I am American born and raised. About 20 years ago I went over to see family. I went out and had a beer at a pub that was on the wrong side of town and the landlord was a great guy and we had a good old time and I got to speaking to a couple lads who had traveled around the states. One pint turned to 8 or 10 and these guys i just met took me to a late night curry house where we had a feast. I couldn't speak more kindly of the people and the hospitality. We are more the same than we are different.
@Pinkpanther100x Жыл бұрын
Curry digesting 🤮
@UkSapyy Жыл бұрын
@@Pinkpanther100x Who asked you? piss off 😂
@TonyDracon Жыл бұрын
@@Pinkpanther100x lol
@MiaSummer-cm6cy Жыл бұрын
We do love a good curry over here. My daughter done the Disney college programme, she made friends from all over the world. I’ve spoke to some of these friends and told them if they want to come over to England they’re welcome to stay at mine
@mogznwaz Жыл бұрын
We are family who might take the piss out of each other a bit
@ShellSellars-SmithАй бұрын
You kidding me? Visited there 3 times and all they talk about is America! Their news if filled with so much of our news. I remember going to the front desk at the Hilton in London asking for a "local" newspaper as the one I kept reading was full of USA news and I was over it! One article was about a crane operator that fell off a building in Chicago. The lady at the front desk looked at me very strangely and said, " that IS our local newspaper". They hate us like a jealous little sister maybe but, they are obsessed ultimately with everything American and want to be us!
@carlhammill5774Ай бұрын
that is hysterical. Why the fascination with America? I don't see anything about UK in US papers. Odd dynamic.
@Hollym1975 Жыл бұрын
As a brit, calling us “the American of Europe” is so accurate it hurts 😂 I’ve never thought about that before.
@briansmith48 Жыл бұрын
I'm an American and I had to laugh. 😅 Someone should put that on a T-shirt. 😆
@chrisking6695 Жыл бұрын
Brits complaining about Americans need to realize that America exits because of the Brits.
@ktv9247 Жыл бұрын
It's almost as if Americans came from Britain
@Kelnx Жыл бұрын
They hate ya cause they ain't ya. Everyone hates America because we're the most powerful nation on Earth. And Europeans hate the Brits because they're the most powerful nation in Europe. That's just how it goes. Everyone hated the Roman Empire until it died and then suddenly talked about it like it was the greatest thing ever. Humans are just spiteful bastards sometimes.
@eduardogardin879 Жыл бұрын
I have always found it funny that critics of American ways don’t realize that We got many of our ways from Europe
@lagomholly Жыл бұрын
I’m from England and I genuinely love Americans. I love their enthusiasm for life and can’t say I’ve had a bad experience with any American (that’s stuck with me anyway!) Wherever you go there will be people who are judgemental and that’s a part of being patriotic but for me I relate to Americans and feel empathy that we’re going through many of the same struggles. Wishing you the best!😊
@theUSCensorsLikeNorthKorea6 күн бұрын
It's either hate Americans or fawn all over them like they're gods.
@tjj2040 Жыл бұрын
I had never heard of the Freudian concept “Narcissism of small differences”. I found it fascinating because it makes perfect sense. It’s often times the people we have the most similarities with that we also have the MOST competition with.
@mistressofstones Жыл бұрын
For me makes sense of the funny rivalry between Australia and new Zealand because we are almost the same. It's hilarious 😂
@distantplaces6560 Жыл бұрын
You’re an American aren’t you….😂
@djinnxx7050 Жыл бұрын
Siblings are likely the best example. Sibling rivalry can be brutal, my twin sister was a monster until she hit 20. I've never had my life threatened so often by someone since. You'd think I was her sworn enemy, just marked from birth to fight to the death or something. Such petty reasons as well. I never did anything to her, i was mostly nice and only acted in defence. Maybe once I went to push her down the stairs as revenge but grabbed her before she fell too far forward, cause I'm not a cunt. She's tried to push me multiple times, thrown knives and other solid objects, I swear she's actively tried to kill me. Luckily today we get along better, maturity has probably helped, but also simply getting out of eachother space. If we spend more than a few days in the same house, it tends to kick off a little cause you know, familiarity breeds contempt. And she's also a tramp. One of the messiest people I know, clothes strewn everywhere, food left on plates just lying around, such a disorganised mess. And she has the gall to complain if I so much as leave a crisp packet on the side. Unbelievable.
@rwno1 Жыл бұрын
Wow that's a shame, I hope your relationship improves with your sis, thanks for sharing 👍
@laurensadler3363 Жыл бұрын
I get that when it comes to British relations with the French, but fail to see the similarities between UK and USA citizens
@malukee1Ай бұрын
I started studying Psychoanalysis and really appreciated you included the passage from Freud about hypersensitivity to differences. I was surprised 😊
@amandajstar6 ай бұрын
I'm London-born, culturally English, and very proud of my English heritage. And I became an American citizen with an A score on the citizenship test: the man in Chicago at my private swearing in (we had to rush it for business reasons) asked my American husband if he wanted 'to kiss the bride'. He did. It was a glorious moment. Do I look down on Americans? That's not the question. I look down on some people all the time, and don't we all? But mostly I think America is a great nation and I am proud and grateful that its people see me (rightly) as one of them!
@kathleenhensley59516 ай бұрын
Welcome to America! (if only belatedly.)
@amandajstar6 ай бұрын
@@kathleenhensley5951 Thank you very much, Kathleen. You are a typically (if I may say so) generous-spirited American!
@nibekus6 ай бұрын
As an American who is married to a British woman, I greatly appreciate this comment.
@amandajstar6 ай бұрын
@@nibekus Thank you -- and I'm sure you both enjoy what each one offers the other : )
@rabwil5 ай бұрын
proud of what exactly? this should be worth a laugh,
@newalchemy9742 Жыл бұрын
When I'm on trips, I always hear "I didn't expect to hear that from an American" or "I didn't expect an American to feel that way". I was in a group with some people from the South, and everyone from the British to Indians to Australians to Europeans kept asking them about guns. There are lot of generalizations and assumptions (from media and popular culture), and I tell them America is a big place with a lot of people. It's better not to think us all the same. Yes, there are some people that measure up to the stereotypes to an embarrassing degree. Those concepts didn't come from nowhere. That said, I also found lots of people in the places I've been that have been more put off by drunken, vacationing Brits (in Croatia and Italy) and especially the Chinese, who they feel are rude and have no respect for their cultures. I've also heard from people over there that have traveled to America have commented to me that they were surprised that people were kind and helpful to them. Trust me, there are many Americans I know that travel abroad that I wish weren't our representatives because they're ignorant and clueless, but again, not everyone here is boorish, uneducated, overweight, and outspoken.
@mbrady2329 Жыл бұрын
Believe it or not, British tourists used to be popular in Croatia, before it became a package holiday destination again! That's probably because it tended to be educated people who'd go on holiday there.
@brittany27yall Жыл бұрын
👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
@Mongo42089 Жыл бұрын
Most seem to think we're uncultured and/or have no desire to learn about anything outside of the US, which really couldn't be further from the truth. The flag wearers are often just louder and more noticeable.
@tanyareavis787 Жыл бұрын
The British are catching up to Americans in the Obese category. They're more like America than they realize.
@mariusa.5863 Жыл бұрын
Comments like that ("I didn’t expect to hear that from an American") are an indicator for stupidity and narrow-mindedness. How can you seriously expect someone to fit the five stereotypes you heard about the country they are from? Can’t get my head around that. Sure, some do fit the stereotypes - I meet two American guys once and they somehow (I still don’t know why and how) changed the topic to guns and rambled on about which guns they own and how much fun it is to hunt. One even said he's a democrat but against stricter gun regulations because after guns, they'd take every other "freedom" from them. 🙄 That was bewildering, but I would never assume all Americans are keen on guns. Even if most are, can’t we at least try to perceive other people as individuals instead of embodiments of our stereotypes? If only we could break humankind from this awful tendency to generalization, stereotyping, prejudice, and xenophobia, the world would be a better place.
@antonioecruz Жыл бұрын
So I was born in Chile but grew up in the US. And when I travel abroad one thing I notice is that people in other countries regularly talk about the US. Even when I present myself as Chilean, not as American, it is a very normal thing to bring up the US in everyday conversation. In contrast, living in the US people rarely talk about any other country. There's very little opinion about the UK here compared to a strong opinion on the US within the UK. I think living in the US, the vast majority of my days I never once mention any other country, and the UK specifically maybe only a few times a year. So I think the opinions Americans have on the UK are very minor opinions without much nuance, but the opinions the British have on the US seem almost obsessive.
@visigoth9271 Жыл бұрын
You've gotta be really into geopolitics to care about that here. After all, every possible adversary is 1000's of mile by ocean away, not like we have to worry about land invasions.
@nintendonerdjoseph Жыл бұрын
I don't know about that. Living in the United States, it feels like nobody ever shuts up about Mexico, Russia, China, Canada, Ukraine, etc.
@itsnoterica Жыл бұрын
They still can’t let go of that one tea party they weren’t invited to 😂
@Navybrat64 Жыл бұрын
@@nintendonerdjosephthat's because these countries are always in our business....except Ukraine. There's nothing wrong with helping a country defend themselves from our biggest adversary.
@Navybrat64 Жыл бұрын
@@itsnoterica😂😂😂😂😂...they still big mad
@braddawson449628 күн бұрын
I was stationed in Scotland in the early 1980s (loved it) and my feeling was as the woman around 12:40 said, it felt like I had stepped back in time about 25 years or so. That was up in the backwoods outside Glasgow area. We did visit Edinburgh, which seemed much closer to how the US was at that time. There is a very good book called "The American Years: Dunoon & the US Navy" which captures allot of what I am talking about as far the culture shock that worked both ways.
@Said_w_the_G Жыл бұрын
I work for a British company, but in North America. I’m American, and the one thing I really struggle with regarding the brits is how indirect they speak about things and how it’s hard to get a straight answer. Everything has to be inferred or deciphered, almost anything, every way, haha
@RoxanneM- Жыл бұрын
The world need us @Said_w_the_G ! Saying things as they are! Just straight! 😂 But true. 😉😎 😅
@ssalerno92005 ай бұрын
Totally agree. I lived in London for two years for college, and it was like peeling away a cultural/social onion to try to get to the heart of the matter with the cues I was being given. That said, I have mates for life over there, and I love them and the country. They are a great people. Almost as great as the Irish. wink, wink.
@vincenthubert32424 ай бұрын
I am a Brit and I find Americans friendly, warm and chatty ❤
@paddington16704 ай бұрын
dont pander
@carlgriffith46604 ай бұрын
@@paddington1670 Yes, no pandering on that, the Canadians will get upset!!!!
@StanleyRowe-fd1um4 ай бұрын
We don't care
@user-hs4ei274 ай бұрын
Look at the biggest tech companies in the world, all American businesses, what does that say about Americans?
@JOKER-mt5yu4 ай бұрын
We don't want your love 🖕
@50ShadesofJoGray6 ай бұрын
That's crazy "in England we don't enjoy others' success." I celebrate my friends accomplishment even if I'm struggling, it's good to have powerful pals!
@mels.37506 ай бұрын
I think this attitude is changing with young people.
@lowlygrinder29775 ай бұрын
@@mels.3750 Yeah, but that's EVERYWHERE.
@MrKelleyzinho5 ай бұрын
There’s even a song by the Smiths entitled “We Hate It when Our Friends Are Successful”
@jorvikaengelskvinna71575 ай бұрын
@@MrKelleyzinho But that's because it's a song by The Smiths...Morrissey has made an entire career out of being miserable.
@rebekahbonis59214 ай бұрын
I personally think even when I'm not doing well myself because it gives me hope but I'll get out of my own situation. But I'm also just happy to see other people doing well generally. Why wouldn't you?
@KostaPendarovskiАй бұрын
For my British friends, French also use the word autumn for fall, and they unfortunately have no other word/s for it. ;)
@soongone99 Жыл бұрын
I am an American in the U.S. Air Force who lived in the U.K. For three years. When we were close to leaving, our British landlord asked me to be available to show the house to potential new renters. First time, I had to go back to the house in my uniform. A man arrived, i opened the door. He looked at my uniform and said: “Thank God, an American!” Turns out he was Canadian and was not impressed with the mother country…
@aclark90311 ай бұрын
There are good & bad things about all 3 countries. But Britain is too secular now. At least in America you still have free speech protections. Tony Blair dismantled that for us.
@andrewnorris541511 ай бұрын
Maybe he meant all the immigrants living in that area? Some areas do not feel like the West. I've nothing against them personally but that could explain what he meant. Also cultural shock is real lol. Many Americans and Canadians from not get the Brits' sense of humour etc and misinterpret them.
@robertonavarro771311 ай бұрын
My 19 years old grandson joined the US Air Force as soon as he graduated from high school last year. He is now in a USAF base in England. He was born and actually grew up in Northern California.
@LiamSmith-r3p11 ай бұрын
@@andrewnorris5415 I'm sure you're not one of these people I'm about to describe. I'm an american that stayed in the u.k. for months at a time and in my experience it can be very uncomfrotable seeing other people form assumptions about you and your personality based on things that you can't control like your accent and nationality for the first time. Most people were great and fun and inviting but others came across as pretentious or even xenophobic in my view. I met people who insisted that I didn't speak real english and tried to correct me in my native language. People that hardly knew me and tried to lecture me about my own country and its politics. I felt like at times people spoke to me as if I were probably stupid more than I could remember happening at home. And even if 20 people are friendly and funny somehow the one ignornant one will stick with you. I can see how it breeds a little resentment. Of course all that is really nothing compared to what people from other countries often experience in England or America for that matter. Anyway, theres ignornant people everywhere. America is just as bad its just im seen as normal here. I love the U.K. and hope to go back soon 🇬🇧🤝🇺🇸 . At the end of the day we have so much more in common.
@dingleberryxo762310 ай бұрын
@@robertonavarro7713 And your point is .....?
@SirLeDoux Жыл бұрын
The only time I was at Disney World in Florida I was behind a large British family -when I got to the check out girl I started talking to her. She said “ oh …finally an American!” I asked why she said that?” Because British people are rude as hell and think they are better!” Is what she said. Every worker I spoke to said the same thing-I’ll take our outlook and personality.
@DianaWanMa Жыл бұрын
Oh, I don’t think that’s a British behavior, but more of rich families one. Flight attendants hate to travel from Florida to South America because they feel superior as they could take their family to Disney World…
@SirLeDoux Жыл бұрын
@@DianaWanMa well I’m basing it on the statements from many employees I talked to afterwards. All that I asked stated that the British people were snobs and rude. Now yes they are probably wealthy too but the workers didn’t complain about the other ethnicities who traveled there. To be fair there are tons of rude people-rich or poor here in America and that’s for sure!
@CanadaHoneybee Жыл бұрын
And yet as a Canadian it’s the British who are kind classy and intelligent when they visit Canada. It’s actually mostly Americans who are rude and uneducated
@eponacraft8583 Жыл бұрын
@@SirLeDoux It's funny because I've had the same experience as you, except in a different way. I'm an American living in Britain. I see the same thing here. As an example, my kids and I went to Alton Towers (an amusement park), and we had a blast! Right after each ride, we would hurry over to purchase photos, giggling and talking excitedly about the silly faces we had been making. At 3 different photo stands, the sales staff asked us why we were so happy. The third time, I said, "Because we're having fun at Alton Towers! Isn't everyone happy here?" The guy behind the counter said, "No, they're not. You're the only ones." My daughter said, "That's so sad! Why would you spend all of this money to just be miserable?" The guy agreed. He said it was nice to see some smiling faces. After that, we started noticing that the guy was right. Almost everyone else there looked like they just wanted to go home. It's not a problem with the park - it's a great place. Not everyone there was wealthy and/or upper class, either. I think it's their culture, which is fine. I prefer to be happy, but it isn't everyone's cup of tea!
@eleanorwalmsley635 Жыл бұрын
@@eponacraft8583The Brits are miserable... I have lived in Britain since I was 3, Irish by birth and parentage... It's ridiculous I love my American friends ❤
@margaretchayka68786 ай бұрын
Funny how everyone is able to label Americans, but ask them to label other groups or countries and they run away as fast as they can because they're afraid to. So, a bit loud and tacky we might be, but we're not going to try to kill you over it.
@lowlygrinder29775 ай бұрын
How is America any different?
@MissleLaunch5 ай бұрын
nah we're just gonna get louder and tackier 🤟🤣🇺🇲✨
@Zoe-c9z5 ай бұрын
WELL SAID
@icelugedoctorАй бұрын
America is the only country is seems that it’s socially acceptable to ignorantly stereotype.
@johncrowley3722Ай бұрын
I am married to a British woman. She is absolutely refreshing and amazing. Love the history, her friends and family due tend to be a bit standoffish. They do tend to be spry and witty with the intent to throw you off in your thoughts. But their jest is not malicious, it's more of a test of your intelligence. If you send it right back in conversation it's taken as an ' okay you got me, but can you catch this one...I have been told my honesty is refreshing, and I am easy to talk to and they like when we are genuine in our listening skills. If you are going to travel there, brush up on your PROPER English!
@EnglishUbermensch7 күн бұрын
Maybe if most English can brush up on their manners
@calycoc26906 ай бұрын
As an American who just moved back from the UK after living there for five years, I disagree about the NHS. The lack of focus on preventative care is a huge negative of that system. I had a baby while in the UK and the maternity care I received was chaotic. Healthcare was one of the reasons I moved back.
@damianjblack5 ай бұрын
Largely because the Tories who have spent the last 17 years in power have been doing their best to ruin the NHS at the behest of their corporate cronies. The Tories are like the Republicans except without the religious fundamentalism.
@kellycornell75105 ай бұрын
Yet my Universal Healthcare in Canada wasn't chaotic. The quality of care I received in 2020 was excellent. I would only trade it for what is offered in France.
@lowlygrinder29775 ай бұрын
My healthcare was amazing, and I'm not bankrupt from it, my sister had two kids, so did my cousins, they were fine. In fact woman in the US are twice as likely to die while giving birth as women in the UK. Look it up.
@GoodBoyOskie5 ай бұрын
I worked at a border hospital where our population doubled every winter because of an incursion of "snowbirds" from cold climates. Most were from Canada. Many would come to get needed surgeries they had a 2 to 3 year wait for in Canada because of lack of available beds. The system works for the young, because in general, their health issues are pretty standard and not in crisis mode. But older people have more serious and chronic health issues, so the system doesn't work as well for them. And this is something I learned directly from older Canadians. Also, we imported some nurses from the UK at one time, due to a nursing shortage here. They were 30 years behind in the medical tech. And I believe it's why my brother died in the UK. I was shocked how long it took for them to diagnose my brother's issue. He was dead before the test results came back. Also had a friend who said they would never go back to the UK. He had chronic health issues from his time in the Canadian military. But he said the doctors were so far behind the treatments for his problem, he had to tell them how to treat it. The people were awesome. But the healthcare was sub-par compared to here.
@kellycornell75105 ай бұрын
@GoodBoyOskie why would any Canadian just cross the border for the same cold ass weather they are escaping from for one. I am not a spring chicken and still received good care. Is it perfect? No. But I still wouldn't trade it for the States as someone living on a disability pension.
@Cthepro3217 ай бұрын
I’m so ready to be a 6’2 southern US smiling idiot in the uk. I would love for people to look at me like I’m stupid because I’m nice. I’d rather be made fun of for being nice and honest rather than blending in by being bland
@pevebe6 ай бұрын
Not sure what your height has to do with it. As a 6'4 grumpy Englishman
@DefeatedElite5 ай бұрын
@@pevebe what does your height have to do with being english? 😂
@pevebe5 ай бұрын
@@DefeatedElite Point and centre
@heidi71515 ай бұрын
Southern Americans are an incredibly brave warrior people and also the kindest in the US. Bravery and kindness are better values than perceived sophistication. Brits refuse to accept that everyone, even royalty people, have either shit themselves or came damn near close.
@AFVetteran5 ай бұрын
@@heidi7151 Midwestern Americans are far kinder and more genuine in their kindness. Southerners are as phony as they get in the US. Friendly if you're just visiting but gossipy, and weary of outsiders in their cliquey rural towns.
@staypositive950 Жыл бұрын
I am an American who lives in continental Europe. I spent time in the UK and met some really lovely people. I have also met some Brits on my travels who are simply snobs. I can't be bothered with snobs from anywhere. I don't think I am better than you but I don't think I'm worse.
@afritimm Жыл бұрын
The English (not the Scots) still have a class system. Despite all the left-wing politics.
@Mulberry20007 ай бұрын
i met a lot of ignorant Americans on my travels and well as nutty brits
@biggiedii48896 ай бұрын
@@afritimm Left-wing isn't really what I'd describe England. It's a lot more conservative than they're willing to admit.
@afritimm6 ай бұрын
@@biggiedii4889 They've been pretty darned left-wing ever since Atlee, with a brief exception for Thatcher. And BBC types are very left-wing as well as quite snobbish.
@travelamazon13 сағат бұрын
The USA is the colony that got away from Britain and Europe, they have never gotten over that. I'm currently laughing loudly in American.
@feewaybilz Жыл бұрын
My uncle married a Brit and moved to Kent in his 20s and within 20 years cultivated a full British accent simply to hide the fact that he was American because of the negative attitude. This attitude goes way back to the time of The Revolution --the resentment that we did not need Britain to do really well in the world, but surpassed them and became a unique world leader whilst their British Empire of colonialism was crumbling. I also think it's this air of superiority that Brits grow up with is what allowed them to convince so many colonial countries to submit to them. I have been going To England and the UK often for 50 years, visiting family, traveling all over, have many friends there. But I will say that the stereotype of the Inferior annoying American is upheld in the media --every single time an American is portrayed in a movie or TV show, they are loud, stupid, greedy or obnoxious. I think this media indoctrination has subconsciously affected all Brits from a young age. I am a reserved soft, spoken, very polite and well educated person. And yet, I have still been talked down to in a condescending manner countless times. It's worse with the upper class Brits who descend from the class system. They hate new money or anyone who betters themselves above their original "class.". So of course, they hate most Americans who have money. And they believe all the people that came over to America were criminals, or lower class, but they also look down on their own people of lower classes. They look down on and ridicule the French and The Germans, you name it. They are a hyper-critical culture. And truth be told they're pretty damn miserable lot.
@leapdrive Жыл бұрын
Yet, they’re hanging on their fingernails economically and hoping to join with our North American trade while being obnoxious and in a proverbial tattered pants. Now, they tell India they shouldn’t be exploring space (after their successful moon landing with their explorer buggy) while they (India) is still poor. Do they know that India is projected to be the no. 2 economy by 2050 while they lose ground in economic ranking? Such a jealous country!
@lakelvp Жыл бұрын
Does the misery explain the fantastic sense of humor? I live in Paris where the vibe and built environment make misery difficult and find people are happy but have a terrible sense of humor.
@missinformed9550 Жыл бұрын
The rude behaviour you are describing is classic English snobbery.
@walkwithmeASMR Жыл бұрын
I'm british. This isn't my view. I love American movies. I don't think Americans are loud or anything I just don't understand some of the politics like gun laws when so many get killed. But again I could be completely wrong ans I accept that I don't know enough to have an opinion. You seem like nice people.
@leapdrive Жыл бұрын
@@walkwithmeASMR , if it weren’t for Americans armed to the teeth, we would have been taken over by these Comm ists Democrats and so will the rest of the world as they would have flaunted the US military and have quietly taken over.
@lulumoon694210 ай бұрын
*Once I break up, I never listen to what my ex thinks, they're always SO bitter!* 👀
@ArronMurray10 ай бұрын
But here you are, watching this video....like a creepy X 😂😂
@Rebelcowboy210 ай бұрын
Yeah like we broke up with the uk
@hannahdyson712910 ай бұрын
We feel the same way
@SStupendous10 ай бұрын
@@Rebelcowboy2 damn sure did
@Rebelcowboy210 ай бұрын
@@SStupendous im glad for that cuz uk has some ugly women
@dalegreer309511 ай бұрын
The word she was looking for is "ashamed", not "shameful". An action can be shameful, a person can be ashamed of a shameful action they did.
@deantreloarАй бұрын
American here, deep south, Louisiana. Anglophile since childhood. My grandparents always demonstrated an unusually high regard for the UK(music, landscape, television, etc.). I don’t know where that came from but I’m grateful to have had that exposure and it shaped me. That said, I find people who are critical of a nation’s citizens base on excessively broad generalizations cannot be taken seriously.
@Dryhten180124 күн бұрын
Considering this is London and most of the interviewees are migrants, I can assure you it's not an accurate representation
@AquinoFamily992 күн бұрын
Very similar upbringing here. When I finally visited the UK I thought everyone was wonderful. Everyone was very nice to us. Everything exceeded my expectations - all the beautiful landscapes and the very old villages and warm, friendly pubs! We didn’t visit London, though.
@andreawallace4044 Жыл бұрын
I'm an American and while living in California, I met a British girl who was going to school there for theater. I was excited to talk to her because I also went to school for theater and I think British people are really cool but she seemed really annoyed and I could tell she felt superior. Not sure why she came to America to learn when she already felt like she was better than us😂
@shaunsteele6926 Жыл бұрын
I've noticed a lot of Brits aren't really interested in what we call "small talk". To us it's being friendly, but to them it's being disingenuous
@kevinprzy4539 Жыл бұрын
Europeans in general are just anti social, maybe it's due to the amount of foreigners that have invaded their lands for the past 2000 years.@@shaunsteele6926
@gloryglory5688 Жыл бұрын
Maybe you just have a head like a robbers dog?
@ashleighsparkle8810 Жыл бұрын
@@shaunsteele6926 That sounds miserable. Why just expect the worst of everyone instead of assume genuine interest and friendliness?
@heatherheaney4060 Жыл бұрын
They dont do small talk. Most countries in Europe don't do small talk. They dont like it, it feels fake and a waist of time.
@PipBerry Жыл бұрын
I'm English and spent some time living in South Carolina twenty years ago. Through business, I met lots of great people from Orlando to Boston. The only thing that took some getting used to was how abruptly they end telephone calls! 😂 I will always treasure my memories of living there.
@lindaniedringhaus879011 ай бұрын
That's because they don't want to take up too much of your time!
@willrob129611 ай бұрын
hahaha ive always noticed that about americans, how abruptly they end phone calls!! Not saying its wrong as they probably save a lot of time compared to us brits who spend a minute saying goodbye in different ways
@striker311 ай бұрын
Depends on where one is calling Call someone in Iowa and they'll be non abrupt. Talk to someone in NY city and they'll hang up before you make the call. A NY second is a hour in Montana. lol The United States is a mix of everything every state is different, every states law will vary and local English can vary in tone, and word meaning etc. Louisiana and Cajun ethnic variations are a thing. Thanks for your time.
@andrewdouvros111 ай бұрын
@@willrob1296in the South, they are known for their long good bye’s; that could take 15-45 minutes alone
@andrewdouvros111 ай бұрын
As someone who is from the greater Boston metro area, who has lived in Orlando and South Carolina; those areas you lived in are a great representation of America’s east coast.
@amyb1078 Жыл бұрын
I'm American, and we say both "autumn" and "fall." I actually prefer fall because I find it somewhat poetic. It's a fall from grace, the fall of the year, the fall of the leaves. In fact, the term "fall" to mean the third season originated in Britain, according to my research.
@bobs182 Жыл бұрын
Lorrie, bonnet, petrol, rubbers
@JustmeT1978 Жыл бұрын
@amyb1078 69% at least 😁😆
@eduardogardin879 Жыл бұрын
Plus in reminds us to change the clock back one hour. You know..fall back, spring forward.
@eduardogardin879 Жыл бұрын
@@bobs182 Don’t forget FAG and BIRD
@shaunsteele6926 Жыл бұрын
@@bobs182 don't forget fanny. It's quite an innocent word in America that you might use when speaking to a child, but it means something different in the UK lol
@wildwest54367 сағат бұрын
Being married to a foreigner, I feel it's best to let America be America and don't try to change it to their culture and standards. We are a different type of people with different Constitutional structures. Both good or bad, we have to figure that all out to become a better people.
@BobbyBermuda1986 Жыл бұрын
What's funny about the whole autumn/fall dynamic is that Americans didn't "invent" the word, "fall" to refer to the season. We have evidence of use of it in England before America. The Brits simply dropped it in favor of the French term, "autumn" at some point.
@EricaGamet Жыл бұрын
As with so many words that were in use in Britain, ported to the US, then dropped... like soccer. If I hear one more Brit online complain that "it's not soccer!" I'm going to go mad! Also, I find it odd that people complain that we use different words or pronunciations... that's because we speak American English... get over it. Sorry for the rant haha!
@ytlurker220 Жыл бұрын
@@EricaGametthey can complain about the words because of how they were created though. Many were created by American tabloids/newspapers for brevity and ease of remembering.
@linmonPIE Жыл бұрын
Also Americans do use the word autumn so there’s no use getting all huffy over it. There’s so many words the Brits gave us that they later on decided to drop for whatever reason. The same goes for our imperial measuring system. Too bad the metric system didn’t take over Britain in time to get a firmer foothold in America before our independence.
@EricaGamet Жыл бұрын
@@ytlurker220 But so many were in use by Brits (no outside influence)... then we started using the words and then the Brits stopped or changed and we kept them. Soccer is a great example. That was a term coined by the British.
@lorrainemoynehan6791 Жыл бұрын
@@EricaGamet language is fluid. Just let it go. It's not important if you understand. What is deeply annoying is a constant 'you use to say it like that, you changed an we didn't' as some kind of badge of honour. Get with the programme. We now say mirror not looking glass, radio as wireless now has another meaning. There are huge important differences, poverty, worker's rights, healthcare, try not to worry about football
@lenilsonjr Жыл бұрын
As a Brazilian living in Portugal, I can relate so much to this "dynamic", albeit to a lesser degree, as the UK and US have a much closer relationship in terms of policy and geopolitics. This idea of "narcissism of small differences" is new to me but it makes so much sense. I moved here after a long stint living in Asia and I was surprised to see how both Brazilians and Portuguese here seemed to focus so much on perceived small diferences vs. how we're pretty much the same culture. If anything, I learned that generalizations are usually quite useless heuristics when trying to understand other places and peoples.
@dobrorhei Жыл бұрын
Nailed it 👏👏
@luisa27004 Жыл бұрын
Eu fiquei pensando bastante nisso enquanto via o vídeo! Várias conexões que poderiam ser feitas... Brasil seria os Estados Unidos e Portugal o Reino Unido nesse caso, já que nós somos vistos como os "exagerados" e vemos portugueses como mais cultos. Também sobre o uso da língua. Se o Brasil tivesse em melhor situação, é capaz que a gente visse os portugueses como "fofinhos" também, já que globalmente o Brasil aparece mais que Portugal - como influência dentro da sua região e culturalmente, por exemplo. Muito gringo aprende português brasileiro, por exemplo, como acontece com o inglês americano. Parece mais relevante aprender o brasileiro, sabe? Mas acho que a grande diferença entre a nossa situação e EUA/Reino Unido é a colonização! Talvez por isso nós temos uma situação mais difícil de superar que a deles. Você que mora em Portugal concorda ou acha que eu tô viajando? haha. Já passei férias em Portugal e enquanto subia ladeira de Porto pensando nas ladeiras de Ouro Preto, a sensação foi de um vínculo meio estranho. A mesma coisa vendo monumento do descobrimento. Sei lá, um misto de vínculo cultural e mesmo genealógico, ao mesmo tempo que uma vontade de ser tudo menos igual a eles. O "narcissism of small differences" ganha uma camada a mais: não querer ser como o opressor ou o oprimido.
@pauvermelho Жыл бұрын
@luisa27004 Na Europa aprende-se Inglês Britânico. Nas aulas aprende-se "Autunm" E julgo que na maiora do planeta aprende-se Inglês Britânico excepto no continente Americano
@JoBlakeLisbon Жыл бұрын
Brazilian culture is extremely different to Portuguese culture. I've lived in both countries and they are very different at all levels. You can see a bit of a thread between the two but the populations are very different.
@pbohearn Жыл бұрын
I think the commonality here is that both the UK and Portugal are two former empires that dominated the world and were full of glory, only to see serious decline, and one of their colonies that they exploited grow well above and over them. It is certainly humbling what the British are going through right now because of their stupid error of leaving the EU. Many of us feel a certain shaudenfreude. The British have been propping themselves up on the memories of their empire for so long, but really, it’s outdated with the current reality, which is that they are certainly a much weaker country than they’ve ever been. All the glory of the coronation is just a show, what’s underneath? The British always wantto underscore its “special relationship“ with United States. I think that’s a term they came up with after World War II to attach onto the country that they knew was in power now. I don’t know if Americans feel the same way. By the way, I live in Portugal And I felt a certain hostility from the Portuguese simply for all of the foreigners that are moving there. If there’s anyone to blame, it’s the policy of their own government which open the doors to get foreign capital. I don’t find them particularly open to foreigners.
@crystalmichaud37167 ай бұрын
They need to stop listening to social media for our culture. They only see the negative because people don't talk about good stuff much because its normal behavior.
@earldriskill35057 ай бұрын
The way they talk about Americans seem they only have a limited understanding of us.
@greencat38007 ай бұрын
Well said. Very well said.
@SultanSully977 ай бұрын
@@earldriskill3505 They don't though, they know good and bad things about America, but the bad points out way the good. If you asked a European back in the 90s what is the best country in the world they would say "The US" f*ck it I would have said the US at one point I even wanted to live there, but that simply isn't the case anymore. No free healthcare, poor education, no safety net, no workers rights, most incarcerated citizens in the world more than communist china, gun violence is a different topic on there own in fact imagine having your kid go to school in a school bus than coming home in a hearse, like the "Uvalde, Sandy Hook and Covenant High School in Nashville. The government doesn't look after it's people and these have nothing to do with media these are facts!!!
@MJEvermore8537 ай бұрын
@@SultanSully97...ummm...you are either terribly misinformed or plain stupid. Pick one and correct your issues.
@greencat38007 ай бұрын
@@SultanSully97 At least they shouldn’t make fun of us for dealing with such a shitty government. At least let them have some understanding not an entire population agrees with the way our government handles our issues. :/ Because SOME of them are just basically going all “Americans are so $@&%ing stupid for _____ or whatever they try to make an excuse to hate on an entire population. :///
@monicat.488024 күн бұрын
Nathaniel, thank you for this, I really enjoyed this .l hope you do more of this because you are not wrong, just don't know how you are on the right track about this needed subject to continue to discuss, because only in constant conversation will we all understand each other better.❤
@leesmith5265 Жыл бұрын
I'm American and I lived in Barcelona for 6 years. Yes I learned the language and had a ton of Spanish & Catalan friends as well as lots of friends from the UK, France, Sweden etc. I quickly learned that the people who had negative opinions about the US 99% of the time had never been here, and had formed their opinions based on stereotypes rather than personal experiences. EDIT: The title of this video is "Why do the British look down on Americans" not "Who is more ignorant, the British or the Americans" Yes Americans can be completely ignorant to lots of things. The point of this video is that lots of people in the UK have very strong opinions about the US. While lots of people in the US are kinda just oblivious to the outside world IMO. Two totally different issues.
@corriemayo2715 Жыл бұрын
@solveeasy2056this video isn‘t putting Americans or Brits in a bad lightl you‘re reading things that aren’t in the script
@Mulberry2000 Жыл бұрын
Rubbish is down to meeting people from the US. That's my experience.
@nofurtherwest3474 Жыл бұрын
America is huge. You might meet some from the south vs say NYC and form your opinion of the entire country on that one sample.
@GilbertdeClare0704 Жыл бұрын
Totally agree ! And here in the UK, our hard Left wing Labour Party and State Propaganda Outlet, formerly known as the bbc, all PLAY on that ignorance and manipulate it for their own ends. As a very proud Englishman, whenever I have visited the USA, mostly down South, I have been bowled OVER by how wonderful, friendly and helpful ordinary Americans are ! I meet FAR more A***holes every day in the UK than I have EVER met in the U.S
@shraddashradda Жыл бұрын
Exacto! I’ve lived in the Americas for a long time and I’m British…I prefer to be around international communities that are well traveled and open to differences. Oftentimes people who are not well traveled assume a more closed mindset and have no clue of the reality of other cultures. When my US friends tease me for my accent I just tell them ‘well you trashed the English language long ago!’ 🤭 I lived in London years ago and never felt I was surrounded by rascist British people, everyone was open to all cultures.
@FNJ720 Жыл бұрын
Too direct, honest, and happy?? As an American I find this hilarious 😂 😂😂 it’s literally making me more happy 😆 Also I’ve never thought of the British as better, smarter, or more sophisticated. That’s crazy.
@misswendyjane4992 Жыл бұрын
They are more sophisticated - I can't believe you can't admit that truth.
@dirgemage Жыл бұрын
@@misswendyjane4992acting pretentious doesn't MAKE you more sophisticated.
@anulkaaw Жыл бұрын
Lmao, do you really think that an excerpt from a book by a former prince represents what all ppl in the UK think? Watch the whole video.
@cherylhoggins1925 Жыл бұрын
So the 'too happy' part, it's that the happiness isn't genuine. The cliched "Have a nice day, " forced smiling and cheerfulness of your servers because they rely on tips to live. For Brits that too in your face and makes us feel uncomfortable, especially when it feels like a fake sheen covering a very dark reality. Honest and direct, too much of this can be tactless and needlessly cruel. It speaks to deeper issues that I won't get into here but rather than take the comments defensively, it might be an idea to think about why people are seeing the Amercians in this way. When we understand each other better, then we get along better and can all be better to each other.
@geniewishes4823 Жыл бұрын
@@cherylhoggins1925we’re taught that having a bad day isn’t a reason to go out in public and not conform. No one on the street did anything to you so why can’t you wish them a good weekend? I wouldn’t call it fake because not everyone smiles and participates is pleasantries but it is expected of you.
@dustincanfield5899Ай бұрын
I pretty much don't even think about them
@ramo_141 Жыл бұрын
I think you can love yourself, your home country and your culture without putting down someone else's
@MusizBesties Жыл бұрын
It's really not english perception you say here! Most american are still(more than ever) colonialism
@Artist1974CH11 ай бұрын
U.S. loves to put down someone else's countries all the time! LIFE DOES NOT EVOLVE AROUND THE U.S.!
@HappyChurros-qx6qd11 ай бұрын
Ive never felt like colonizing another country nor anyone I know for that matter.@@MusizBesties
@elelegidosf970711 ай бұрын
Indeed, but the love of oneself is a topic that, although interesting in its own right, is unrelated to the topic of why Brits dislike Americans.