Southerners read mean tweets about the South (again!)

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  • čas přidán 15. 07. 2024
  • Y'all really need to mind your manners.
  • Komedie

Komentáře • 2,4K

  • @mountaindewdrop5893
    @mountaindewdrop5893 Před 2 lety +1607

    Everybody know the opposite of plum awful is peachy keen! Come on now!

    • @rrrob19
      @rrrob19 Před 2 lety +34

      Preach!

    • @megroux
      @megroux Před 2 lety +10

      Pahaha! Yes indeed!

    • @timmholl9238
      @timmholl9238 Před 2 lety +43

      I don't know....I kinda want Adam to trademark "apple great."

    • @traceytillery382
      @traceytillery382 Před 2 lety +26

      Try this: "Peachy keen, jellybean!"

    • @ssp4795
      @ssp4795 Před 2 lety +2

      haha, brilliant.

  • @asdisskagen6487
    @asdisskagen6487 Před 2 lety +997

    Anyone who doesn't understand the sliced tomato as a side... has never had a good tomato. Grocery store tomatoes have all the flavor of plastic. You need a good, home-grown, organic, heirloom tomato that was picked when it was RIPE, sliced just before serving and with a sprinkle of sea salt and freshly ground black pepper. It is the taste of summer. Literally, that's the only/best time you can get tomatoes with flavor that good.

    • @HappyLife693
      @HappyLife693 Před 2 lety +25

      Oh my gosh! Now I want a fresh tomato. As an aside, cucumber sandwiches are delicious too.

    • @jamesburton1050
      @jamesburton1050 Před 2 lety +16

      @@HappyLife693 with mayo!

    • @HappyLife693
      @HappyLife693 Před 2 lety +8

      @@jamesburton1050 absolutely! While, it’s not traditional, I also love dill in my cucumber sandwich.

    • @Dawn_Hannah
      @Dawn_Hannah Před 2 lety +5

      Amen! 🙌🏼

    • @countrygirl6003
      @countrygirl6003 Před 2 lety +3

      you are soooo right!

  • @donosborne9398
    @donosborne9398 Před rokem +38

    We don't park in our yards, we just grow grass in our driveway! 😄

  • @athinadillmann9234
    @athinadillmann9234 Před 2 lety +308

    I gotta say: I‘m from Germany, never even been to the USA, but I love the south. Your humor, your accents, music, weather, landscaping, courtesy. I really hope I can visit someday. And I love your channel. 🥰

    • @jeffpatterson3676
      @jeffpatterson3676 Před rokem +9

      Lol come to my hometown Cullman Al, founded by Germans lots of German named streets and shops and oh the people, lol I'm Scott irsh 60 percent some German

    • @floridadad2817
      @floridadad2817 Před rokem +3

      Did you like how they thought "Gunner" was a Southern name? LOL

    • @tekkaikenmega509
      @tekkaikenmega509 Před rokem +2

      I hope you enjoy a visit be great to have you over for a spell and soak up the culture

    • @PurebloodedPatriot
      @PurebloodedPatriot Před rokem +3

      Much appreciated! You're welcome here anytime. 🇺🇸 Georgia 🇺🇸

    • @Bridgeburner4477
      @Bridgeburner4477 Před rokem +2

      visit Texas. There's a lot of German settlements in central Texas cities like Schertz, Elgin, Phlugerville. I recommend Austin to visit.

  • @j.s.matlock1456
    @j.s.matlock1456 Před 2 lety +906

    It's not "plum" like the fruit. It's "plumb" like a plumb bob or a plumb line as in perfectly straight. In common uses one can substitute the word "completely" for the word "plumb" as in: I'm completely (plumb) tuckered out. Or: I completely (plumb) forgot.

    • @eponine318
      @eponine318 Před 2 lety +89

      Yay! Thank you for pointing this out. It's plumb accurate :)

    • @nanoflower1
      @nanoflower1 Před 2 lety +53

      Exactly. I was sort of surprised that none of them noticed that it was supposed to be plumb. Though using "plum" did allow for the apple joke.

    • @JackieBaisa
      @JackieBaisa Před 2 lety +32

      I know. That drove me crazy. There's a B on the end of it! It's not a fruit!

    • @TheSuzberry
      @TheSuzberry Před 2 lety +10

      I love you.

    • @Aethelgeat
      @Aethelgeat Před 2 lety +51

      Plumb for me is the same as 'straight up.' No equivocation or qualification, just dead on, square , precise, and accurate. So that's plumb awful is that's straight up awful. Not almost, not kinda-sorta, not in the ball park (which supports 'completely').

  • @MrsAlmaTrumble
    @MrsAlmaTrumble Před 2 lety +710

    To those who have anything rude or mean to say about the South. Bless your heart.

    • @Chris_Troxler
      @Chris_Troxler Před 2 lety +18

      RIGHT??

    • @joeymccullough2716
      @joeymccullough2716 Před 2 lety +28

      No, it’s bless their little pea-pickin’ hearts!😆

    • @mercurywoodrose
      @mercurywoodrose Před 2 lety +31

      you really went there, just had to say it. someone get out the white gloves and duelling pistols, please.

    • @Pharaoh_Tutankhamen
      @Pharaoh_Tutankhamen Před 2 lety +8

      If you don't like the south, you better stay up North, before you get hurt

    • @itsjustme4848
      @itsjustme4848 Před 2 lety +10

      I’ve spent enough time in the South to know what that really translates to! ;-)

  • @ashleegmitchell
    @ashleegmitchell Před rokem +23

    I worked for a US company once. At orientation, one of the big bosses had come up from Georgia and told us a story about her first time in Canada. She'd never seen a black squirrel before, so she asked her Canadian subordinates, "What the hell is wrong with that cat?" She was shocked when they told her it was a squirrel, because "I didn't know they came in black too!" They all laughed together, and now she tells that story to all new hires. She was hilarious.
    I was eventually delegated to work only with our Hawaiian and Southern customers, because I was pretty good at pronouncing Hawaiian names/words and I guess the Southerners just liked me. I can honestly say that Southern Americans were the most polite customers I have ever had. I loved working on their contracts. There was just one drawback... I picked up their accent and speech patterns. I didn't know I was doing it until I got off a call, and my coworkers were staring at me. I said, "What?" Then one of my friends mockingly responded with, "Y'all have a nice day now." And everyone laughed at me. Apparently, they'd noticed me doing it and then switching back to my normal accent and speech patterns as soon as a Hawaiian client called. I had no idea I was doing it, and they thought it was hilarious.

    • @ameliesayshola8854
      @ameliesayshola8854 Před rokem +1

      I saw black squirrels all the time growing up in the Northeast US. They aren’t as rare as people think 😊

  • @donjackson5522
    @donjackson5522 Před 6 měsíci +19

    Southerners may use lightning as a verb, but y’all up north use barbecue as a verb.

  • @tvdan1043
    @tvdan1043 Před 2 lety +487

    Okay but a ripe back-yard tomato, sliced, with a dash of salt and pepper? That ain't just a side, y'all. That is lunch 🥰

    • @elizabeth6134
      @elizabeth6134 Před 2 lety +12

      you’ve got my mouth watering now!!

    • @ashleydowney1222
      @ashleydowney1222 Před 2 lety

      Yuck.I don't like salt or pepper on stuff.

    • @randomllama7362
      @randomllama7362 Před 2 lety +4

      Have you ever tried Celery Salt on a fresh tomato? Delicious!

    • @elsie412ok
      @elsie412ok Před 2 lety +4

      No lie, my sister and I would be sent out to harvest, and I think we ate as much as we brought in! Lol

    • @elsie412ok
      @elsie412ok Před 2 lety +2

      @@ashleydowney1222 Gotta have at least a little salt on the tomato slices, makes them juicier.

  • @Gee-Oh1
    @Gee-Oh1 Před 2 lety +412

    The most southern thing I have ever heard was "You're making more noise than two skeletons wrestling on a tin roof during a hailstorm!"

    • @StoneColdFox17
      @StoneColdFox17 Před 2 lety +10

      😂😂😂

    • @mercurywoodrose
      @mercurywoodrose Před 2 lety +9

      @@StoneColdFox17 they make more noise of they are not fighting, but showing love for each other if you know what i mean. knocking kneebones is loud.

    • @ataurus2at
      @ataurus2at Před 2 lety +5

      🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @theloftons8297
      @theloftons8297 Před 2 lety +20

      I know an older gentleman, from Louisiana, and if something good happens to a person or if they have a little money he'll say "Oh, you're just shittin' in high cotton aren't ya".

    • @tiffanybramlette6998
      @tiffanybramlette6998 Před 2 lety +12

      My husband said most he heard was "you're makin more noise than a bull rhino in heat draggin a wooden box full a Mason jars full a marbles down rail road tracks down a flight of stairs"

  • @forty_two42
    @forty_two42 Před rokem +14

    I was raised Irish Catholic. This is the first I'm hearing of "No drinking in church" I tried Whiskey for the first time during coffee hour after service

    • @lanarose198
      @lanarose198 Před rokem

      yeah..... down here, the baptists and other evangelicals are the dominant religion and influence pretty much all liquor laws. That's why we still have wet and dry counties.

    • @dhash1712
      @dhash1712 Před rokem +1

      Southern Baptist, ya’ll

    • @RTPMinx
      @RTPMinx Před rokem +2

      @@dhash1712 I got a funny story about Southern Baptists. My friends and I were helping a Baptist minister move to his newly built church and, while we were packing up his things, we found a fifth of Jack Daniels under the bathroom sink in his private quarters. We took it to the minister and said, "sir, what is this doing in the bathroom?". He responded, without missing a beat, "oh, that's for medicinal purposes". Well, we couldn't argue with that because all of our grandma's kept whiskey around for hot toddies when we would get sick. So, there is drinking in the church, but only if it is for medicinal purposes. 😉😂

  • @annodomino3935
    @annodomino3935 Před 2 lety +141

    Grew up in the North but married into a pure Southern family and learned about so many things I had been missing out on my entire life. They’re not lying about the tomatoes. Tomatoes in the north are gross, but get one fresh from a Southerner’s summer garden and they are so so good.
    Never would have ever eaten a “tomato sandwich” in the North (bread, mayo, salt&pep, & sliced tomatoes), but when in in-laws served them for Sunday Dinner I about fell out of my chair they were so good.

    • @lazyhomebody1356
      @lazyhomebody1356 Před rokem +2

      We always had a garden and grew tomatoes, but the best tomato I ever had is served in a NYC coffee shop. They said they are grown in New Jersey. Best tomato ever.

    • @JBunny7482
      @JBunny7482 Před rokem +6

      Mmm a grilled cheese with tomatoes in it 😍

    • @williefranklin7865
      @williefranklin7865 Před rokem +1

      Or on crackers w/ mayo... Great snack.

    • @ameliesayshola8854
      @ameliesayshola8854 Před rokem +3

      @@lazyhomebody1356 to this day my father still rhapsodizes about his vegetable garden when my parents lived in NJ and how good his tomatoes were! 🍅 So no, good tomatoes aren’t only found in the south.

    • @charlayned
      @charlayned Před rokem

      My brother used to eat peanut butter and tomato sandwiches. I hated making them for him but he swore by then. And yes, he was from Texas.

  • @quailypoes
    @quailypoes Před 2 lety +524

    I will never forget my first visit to the south: everyone was so kind and friendly, it kinda freaked me out at first, until I realized it was genuine. Then I moved to SC for a little while and adored it. Back in the PNW now, miss the south! You guys are so nice, no mean tweets here!

    • @GregBurch
      @GregBurch Před 2 lety

      Pnw, especially Spokane, is full of jerks.

    • @andrealmoseley6575
      @andrealmoseley6575 Před 2 lety +23

      I had to adjust to the inland NW/PNW...People aren't as friendly at the store, etc...They think you're kinda crazy if you start talking to them.

    • @donnajernigan5821
      @donnajernigan5821 Před 2 lety +29

      Come on back to South Carolina! We’d love to have you back! 🌙🌴

    • @HappyLife693
      @HappyLife693 Před 2 lety +8

      Thank you

    • @DZ-tl7uz
      @DZ-tl7uz Před 2 lety +9

      @@andrealmoseley6575 Eastern Washington, people are quite nice there unlike the west.

  • @Chibason
    @Chibason Před 2 lety +45

    "I'm not mad, I'm just upset"
    Alabama native here, heard that phrase a lot in my life...I've used it too
    It makes sense. The word 'mad' infers someone is to blame...but being 'upset' is a way to say "I'm just dealing with my feelings"....it's much less blameful

  • @freddycooks
    @freddycooks Před rokem +22

    Hint: A little sugar in cornbread and spaghetti does help balance the flavor, not so much that it tastes like Jiffy, but like a half teaspoon to make the flavor less harsh. You won't even be able to tell it's there, but it will be more delicious if the right amount is added.
    From a real southerner 🙂

    • @eriolduterion8855
      @eriolduterion8855 Před rokem

      IMO- if you put sugar in either cornbread or spaghetti sauce, you need to actually learn how to cook better! And I was raised in VA, NC & SC!

    • @freddycooks
      @freddycooks Před rokem +3

      @@eriolduterion8855 You wouldn't even know sugar are in those dishes if they're prepared right. Just like "sugar" is an ingredient of almost food you buy. I'm not saying it's healthy, but it balance the flavor as I've previously stated. People in VA cook soulfood like northerns Yankees. No flavor and bland and folk from South Carolina are country and slow, they don't even know they can't cook until they taste some real soul food.
      ~From Alabama

    • @jamiebowles4588
      @jamiebowles4588 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Grammaw put a little sugar (and a little bacon grease!) in EVERYTHING!

  • @ssp4795
    @ssp4795 Před 2 lety +7

    May1 in South Australia is bonfire day, fire restrictions are over and we've piled up huge bonfires, city people can't light a fire to save themselves. I'm SO KEEN to come visit y'all one day, but my airbnb business of doing barn weddings is getting in the way.

  • @luckytahlula6515
    @luckytahlula6515 Před 2 lety +389

    My southern mom always told me that other people bad mouth you because they're jealous of you. Through life experiences I think she's right.

    • @janicelindegard6615
      @janicelindegard6615 Před 2 lety +9

      My Southern mom said the same thing!

    • @sarahrojas9945
      @sarahrojas9945 Před 2 lety +6

      My Colombian mom said this as well.

    • @elizabethbowie9753
      @elizabethbowie9753 Před 10 měsíci

      My New England Mom said the same thing!!!

    • @emanymton5789
      @emanymton5789 Před 10 měsíci

      You really think they're jealous they can't marry their brother/sister? lol

    • @dwayneslifeandtimes
      @dwayneslifeandtimes Před 10 měsíci +1

      ​@@emanymton5789Shouldn't you be working on helping your son become your daughter?

  • @Mewpasaurus
    @Mewpasaurus Před 2 lety +190

    "I'm not mad, I'm just disappointed" = thing my very Southern mom said anytime she wanted me to feel bad about something I did (usually something stupid). What I currently say when I want to avoid confrontation, but let it be known you should leave me alone for a hot second.

    • @Yashael341
      @Yashael341 Před 2 lety +1

      Accurate.
      On a side note, I once played a mad scientist (long story), but I kept insisting that I was just disappointed.

    • @treeshell3668
      @treeshell3668 Před 2 lety +4

      I always say give me a hot second and my kids quickly and quietly walk away.

    • @rebeccscreasman3293
      @rebeccscreasman3293 Před 2 lety

      I used to say that. Now I say, ‘ You have a death wish.”

    • @sunshineinfla222
      @sunshineinfla222 Před 2 lety

      Love it!

    • @elsie412ok
      @elsie412ok Před 2 lety +1

      Yep, what people take as passive aggression in Southern people, isn’t really aggression. It’s just disagreeing with something said/done politely. We don’t want folk to feel bad about themselves.

  • @dr.bherrin
    @dr.bherrin Před 2 lety +8

    The "I'm not mad, I'm aggravated" isn't a Southern phrase. I hear it all the time, in Nevada, Arizona and even Hawaii.

  • @HK-cx3ws
    @HK-cx3ws Před 2 lety +40

    I was up in Indiana and was telling story about something that happened in a grocery store. I mentioned grabbing a buggy. 5 minutes later someone triumphantly said “shopping cart!” Everyone else at the table erupted! All of them had been pondering and trying to guess what a buggy was. I don’t think any of them heard any of the story after I mentioned the buggy

    • @ameliesayshola8854
      @ameliesayshola8854 Před rokem

      Isn’t buggy a British word? We don’t say buggy in the Northeast either

    • @sheilalyda231
      @sheilalyda231 Před 10 měsíci +1

      When I was living in Asheville, NC, they all called it a buggy. However, friends of mine from FL called it a basket. But we Hoosiers have it correct. Just read the signs.

    • @CullenRTerry
      @CullenRTerry Před 5 měsíci

      Didn’t even realize that buggy was a southern thing

  • @caronlittle3539
    @caronlittle3539 Před 2 lety +121

    I drove a truck all over the US, Canada, Mexico. They all have stickers on their cars.

    • @rayjohnson2387
      @rayjohnson2387 Před 2 lety +4

      Putting a sticker on my car is a justified homicide 🙂

    • @dominickjustave3558
      @dominickjustave3558 Před 2 lety

      True

    • @MAILLADY2010
      @MAILLADY2010 Před 2 lety +2

      @@rayjohnson2387 I absolutely agree, however I do have one sticker on my car ... Gold 100 (if a first responder is injured or dies in the line of duty, the money to purchase that sticker goes to the family).

    • @rayjohnson2387
      @rayjohnson2387 Před 2 lety +2

      @Basically I'm Schlorping I live in Missouri...they're everywhere

    • @aznmochibunny
      @aznmochibunny Před 2 lety +1

      I'm in Southern California. If I see bumber stickers, it's those honor roll kids one. Most of what I see are anime decals. Maybe I just notice those more cause I have them too.

  • @yourapunk2165
    @yourapunk2165 Před 2 lety +134

    You guys should do a video on Southern mannerisms (if you haven't already). The fake jog we do when someone holds the door and we are a little to far away. The way we hold a door for everyone (my daughter and I went to convention and she was stuck holding a door for like 5 minutes cause manners). Stuff like that. Oh and the awkward smile we give everyone

    • @sunshineinfla222
      @sunshineinfla222 Před 2 lety +6

      You always know who is a Yankee because they never speak back when you say something nice to them. SO rude!!!

    • @MelissaThompson432
      @MelissaThompson432 Před 2 lety +9

      It's not the smile that's awkward. It's the way people who Aren't From Here don't know what to do when they get one.

    • @bozimmerman
      @bozimmerman Před rokem

      Never seen an awkward smile before. Where are you from?

    • @Nova-ru5kr
      @Nova-ru5kr Před rokem +3

      Oh, and we wave at other drivers even if we don't know them. I doubt anyone in other parts of the country do that.

    • @sharonmontano4924
      @sharonmontano4924 Před 11 měsíci +1

      This happens everywhere!

  • @samarapedigo814
    @samarapedigo814 Před 2 lety +12

    I just moved to the north for my dad's Job and let me tell you this feels like a touch from home. I grew up in Tennessee and we put sugar in our cornbread.

  • @circedelune
    @circedelune Před rokem +3

    Never heard “I’m not mad, I’m just aggravated.” My Dad used to say, “I’m not mad, I’m just disappointed.” I would rather he had been mad. That one cut.

  • @jilledmondson6894
    @jilledmondson6894 Před 2 lety +229

    YES, a warm sun drenched freshly picked RIPE tomato with salt and pepper eaten out of hand like an apple is just so, so heavenly. Best snack ever. My memories from my childhood.

    • @StevinSto
      @StevinSto Před 2 lety +6

      Yyaaass! Ppl don't appreciate food and or savory food like they do in the south.

    • @tbjtbj4786
      @tbjtbj4786 Před 2 lety +4

      Who doesn't do that?
      Oh if you like it a bit spicy add hot sauce to the salt and pepper.

    • @mitchellminer9597
      @mitchellminer9597 Před 2 lety +5

      Yeah, going out to the garden with a salt shaker. Dang.
      For those who don't know, tomatoes should not be refrigerated - it actually does alter the flavor. (Tomatoes should never be able to be mechanically harvested, either.)
      One exception to the no-refrigeration rule ... my mom's summer salad:
      Cottage cheese, chopped tomatoes, chopped red onions, black pepper, and salt. Mix and refrigerate to let the flavors meld for a while.

    • @vickithompson3039
      @vickithompson3039 Před 2 lety +1

      @@mitchellminer9597 that sounds soooooo good!!!

    • @tbjtbj4786
      @tbjtbj4786 Před 2 lety +2

      @@mitchellminer9597 well mechanical picking can be ok for juice or soup tomatoes. But your right about ones to eat fresh.
      And I don't like the gassed ones from the big commercial farms.
      I worked at a packing house when I was 15. And it took me years before I would eat tomatoes again

  • @collegebro85
    @collegebro85 Před 2 lety +240

    As a Texan, we can let you know if you EVER mispronounce queso or any other Spanish word…now frijole, empanada, or jalapeño we have heard ALL kinds of versions 😂🤣😜

    • @jamesburton1050
      @jamesburton1050 Před 2 lety +7

      Agreed!

    • @deniseroe5891
      @deniseroe5891 Před 2 lety +20

      Texan here too, Mexia also.

    • @FiddleKat
      @FiddleKat Před 2 lety +1

      Yep

    • @MrnmrsCCazares
      @MrnmrsCCazares Před 2 lety +31

      Oh yeah, as a Texan I still don't speak a lot of Spanish, but I can speak tacos. Like anything on a menu I can say because those are the important Spanish words.

    • @wayneeddy3261
      @wayneeddy3261 Před 2 lety +6

      Even Spanish speaking people can't agree on Pool, Posole or Posoli..😂😂

  • @kamilegier4730
    @kamilegier4730 Před 2 lety +8

    Back in times of scarcity and among the poor of the south, vegetables were often use to make main courses, usually fried to add much needed calories, like green tomatoes which were battered and deep fried and served in the place of a meat dish, then we just hung onto these delicious foods as traditions

    • @cactuscupcake6146
      @cactuscupcake6146 Před rokem

      We had a garden growing up out west and we loved battered fried zucchini. Why does everyone call it Italian squash when it has a name? Lol weird!

  • @katierice9247
    @katierice9247 Před 9 měsíci +2

    “I’m not mad, I’m just aggravated..” ME WHEN MY HUSBAND ASKS IF IM OKAY!!!! Lmao 🤣

  • @ThisIsTheWay05
    @ThisIsTheWay05 Před 2 lety +203

    About the car sticker thing, I’m in California and I can tell you, I’ve seen people in the grocery store parking lot that have covered their whole bumper in stickers. So it’s not just a Southern Thing.

    • @blindjimmyblaze1655
      @blindjimmyblaze1655 Před 2 lety +16

      Absolutely! It’s not a Southern thing, it’s a trashy thing.

    • @merpius
      @merpius Před 2 lety +8

      It is all over the US and Canada, for sure.

    • @katrinaprescott5911
      @katrinaprescott5911 Před 2 lety +28

      Nobody will have more stickers on their car than an old hippie driving a 1970-something hatchback. You are presented with every political and social cause they have supported since they got the car, covering the bumper, the back panel, and as much of the back window as they can legally get away with. I have seen this more than once.

    • @snowcrash4286
      @snowcrash4286 Před 2 lety +11

      Can confirm. Aging hippie with newish hatchback and the stickers are still few, but in the next 20 years I'll be there

    • @HappyLife693
      @HappyLife693 Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you for confirming that. :-)

  • @bigtex4058
    @bigtex4058 Před 2 lety +77

    The passive aggressive thing is true. That's why we are nice to your face but refuse to use our turn signals.

    • @carriehodges6566
      @carriehodges6566 Před 2 lety +6

      Oh yeah ! True that!

    • @harding0010
      @harding0010 Před 2 lety +1

      What's a turn signal?

    • @fredrich1706
      @fredrich1706 Před 2 lety +7

      I live here hate it when people don’t turn off their signals.

    • @shawn_anigans
      @shawn_anigans Před 2 lety

      Well, bless your heart 😂

    • @Ailorn
      @Ailorn Před rokem +1

      Real question... Do they turn off their high beams at night coming from the other direction? Because people who don't do that are truly inconsiderate.

  • @bryankeith7785
    @bryankeith7785 Před rokem +2

    I literally had sliced tomatoes and cucumbers as a side for lunch today! 😁

  • @JBunny7482
    @JBunny7482 Před rokem +2

    I'm in central California, where it's all farmland and dairies, and all of these apply to us 🤣

  • @rhinooningo2865
    @rhinooningo2865 Před 2 lety +80

    My mom used "plumb" as an adverb frequently. I still remember "plumb tuckered out." We should reintroduce it to the world to make it a better place.

    • @ChoseDeath
      @ChoseDeath Před rokem +1

      I have one for you I bet you haven't heard, even I don't say this and it came from my family. "Plum fixing to." That was a Great Uncle's way of politely saying "I am about to (do whatever) with great rapidity," usually with lots of swear words thrown in.

  • @gaoutlaw
    @gaoutlaw Před 2 lety +29

    Those northern folks are just plum crazy. Bless their collective hearts.

  • @numbernine3436
    @numbernine3436 Před 2 lety +3

    My little hometown is being overtaken by northerners. I now live 20 min north of my original hometown. I have multiple neighbor's who hv moved here from New York state, Michigan etc.
    I do hv a coworker who said he had put in for a transfer bc people here were rude as hell. I believe he was speaking of the younger generation.

  • @trlevan316
    @trlevan316 Před rokem +3

    1/2“ bologna on white bread with a delish slice of warm from the sun right off the vine tomato, bbq chips, RC. Nothin better.

  • @melissawittman
    @melissawittman Před 2 lety +57

    I love tomatoes. I remember sitting on my granny's porch with a salt shaker and eating them like an apple!

  • @_thebearden_
    @_thebearden_ Před 2 lety +132

    Ryan: "What is the opposite of plum awful?"
    Adam: "Apple great."
    Me: Y'all...🤦🏾‍♂🤣

    • @asdisskagen6487
      @asdisskagen6487 Před 2 lety +19

      He missed a great opportunity. The correct answer is "peachy keen"

    • @karenwinston8911
      @karenwinston8911 Před 2 lety +2

      @@asdisskagen6487 😉 nice!

    • @_thebearden_
      @_thebearden_ Před 2 lety +1

      @@asdisskagen6487 That would have been perfection!

    • @Pharaoh_Tutankhamen
      @Pharaoh_Tutankhamen Před 2 lety +1

      We have to make this a thing

    • @keric3730
      @keric3730 Před 2 lety +1

      It made me want to made apple bread with grated sour apples, hearing them say that

  • @alkggkla5643
    @alkggkla5643 Před 2 lety +2

    I love barn weddings and celebrations! We park in the yard mostly cuz that's where the shade is 😎

  • @dennisdavis2825
    @dennisdavis2825 Před 6 měsíci +3

    Last time I heard “plum” was on a hay wagon in WV. Couple of good ol boys were talkin about shootin a possum that was plum near the barn!

  • @TheSuzberry
    @TheSuzberry Před 2 lety +148

    My husband was raised in Annandale, VA, by parents who were from Illinois and Washington State. Any time he would try to tell me something about Southern Culture, I’d explain to him that he was from NORTHERN Virginia.

    • @karenwinston8911
      @karenwinston8911 Před 2 lety +24

      I have a similar thing when I talk about being from north Florida. I always emphasize the "north" because I want to be grouped with pecans and Tom Petty, not retirees and high rises.

    • @crymars5890
      @crymars5890 Před 2 lety +9

      Haha glad you set him straight about the southern thing. 😁

    • @ashleydowney1222
      @ashleydowney1222 Před 2 lety +3

      My mom grew up in Chantilly, Virginia (northern Virginia). And her parents were from Kentucky. She definitely knew a lot about Southern culture though. Since would go visit her grandparents and other family several times a year in Kentucky Then she ended up moving to Kentucky and Georgia.

    • @kilngoddess424
      @kilngoddess424 Před 2 lety +4

      @@karenwinston8911 i'm from s.w. Florida and my daddy built swamp buggies and swamp buggy trailers and we often had a pot of boiled peanuts on the stove and breakfast in the rare cold months always included grits…no retirees and high rises in my childhood. Lets not disparage your more slightly tropical cousins now.

    • @karenwinston8911
      @karenwinston8911 Před 2 lety +3

      @@kilngoddess424 I apologize for the slight. I occasionally visit family around Fort Lauderdale, and can hardly believe my surroundings. The number of times we go out to a meal and the "sweet tea" they hand me comes from the soda fountain. 🤢

  • @katrinaprescott5911
    @katrinaprescott5911 Před 2 lety +206

    "Why do southerners put sugar where sugar doesn't belong?"
    Ten to one the person who tweeted that puts sugar in cornbread. Sit down.

    • @tvdan1043
      @tvdan1043 Před 2 lety +3

      🤣

    • @davedahowell8694
      @davedahowell8694 Před 2 lety +18

      At that point it's not cornbread, it's corn cake.

    • @notmyworld44
      @notmyworld44 Před 2 lety +9

      Yes! My dear old south Georgia mother always said "Ah don't wont none a that damn Yankee cornbread. They put shooger in it!" (Misspellings intentional.)

    • @kimbarbeaureads
      @kimbarbeaureads Před 2 lety +9

      To be fair, corn cake is awesome.

    • @notmyworld44
      @notmyworld44 Před 2 lety +3

      @@kimbarbeaureads i absolutely agree!

  • @ShavinMcCrotch
    @ShavinMcCrotch Před rokem +2

    New Jersey is The Garden State, famous for their tomatoes. They grow better up north than they do in the south. I think the problem is, most people can’t be bothered with gardening anymore. Their loss. 🤷🏼‍♂️

  • @martinemartin4779
    @martinemartin4779 Před rokem +4

    I'm from New Zealand, but have to agree about the tomatoes! Love the video. Y'all must be plum tuckered out after all that effort. ❤😉

  • @lauram8973
    @lauram8973 Před 2 lety +56

    "The real key to happiness is a good tomato." Amen!

    • @christopherhelms7290
      @christopherhelms7290 Před 2 lety +1

      Normal, good, natural vine tomatoes grow pretty much all year round, if you get far enough south. Up north we only get 3-4 months to grow the good ones, and the rest of the year we have to settle for these awful hydroponic "slicer" things that mostly just resemble tomatoes and don't taste like much of anything.

  • @MommaARA
    @MommaARA Před 2 lety +88

    Check this out. My dad's family is from Minnesota back when they still spoke Swedish and Norweigan in schools there. So his family actually survived the Great Depression with all members alive.
    He remembers fondly his grandfather and him sharing sour cream sandwiches. Basically thick white homemade bread, butter, mayo, and sour cream. I really believe these strange combos came out of the depression where you had to make do with what you had to not starve.

    • @eharper7
      @eharper7 Před 2 lety +1

      Strangely enough, I really want to try that. 😂 I tried a fluffer nutter sandwich last year that was awesome.

    • @isabelh.3845
      @isabelh.3845 Před rokem +1

      That's a good point. I'd never thought of that.

    • @boddaboom77
      @boddaboom77 Před rokem

      That's exactly how most of these regional dishes came about.

    • @Nova-ru5kr
      @Nova-ru5kr Před rokem +1

      I wonder if that's also where eating coon and pumpkin pie came from, myself. Who would eat that unless they were staring death in the face?

    • @sandrad9695
      @sandrad9695 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@Nova-ru5krPumpkin pie is starvation food for you? 😂 Pumpkin Pie is sublime.

  • @gregoryrekitt9375
    @gregoryrekitt9375 Před rokem +5

    This has been so entertaining to me! I have lived in Pennsylvania all my life, but my Mother was born in Nashville and moved here when she was a teenager. All of our gatherings and picnics had my Grandparents who had very strong Southern accents and we all miss them so much! Tomatoes were always something we all had grown in our gardens and had as a side dish for any meal. Oh yeah, a little salt and pepper! You got yourself something there!

  • @johnnyjohnson1326
    @johnnyjohnson1326 Před rokem +7

    "I'm not mad, I'm disappointed" is way more emotionally impactful and drives the point home more deeply

  • @Mitsuhurrican
    @Mitsuhurrican Před 2 lety +54

    A good fresh straight out of the garden southern tomato is the best side dish, put a piece of cornbread on the other side and we have the beginning of a great meal!!!😃

  • @politicalmechanic9501
    @politicalmechanic9501 Před 2 lety +30

    In the south Louisiana we don’t call the median a median we call it the neutral ground. Also in the south sweet tea is default you have to specifically ask for unsweet tea. And speaking of drinks whenever you go to a restaurant the waitress ask you what kind of Coke do you want because a Coke could mean any type of carbonated beverage.

    • @sodacurt
      @sodacurt Před rokem

      Yeah you can tell if a yankee just started working at Bojangles, you get a bitter surprise when that battery acid hits your tongue

  • @franciscodanconia4324
    @franciscodanconia4324 Před rokem +2

    Definitely no sugar in cornbread. It won’t hold as leftovers the next day.

  • @anonymousone2843
    @anonymousone2843 Před 2 lety +1

    I live in Northeast Pennsylvania my entire 45 years. And NONE of these things is strange or bizarre to me. My oldest is 22, shows Appaloosa and would happily have a wedding one day in a nice barn. Where are people getting most of these sterotypes from? My husband is southern and he does 2 things that bewilder me. One, everytime a thunderstorm comes in he runs to every window and declares, "Lookin like we could be in fer a tornada!" No tornado ever comes. Second, he says "fixin" alot. "I was just fixin to take the garbage on down to the road." 🤣 God Bless 🥰

  • @corvidsRcool
    @corvidsRcool Před 2 lety +104

    I've been around smokers all my life and sold a lot of cigs as a cashier and I have never heard a Southerner pronounce the L in Marlboro. Or met anyone who couldn't say queso correctly. LOL

  • @janzadventure101
    @janzadventure101 Před 2 lety +45

    Oh how I miss carrying a salt shaker out to the garden on those sun drenched mornings. The smell of a garden grown tomato freshly plucked is imprinted in my memory forever. There is no greater taste. A second place taste would be sliced on my plate next to virtually anything.

  • @MisterLobb
    @MisterLobb Před 2 lety +4

    Those “barns” aren’t actually used for animal husbandry between social events. It’s just a name, like Pottery Barn. Pottery Barn doesn’t milk goats during the weekdays and have craft sales on the weekend.
    This one is as funny though.

    • @johnard611
      @johnard611 Před 4 dny +1

      "The Vampire Diaries" had a southern barn wedding to rival the red wedding on Game of Thrones. Made me feel proud y'all :)

  • @karlatabor5463
    @karlatabor5463 Před 2 měsíci

    As a Raleigh, Wake Forest woman, now transferred to Oklahoma, it is so much fun to listen to your gabbing on about the South. Thank you for this channel. Plus, I forgot about how good a banana/ mayo sandwich is. Sweet and sour mix, yummy. My biscuits and gravy are delicious. Okies for the most part use the powdered stuff from Sams. My son married an Okie would hates biscuits and had never had a good gravy. She loved my biscuits and gravy. She was confused.... And when the sirens go off here, the Okies go outside, stand on cars to see where it is. There are not many trees so we can see a far piece.

  • @kevinramsey417
    @kevinramsey417 Před 2 lety +73

    Talia's like a hug in human form.

    • @christopherhelms7290
      @christopherhelms7290 Před 2 lety +5

      They all seem like nice folks.

    • @videodistro
      @videodistro Před 2 lety +2

      I don't think I've ever met someone from Korean descent that wasn't really nice.

    • @notmyworld44
      @notmyworld44 Před 2 lety +1

      I know another young woman in our area that looks almost just like her; and like Talia, she is half-Asian. Those are two of most pleasantly exotic-looking women I've ever seen.

  • @angelmaden1559
    @angelmaden1559 Před 2 lety +10

    That’s plumb awful; bless your heart. They don’t understand tomatoes because they’ve never had a proper home grown one. Again, bless ‘em.

  • @lessanderfer7195
    @lessanderfer7195 Před 2 lety +2

    As a Texan, sweet Cornbread and sugar in Grits are perfectly normal.

  • @bkatz0218
    @bkatz0218 Před 2 lety +9

    I think the word is actually plumb not plum haha. I only say this because my grandma would write me letters and it was always spelled plumb. My favorite lines were, “…and that girl next door is plumb nasty, lettin’ that filthy mutt of hers lick her face,” and “…so I told your grandpa he was plumb ignorant for thinking I wasn’t going to open my mouth and give Nola (her sister) my two cents about that awful hair color (which led to a fight).” 😄🥰

    • @RobertHEllis
      @RobertHEllis Před 7 měsíci

      Plumb - to be level or true. 100% correct.

  • @jmarkly
    @jmarkly Před 2 lety +21

    You can’t beat a good ripe tomato as a side with fried chicken, mashed potatoes, mac and cheese and greens.

    • @matthewcox7985
      @matthewcox7985 Před rokem

      Agreed! Although I'll have to skip the potatoes / mac n cheese, I'm trying to cut back on the starch!

  • @MommaARA
    @MommaARA Před 2 lety +10

    No one has mentioned Chow-Chow. Dis not know it was a thing until I lived in Tennessee. Did not know Southerners are obsessed with spicy peppers and Jalapenos. But the first time I heard it said in Texas I died laughing. The twang like right out of a movie. Bless that man.

  • @ilovecatss0116
    @ilovecatss0116 Před 2 lety +2

    “What do you mean? We can pronounce queso just fine!!”
    *proceeds to pronounce queso wrong*

  • @Heal_Hound
    @Heal_Hound Před měsícem +1

    I added sugar to the dressing of a potato salad one time. I believe my parents got out the colander at my grandma's house, rinsed the dressing off the entire salad, and remade it without the sugar. I was a strange kid.

  • @bennington7660
    @bennington7660 Před 2 lety +12

    I will stoke a fire until I’m plumb tuckered out! Living in the south is hands down the best ❤

  • @johnnyragadoo2414
    @johnnyragadoo2414 Před 2 lety +42

    What's the opposite of plum awful? My guess, fit as a fiddle.
    Besides, I think it's correctly spelled "plumb," as in someone who doesn't know gee from haw could either be a city boy or half a bubble off plumb.

  • @macaroniwithoutcheese175

    At my house, There is a 2-lane road out front, and everybody has their piles of pinestraw and leaves and branched sitting out there for some dude with a truck and a crane to come and pick it up a few times a year. It narrows lots of the street to 1.5 lane, so you're swerving as you go along the road. People usually just line up along this side of the road, and yo usually see it at holidays or when somebody is dying, there could be 20-30 cars and they end up lining the road.

  • @jennifercathcart3728
    @jennifercathcart3728 Před 4 měsíci

    My MIL got married on a beach, but the reception was in a garage. Like a mechanic's garage. It was so much fun!

  • @hamiltonconway6966
    @hamiltonconway6966 Před 2 lety +151

    I learned a long time ago that people outside the South had a terrible opinion of the South. I was just out of college and in the US Military when I first encountered it. I knew Hollywood and the media hated us before my personal experiences. Today, I just ignore it, just tune it out.

    • @dominickjustave3558
      @dominickjustave3558 Před 2 lety +3

      People don't care

    • @davedahowell8694
      @davedahowell8694 Před 2 lety

      Its ok, they're just jealous.
      But seriously the stigma behind being from the South comes from the idea that the South was villainized after the Civil War for many reasons. Some of those reasons were true, many of them were false. After a while, it became the whipping boy of the country (for lack of a better term). It was ok to make fun of Southerners because it's likely their ancestors fought for slavery. If they were that stupid back 150+ yrs ago, they probably aren't much smarter now.... 🙄

    • @choreomaniac
      @choreomaniac Před 2 lety +12

      I think it’s changed. Especially the last few years. Tons of Yankees have either moved south, know friends or family who have moved south or have thought about it.

    • @davedahowell8694
      @davedahowell8694 Před 2 lety +2

      @@choreomaniac I hope so

    • @ChoseDeath
      @ChoseDeath Před rokem +1

      Meh, I was talking to a coworker from Chicago and he was flapping his gums (we hadn't known each other long, so he was testing me), and I just looked at him and said "Hell Bobby, you can laugh all you want brother. I know the superior nature of my culture." Which he thought was great and we were good buddies after that.

  • @dbackscott
    @dbackscott Před 2 lety +45

    Tomato slices or wedges (salted and peppered, of course) with a side of chicken salad is an excellent lunch.

    • @angelarbab0091
      @angelarbab0091 Před rokem +1

      the chicken salad is the side in this scenario ?! the tomatoes are the main?
      you eat food wrong mate :D

    • @dbackscott
      @dbackscott Před rokem

      @@angelarbab0091 you should’ve seen the size of the tomato.

    • @angelarbab0091
      @angelarbab0091 Před rokem

      @@dbackscott bhahaha, it’s not about that tho , I’m chucking here, this is proper banter😂

    • @nateloish3309
      @nateloish3309 Před rokem

      You can’t forget the egg salad!Maybe throw in a pickled egg or two.

  • @SusanHukel-rm4lg
    @SusanHukel-rm4lg Před 3 měsíci +1

    I'm from california and we used to eat sliced tomatoes with s&p in the summer all the time when I was growing up.They were delicious.

  • @BlessedBeesHomestead2019

    As a southerner,,, I only eat grits with sugar in it 😂😂

  • @rhondahuggins9542
    @rhondahuggins9542 Před 2 lety +12

    Oh lived a couple of years in NE...I was not in my right mind back then...NEVER got a good tomatah until I got back home to Arkansas! Also am from The Ozarks...if you live in the hills...woods for you Non-Southern peoples...there is NO green lawn...it is the yard...we park on it 'cause we had to fire the valet since he was plumb lazy!!! Yall ROCK!!❤❤❤

  • @ajtomes1
    @ajtomes1 Před 2 lety +3

    I agree! The 60% are endearing. We use "PLUM" for everything in North Carolina. And I ALWAYS have a side of tomatoes when I eat breakfast out. It's a treat!

  • @erinhunt492
    @erinhunt492 Před 2 lety +5

    Y’all really just about killed me with apple great. Ten minutes later, and I’m still trying to get the water inhaled while laughing coughed up. I guess I learned that lesson the hard way.

  • @christiabreeden7777
    @christiabreeden7777 Před 2 lety

    I jus stumbled upon yalls page and MAN.. Yall on point I needed a good laugh and my oh my how true these are!

  • @MrnmrsCCazares
    @MrnmrsCCazares Před 2 lety +9

    Queso is just the Spanish word for cheese, but I didn't know that until was in my twenties. I always thought it was the chip dip. I am from Texas, and know 3 year olds that can say queso and eat it regularly.

    • @squid1313
      @squid1313 Před rokem +4

      I've heard people in the south say queso and it's like nails on chalkboard for my Californian ass. They say "kay so" it's not an a!! It's queso! Also I never heard of this white cheese dip till recently. We don't even have it here lol

  • @seanservo3105
    @seanservo3105 Před 2 lety +3

    I happen to love sweet cornbread. Born in FL, grew up in TN, VA, MO, and TX.

  • @claressadubs
    @claressadubs Před rokem +2

    I busted out laughing at "apple great" 😂

  • @SageSarcasm
    @SageSarcasm Před rokem

    I just found y’all’s channel last week and it’s already at the top of the list of my favorite channels ever 🤣 KEEP IT COMIN!

  • @slowfootlabeef704
    @slowfootlabeef704 Před 2 lety +32

    I love y'all so much! I'm gonna eat some sugar covered plums in a lightnin' storm, hunt me up a barn wedding to crash. Seriously, now I know why Yankees a so grumpy. Now pass the grits!

    • @mrsmack5808
      @mrsmack5808 Před 2 lety +1

      I'm a northerner but have love southern cooking. Buttered biscuits, grits, salted fresh tomatoes...all so good

    • @slowfootlabeef704
      @slowfootlabeef704 Před 2 lety

      @@mrsmack5808 well then y'all come and visit real soon!

  • @tamyra7174
    @tamyra7174 Před 2 lety +7

    As a southerner that went to NY, I'll attest to the food not being as good. I was so glad to come back to the South. I had fried chicken in the North and it was just not good

  • @user-xb3hx7rq8q
    @user-xb3hx7rq8q Před 6 měsíci

    I'm a transplant from NYS to GA. And I have always had a nice thick slice of tomatoes as a side. It's like a refreshing pallet cleanser between meats.

  • @survivingsam4404
    @survivingsam4404 Před 2 lety +2

    I am a grit eating, Tater salad loving, biscuit sopping southerner but I admit I like sweet cornbread (Jiffy corn muffins FTW)

  • @johnharris6655
    @johnharris6655 Před 2 lety +7

    "why do southerners burn leaves and wood all the time?" "To cover up the smell coming from the Moonshine still."

    • @doughesson
      @doughesson Před 2 lety

      On the advice of my legal counsel, I respectfully decline to respond on the grounds that my answers may tend to incriminate or embarrass myself

  • @EmmaChihuahua81
    @EmmaChihuahua81 Před 2 lety +4

    Fresh garden tomatoes are delicious! Sliced up on bread with a little Blue Ribbon (or Duke's, but never Helmans) mayo a dash of salt and pepper and you have yourself a cool refreshing lunch.

  • @900milesfromnormal3
    @900milesfromnormal3 Před 2 lety +3

    2:25 1. I am a Southerner (South Carolina) and I have NEVER done that...at least not without being sarcastic. 2. I've no idea why people do that, but I put this video on pause and looked up the word "plumb". Here's my theory: One definition of plumb is to measure the depth of water. Also a "Plumb Bob" is a measuring tool. So MAYBE to say something is Plumb Awful etc. means that it is as if a measure has been taken of just how awful etc something is.

  • @McBernes
    @McBernes Před 7 měsíci +2

    "Marlboro" is commonly pronounced "Marlbura" in my part of the south. And tobacco is "tubacca" (the tu is the same as in tub). My great grandmother's chewin' tubacca of choice was Redman.

  • @righttorecord3538
    @righttorecord3538 Před 2 lety +14

    Still praying for more episodes of Slaw & Order.

    • @dixieboy58
      @dixieboy58 Před rokem

      Slaw and Order? 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @agb1953
      @agb1953 Před rokem

      @@dixieboy58 The Slaw & Order episodes are their best work.

  • @scottbenke7182
    @scottbenke7182 Před 2 lety +8

    I liked how Talia said she was 'Matt', and Matt said that he was 'Talia'. The most Southern thing I ever heard was: "She has enough money, that she can afford to burn a wet mule."

  • @jennifermolina4396
    @jennifermolina4396 Před 2 lety

    Love that I discovered this channel. Just goes to show that southerners don't care if you mean tweet them. Everyone can have their own opinion about whomever! Loved the cars in the yard bit! We have so many in ours! They all drive and they're all in good condition!

  • @YTcensorsEverything
    @YTcensorsEverything Před rokem

    Here’s a good one I learned when I moved from NJ/PA down here to SC…. “I appreciate you.” Instead of thank you.

  • @ladytalksalot4097
    @ladytalksalot4097 Před 2 lety +10

    This only convinces me more that the Midwest is just what would happen if the South got cold.

  • @mattdandersn
    @mattdandersn Před 2 lety +11

    I'm going to jump on this first one that you did sugar does not belong in biscuits and gravy.

  • @Sldejo
    @Sldejo Před 24 dny

    Have been to many weddings, galas and proms held in a barn in the PNW. They just call it a venue instead of calling it what it is.

  • @jeanilouva9751
    @jeanilouva9751 Před 8 měsíci

    One of my fav southern expressions is "I may be some dumb but I'm not plumb dumb." I was raised in Virginia, lived 9 years in Tennesee near the Tennessee Alabama state line. Currently reside in Ohio but still a southern gal through and through.

  • @45auto
    @45auto Před 2 lety +8

    I'm not from the south and have said "plumb tuckered out". I think it is more of an age or generational thing.

  • @hez5160
    @hez5160 Před 2 lety +7

    I'm a Northerner (lived most my life in New England and several years west of Seattle) and I married a Southerner. We moved to the South after our wedding. The passive aggression here is FOR REAL. I'm struggling with culture shock.

    • @hez5160
      @hez5160 Před 2 lety

      @marcusgoes it's a struggle because I hate hot weather. And I miss having actual seasons.

    • @gideonqwikfut4622
      @gideonqwikfut4622 Před rokem +1

      ​@@hez5160yeah, seasons don't exist down here 😂

  • @TheNeonParadox
    @TheNeonParadox Před 2 lety +1

    I was told once that people in the south put sugar in spaghetti, and it took a month for my fists to stop involuntarily clenching. I finally had to dip my fists into a pan of cacio e pepe to loosen up my fingers. And no, there was no sugar in the cacio e pepe, mafankulo! 🤬

  • @Perci_plays6984
    @Perci_plays6984 Před 2 lety +1

    I am from the north east. Like ALL THE WAY NORTH EAST. Maine born and raised live in New Hampshire now. We burn piles of wood at every gathering. It's just what you do! Also old furniture. It's not just a southern thing. (Note I lived in Georgia for two years and loved it! I miss good old southern cooking!)