Reacting to My Husbands Ancestry DNA Results | Am I Really Suprised?

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  • čas přidán 19. 01. 2022
  • Reacting to my husband's Ancestry DNA results. Thank you for all the comments that I received on my Ancestry DNA results video. I hope you enjoy my husband's DNA results video as well.
    See My Ancestry DNA Results | How Puerto Rican Am I? 👇🏽
    • Ancestry DNA Results |...
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Komentáře • 53

  • @peterconnel7495
    @peterconnel7495 Před 2 lety +10

    Wow! He's less European than I expected,which was about 70%.

  • @doubleutee8867
    @doubleutee8867 Před 2 lety +6

    Your connection with your husband clicks so well. Wow! I'm impressed at how well ya'll connect, and how ya'll have so much fun in the video. It was enjoyable to watch. I've seen a lot of videos done by the Mexican/Chicano community, and his results blend in well (are compatible) with the experiences (videos) I've witnessed - retrospectively speaking. Unless there's something more under "Additional Genetic Communities" he has two genetic communities then. Very well done. I'm subscribed. Thanks for sharing the video post.

    • @YaritzaBetancourt
      @YaritzaBetancourt  Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you so much for subscribing, for watching and commenting I really appreciate it. And it makes me so happy that you enjoyed the videos. 🤗

    • @doubleutee8867
      @doubleutee8867 Před 2 lety

      @@YaritzaBetancourt No problem. You are most welcome.

  • @Prettyboi_Lele
    @Prettyboi_Lele Před 2 lety +6

    I'm not shocked about her husband looking mainly Spanish and being half indigenous alot of the Mestizos look in-between sometimes or look completely white and them being literally half indigenous

    • @joshuafult84
      @joshuafult84 Před 4 měsíci

      Exactly people don't realize this. In Mexican families siblings who are fully related can look vastly different

  • @ce7133
    @ce7133 Před 2 lety +9

    Looks more Spaniard to me nice results!

    • @YaritzaBetancourt
      @YaritzaBetancourt  Před 2 lety +1

      I can see that! thanks 😃

    • @ce7133
      @ce7133 Před 2 lety

      @@YaritzaBetancourt No problem 😀 have a blessed day!

  • @AishaLaDon
    @AishaLaDon Před 2 lety +6

    Lol, his face. That is so fun! But sorry to break it to you guys. Those 1 and 2% results tend to change over time. Ancestry updates its database as it gets new info. I try not to look too much into anything with less than 8-10%

    • @YaritzaBetancourt
      @YaritzaBetancourt  Před 2 lety +1

      hmm interesting! I did read on their website that the percentages can be more or less. It's interesting then, that his Irish percentage was only 2% since that lineage can be traced. I don't understand much of how this works lol

    • @rettawhinnery
      @rettawhinnery Před 2 lety +2

      @@YaritzaBetancourt If the 2% comes from a single ancestor and is not from a mixture, you should be able to find that person about 5 or 6 generations back. You get 50% from each parent, about 25% from each grandparent, 12.5% from each great grandparent, 6.25% from each great-great grandparent, and about 3.12% from each great-great-great grandparent, more or less.

  • @essentiallyann2650
    @essentiallyann2650 Před 2 lety +3

    You guys are so cute together!!! I really see the North African; if he were to live in Western Europe, that's what people would assume he was...

    • @YaritzaBetancourt
      @YaritzaBetancourt  Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you for watching and commenting! 🤗 That's very interesting depending on what part of the world you're from you get different assumptions.

    • @deniaridley
      @deniaridley Před 3 měsíci

      I agree. I'm in southern France and he looks like a lot of the people here. My first guess was Northern African/Spain (due to the 800 years of Moors on the Iberian peninsula).

  • @ShiningNoctowls
    @ShiningNoctowls Před rokem +1

    Thanks for sharing; take care 🔥 ❤ 🌙

  • @ilfurlano1228
    @ilfurlano1228 Před 11 měsíci +1

    So he's around 65% white 35% ameridian! Nice!

  • @orlandovelastegui1391
    @orlandovelastegui1391 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Most Hispanics or Latinos are always going to get Basque doesn’t matter if you look White, Black or Indigenous!!!! Most of the people that came to the Americans that are from Spain can from San Sebastian or Northern Spain.!!!

  • @realtalk6195
    @realtalk6195 Před měsícem +1

    Your North African, Egyptian and Malian DNA percentage says you had Moorish ancestors including migrants from across the pond.
    Your Basque ancestry is pretty high too. Basque is a European ethnicity that predates the Indo-Europeans colonizing most of the continent.

  • @rettawhinnery
    @rettawhinnery Před 2 lety +3

    The ethnicity estimates change over time as the DNA companies get more people in their databases. The original intention of the ethnicity estimates were to tell where your ancestors lived 500 to 1000 years ago, before inter-continental travel. However, since there are no living people that old, each of the DNA companies create reference populations based on living users who claim that all four grandparents were born in a specific location. Country borders are political, not ethnic. And nationality is not the same thing as ethnicity. Some modern country names did not even exist 500 to 1000 years ago and humans migrated without regard to borders. Each of the DNA companies create geographic areas for the ethnicities that they identify and they change from time to time as well. For example, during the last AncestryDNA update, they changed most of my Ireland component to Scotland, but they define the Scotland geographic area as including Northern Ireland, part of northern England, and even Brittany in France.
    This was an interesting video. Thanks for sharing.

    • @YaritzaBetancourt
      @YaritzaBetancourt  Před 2 lety

      Everything you said totally makes sense. I would be interested to see how my changes over the years based on new research. Thanks for watching 🤗

  • @LorianR
    @LorianR Před 2 lety +10

    Well, if you unify the Basque and the Portuguese amounts with Spain, you have 55% Iberian overall. Furthermore, giving historical facts about the Conquest of America, I‘m positively sure that you may actually be 55% Spaniard. Here’s why: the so-called “Basque country” is really a part of Spain to begin with, and the Portuguese part is usually confuse by these American DNA companies whether with people from the Spanish Extremadura or Galicia parts that border with Portugal.

    • @topmog
      @topmog Před 2 lety +4

      No, you are wrong. The Basque DNA has nothing to do with the rest of the communities in Europe, which is why it is so easily picked up by these companies (google up "Basque ‘genetic singularity’ confirmed in largest-ever study" in the English version of El País). These markers are common in some pockets of Latin America because they used to have a significant Basque population, i.e. the place were his mom comes from (Chihuahua, Mexico) was officially known as New Biscay (Nueva Vizcaya) before 1823. And Portuguese is Portuguese, which is common in Northern Mexico because a region in the Northeast was colonized by Portuguese Jews.

    • @LorianR
      @LorianR Před 2 lety

      @@topmog I already knew about the difference genetically speaking regarding the Basque people. My point is politically and historically speaking those basque didn’t colonise the New World in the name of the Basque Country or wherever mindless anachronism of that sort. Furthermore, the more proper name of the region will be “Vascongadas”, the term “country” attached to Basque just has to do with modern nationalist claims which can’t be further from historical facts. In the times of the conquest of America, the Vascongadas were part of the Crown of Castile. My point is political. Thus, to say that someone have genetic background from the “Basque Country” is the same as saying it has Spanish background (regarding Latinamericans, which may exclude the basque part of France in this case).

    • @topmog
      @topmog Před 2 lety +3

      @@LorianR So you think Basque = Spanish because Basques did not colonize the New World in the name of the Basque Country? 😂This is an ETHNICITY ESTIMATION, and those genetic markers point to those Basque markers that are easily distinguishable from the markers shared by most Spaniards. Those 16-century political allegiances are not relevant at all.

    • @LorianR
      @LorianR Před 2 lety

      @@topmog nah, you don’t get the point. It’s the same with Sardinia and Italy. Sure, you can say someone is ethnically from Sardinia, but as Sardinia is a part from Italy, at the end of the day it will be the same as to say that is Italian. I’m only speaking in terms of political geography, which was my point in the first statement to begin with. These companies aren’t accurate at all anyway. For example the “north-west European” category is kind of grotesque, as well as many others. Having said that, believe what you want. I’ll ruther trust first hand historical sources about immigration than these pretentious genetical backgrounds that are supposedly attached to some territories just by confusing estimations prompted by statistics.

    • @katinadraper2913
      @katinadraper2913 Před 2 lety

      Iberia was conquered by Attila and the Huns whose dna is closest related to native Americans

  • @jo100
    @jo100 Před rokem +1

    Just Curious, how tall is your Husband?, because I saw another Thumbnail Video of yours with him standing up and all?

    • @YaritzaBetancourt
      @YaritzaBetancourt  Před rokem +2

      Lol he’s 6’3” and I’m 5’ 😄 there’s a height difference

  • @sophiawilson8696
    @sophiawilson8696 Před 2 lety +2

    How Egypt get there and Batu and North Africa is not surprise cause how close it to Spain and Portugal.

    • @realtalk6195
      @realtalk6195 Před měsícem

      Southern Spain, Portugal and Sicily were ruled by Arab and North African-origin dynasties during the Middle Ages. Travel and migration between those regions and North Africa and West Asia were common during Moorish rule. They were later conquered by Catholic dynasties of Germanic origin and led to the Age of Exploration whereby Europeans proceeded to colonize the rest of the world.
      In the 1400s-1500s, Catholic dynasties conquered the Muslim regions and gave people the ultimatum to either convert, flee or die. Many fled and many were converted. There are some North Africans with Southwest European ancestry and there's more Southern Europeans with North African ancestry.
      Before being conquered by Ancient Rome, the regions of Southern Spain, Portugal and large parts of Sicily were part of the Carthaginian Empire centered in Tunisia, North Africa. Carthage was founded and led by the Phoenicians, a Semitic people originating in Lebanon.

  • @alexnavarro6941
    @alexnavarro6941 Před 2 lety +1

    These tests are so fascinating. I've been checking these videos all day yesterday, super interesting. And I like to comment to give my guesses. It's fun. So let's see...
    55% Iberian. No surprise, when I look at you, I can think: he's a Spaniard. Due to your mix of races, you look like Andalucian or Canarian, people who have strong North African roots (not the case of course, since you are mesoamerican). Since you have a lot of Basque and Portuguese, my guess is that you descend from someone who came from northern Spain, like Galicia.
    36% Mesoamerican. That guy from Galicia (or girl, Spanish settlers were not only men, and spanish women were encouraged to mix with natives as well) had intermarriage with a beautiful native american. So now you are part of two different worlds. I'm mixed too (indian from India in my case), so I know the feeling. It's a beautiful feeling, I feel I'm part of the entire world, and not just a small part of it.
    6% North African and Egypt. Some migrant that came to the Iberian peninsula during the moorish conquest of the visigoth realms. The moors were 700 years present in the iberian peninsula. And that very same migrant maybe could have had some subsaharian DNA, that's the Cameroon, Congo and Bantu trace. Or it could come from much before, maybe from the roman times. So much history.
    2% Irish. No surprise. Since you could descend from someone from Galicia, Galicians have genes from Celts (gauls, "galos"), just like the Irish people. Because the Iberian peninsula was inhabited before the romans and the carthaginians by celtic cultures. You have a celtic gene that is 2000 years old. Nice!
    Best thing of all: we all come from Africa, the cradle of humanity. So if we look back hundreds of thousands of years, we are all brothers and sisters in the end. Less frontiers, better humanity.

  • @amazonaencalifornia7631
    @amazonaencalifornia7631 Před rokem +1

    Verificad si este test separa celtas en función de su procedencia o los mete a todos como si fueran irlandeses. Hay celtas en muchos lugares de Europa, de hecho la mitad de España es celta, y por eso es muy probable que lo que aparece como irlandés sea en realidad celta español y no celta irlandés.
    Además los irlandeses proceden de la península Ibérica. Los celtas de la zona de Galicia fundaron colonias en lo que hoy es Irlanda. De hecho conservan sus leyendas sobre el rey Breogán, su rey, que vivía al otro lado del mar en Galicia.
    Por otra parte, además de que media España es celta, España acogió a más de 20.000 irlandeses durante las matanzas de católicos irlandeses que realizaban los ingleses. Muchos de ellos se quedaron en España, por no decir todos, y existe la posibilidad de que esos irlandeses ya como españoles y mezclados luego pasaran a América. De hecho muchos lo hicieron.

  • @donotneed2250
    @donotneed2250 Před 2 lety +1

    That running joke is not a joke after all then? From 1974 to 1981 I was on active duty and had more than one fellow soldier call me half-White or say that I was not Black enough as dark as I am. Well, what would you expect from someone who didn't know my background especially since I started life out as an Army brat? We were not allowed to speak Ghettoese in our house or at any of our elders'. In the 1960's "ain't" was not in any dictionary and we were not allowed to use it. If we could not show a word in the dictionary or encyclopedia we were not allowed to use it when speaking with our parents. That is one of the reasons I speak and write the way I do. At my first duty post people didn't believe I was from Georgia and I had to pull out my birth certificate. They said I sound as if I'm from the upper Midwest part of the country.
    I wonder what would they say today since AncestryDNA says that I am part Russian, Wales, Norway, England, Northwestern Europe and Native American along with having ethnicity of mostly western, east and south African?

    • @YaritzaBetancourt
      @YaritzaBetancourt  Před 2 lety +1

      Language, accents and dialects are very interesting because that's based mainly on where and how we grow up,

  • @flo-xj6sr
    @flo-xj6sr Před 11 měsíci +1

    Do your haplogroups they never change.

    • @YaritzaBetancourt
      @YaritzaBetancourt  Před 10 měsíci

      What test is that?

    • @flo-xj6sr
      @flo-xj6sr Před 10 měsíci

      A haplogroup on females is your maternal line from mothers to daughters that never changes it tells you where your mother is from & what race or tribe she's from, men have 2 haplogroups from their mother & father line that never changes either but they can only pass the Y male chromosome aka haplogroup on only to their sons, it also tells you what diseases you can get or not get..What you guys did is your autosomal dna what ancestry mixing or no mixing that can change or fizzle out depending on who you mate with but haplogroups never change .I hope I explained it clearly..🎉

  • @myrnafernandez1835
    @myrnafernandez1835 Před 11 měsíci

    😂🎉

  • @MiguelLopez-tc5nm
    @MiguelLopez-tc5nm Před 2 lety +8

    Why is he shocked that he Spanish? Lmfaooo he look mostly spaniard!! He white 😂😂🤣😂😂😂 cool results!

    • @YaritzaBetancourt
      @YaritzaBetancourt  Před 2 lety

      haha I don't know I don't he ever thought about it.

    • @MiguelLopez-tc5nm
      @MiguelLopez-tc5nm Před 2 lety +1

      @@YaritzaBetancourt lmao I understand😂

    • @punchyrivera9061
      @punchyrivera9061 Před 2 lety

      He also 33 percent native Mexico so he of mixed race.

    • @punchyrivera9061
      @punchyrivera9061 Před 2 lety

      @TheArawakReaper that’s a fact a lot of people forget that African woman is the only group of woman that can give birth to any skin pigmentation. The guy on the video looks mix he looks mestizo. People just so white wash and want to be something that doesn’t want them

    • @Ju-op9cl
      @Ju-op9cl Před 2 lety

      @TheArawakReaper phenotype plays a role in how you're perceived too hence why a lot of latinos are racialized different

  • @KrlKngMrtssn
    @KrlKngMrtssn Před 17 dny

    So basically he's 65% Conquistador, can he pay reparations of 65%, please? Btw, we won't count the 2% Irish, these are the cool colonisers. So just 65%, thanks.

  • @freddiecotton6631
    @freddiecotton6631 Před rokem

    You people are being lied to.. worst part people that conduct and invented these test are on tape or should I say film.. saying these test are fake.. if you are so call Latino or Hispanic you are so call Black... your people went court to fight for these names. Because you don't like the idea of being so call Black ..