The Country LEAST Expected... (Countryballs)
Vložit
- čas přidán 28. 01. 2023
- Do NOT Make This Mistake... • Do NOT Make This Mista...
🎮 2nd Channel ► / druuuwu
🩳 DrewShorts ► / drewshorts
🤳 Drew_IRL ► / @drew_irl
⏰ TikTok ► bit.ly/3NX7Zuv
📷 Instagram ► bit.ly/3s0nlnA
🐤Twitter ► bit.ly/388Ncla
👽 Reddit ► bit.ly/3QyFcyj
💵 Patreon ► bit.ly/3xLCXQB
😎 January Patreon Supporters
SoviettheDILFofCountryhumans
Ivan Lima
Diary of a Wimpy Kid The Catfish
imabigboy
ZaneyBoi
Astrakonix
Brazilian guy from Brazil
Veiotic
Twickenhamster
TheMexican760
Triv44 aka DrewcometoCracow,Polandnextvacation
Robert Elonich
Patrick Allison
RyeThePie
The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth
LuxembourgLover
ortin 5610
Drew's Argentinian Grandpa
Carmel Saida
DJ McSkillet
drew's goth gf
Bryton Is The Best
Based Selene
Bjarne Wildfang
20 Dollars is a lot Drew!
aPhatNarwhal - Hry
The reason for Turkey's tea consumption is that during the 70s, a huge economic crisis hit the country, and it was forced to stop coffee imports which made it turn to Rize tea as a substitute, this type of tea was grown in the Black Sea province of, wait for it, Rize. When people could afford coffee again during the 80s, tea had already become very popular and over time people started preferring tea to coffee, causing tea to replace the strong coffee drinking culture that had existed in the country before the 70s.
Im turkish and I didnt know that wow
That'a pretty cool
@@Burkant13 Ben de internetten bakıp öğrendim.
Wow first time to hear, I shocked that it's true
Actually it goes back to early republic years. During the ottoman empire source of coffee was Yemen (There's even an old Turkish song called "Kahve Yemen'den Gelir" (eng: Coffee comes from Yemen). And because Turkey's climate is not suitable to produce coffee, it was replaced by tea in early republic years.
Drew: "I don't think Turkey is a huge coffe lover."
Me a Turk: " Oh boy, you never heard of Turkish coffee, didn't you?"
Coffee beans were found in Yemen in 1500s, then brought to Istanbul as a gift to Sultan Suleiman the Magnificient from the peasant who found it. Turkish royal chefs made the first coffee in the history there. So Turks are inventors of the coffee.
@@pyro_teamfartress2 Cool bro
@@pyro_teamfartress2 It's called turkish coffee because how coffee brewed and prepared.
@@pyro_teamfartress2 interesting
I will use this to press demands against Yemen…eventually
and well
the turkish style of coffee brewing is to cook the ground coffee directly in boiling water
which allows it to extract as much caffein from the coffee beans as possible, leading to it being the one of the strongest types of coffee
I like how he said that the british 'randomly' throw a 'u' in some words but tecnically it's the americans who just leave it out and not the british that throw it in.
American are much more efficient.... Lol
How the turns have tabled
English is Americas language. We stole it from the British. British accents are cringe🤮 get your own language and stop speaking ours so funny you sound ridiculous 😝😩😂
I feel like drew could make a country ball show and be the voice actors for all the countries and it would blow up.
yes
Nah
Drew should voice at least 247 Polandballs
YESS
look at my banner for mango !
About the Turkish tea:
In the 19. and 20. centuries, this cheap tea starts to enter Turkey. And the people loves it. Its cheaper than coffee and it tastes good also. In the 60s, Some Rize guy imports tea form Georgia and plants it to Rize. now Rize is #1 producer of tea in Turkey. We still do drink coffee, but not that much compared to past.
@gtag ca i drink coffee and i am from Turkey
@gtag ca Children don't drink too much tea, but they try it at some point in their childhood
i wait for drew to realize that turkey is also one of the biggest coffee consumers in the world
Drinking a lot of tea totally speeds me up, that's why I don't drink much of it, I think the Turks have been drinking tea since they were in their mother's womb.
@@Urielenr We've been getting that caffeine and energy since day 1. We use that energy to dream about forming Ottoman Empire again.
@@yusufardagures5490Apparently soft drinks and Coca Cola in Turkey are very expensive and it is more accessible to drink tea with reason that is how the Turks are
@@Urielenr Not payin 15 liras for a liter of coke.
@@Metonoktaexe hi "durum + minibus"
How are people actually "surprised" that Turkey has the highest Tea consumption per capita ?
Britain
in fact, in the Turkish novels that I have seen, tea at whatever time it is, the Turks drink a lot of tea
And two, I think, China and Japan compete with Turkey in drinking tea
British stereotypes
look at my banner for mango !
Drew would definitely count as a Countryballs/Polandballs voice actor at this point.
look at my banner for mango !
@@weirdyoutubechannels ⚡️⚡️🧔🏿⚡️⚡️
(I'm serious this time)
As a Turk I can confirm we absolutely *LOVE* our *TEA*
Coffee too
Yea
Quite right! Tea is the most wonderful drink ever invented! 👍🇬🇧
@@davidfarrer4332 we drink boht alot lol
Fun fact about Turkey's tea:
When chernobyl exploded most of the uranium landed on the other side of blacksea which is where Turkey's major tea grew location.
At that time tea exports of Turkey got canceled, but this caused that time's President of Turkey to go to the press and drink that radioactive tea. Guy died from cancer.
Even still today radiation is still active (not much but still) and we drink it even that's happening.
In Turkey we drink tea like water
P.S. Tea became popular because Turkish coffee got expensive in a time when the people were even poorer and tea took over
As will smith would say
It’s rewind time
Only this time we can’t even afford the tea
(4:10) So common for Americans to make fun of Brits for using a glottal stop instead of a T, but Americans tend to use a rothic tap instead of a T, so they can't say it correctly either.
4:41 fun fact: the Us weren't added to the British version, they were removed from the American version because American newspapers are charged by the letter, and thusly remove some letters to cut corners. And they stuck.
If they charged by the letter we would have had modern texting abbreviations like omg or smh in the 1700s
In Rize, which is a city in the Black Sea region, about 300 THOUSAND TONS of dry tea is produced annually in Rize. So, Excessive consumption of tea is quite understandable.🍵
I believe the comic starting at 12:06 is a reference to the movie "Oppenheimer", where they actually blew up a nuke to get the footage they needed. Christopher Nolan really does love his practical effects.
Drew just took two consecutive unforced Ls in record time by not understanding how the Turks could be such voracious tea enthisiasts and then immediately following it up with a hilariously wrong assumption about them therefore not liking coffee.
As a Turkish person i can confirm that we drink a lot of tea. I mean i drink like 2-3 big cups of tea everyday
Petition for Drew to make Kazakhbrick (Day 7)
Yes, that would be very cool.
I support
No
YES
look at my banner for mango !
5:16
Just so you know, 'Barbare ite domum' is Latin for 'Barbarians go home'.
An average Turk: *consumes 3 - 4 cups of tea daily*
An average Finn: *consumes 3 - 4 cups of coffee daily*
6:15 MR BEAST!
1:00 As a fellow Louisianan and New Orleans resident, I can confirm that this is extremely accurate.
This is by far the best types of video drew makes, they are just so fun
IMHO the worst are the PWA and second worst mr spherical.
@@tommytharning932 ...no
look at my banner for mango !
@@tommytharning932 Each to his own, but Drew literally watches all their stuff lol
@@tommytharning932meh, i don't really like mr spherical but i don't think they're bottom-tier, their animations are really high quality
Petition for Drew to put up the No-No German flag and sing Erika
(english:We Turks love to drink tea. We always drink tea. It is made in the region starting from the Georgian border in the Eastern Black Sea Region to the Fatsa district of Ordu province. In Turkey, we are known for tea, kebab, ravioli, lahmacun, baklava, meatballs, wrapped in olive oil, pita, iskender and doner. Let's not forget the most important dish in Turkey, especially in the cities of afyon and kayseri, sucuk (the food you also call meat). turkey, cuisine It is one of the richest countries in terms of culture (it is hard to believe how I got here from tea)
(türkiye:Biz Türkler çay içmeyi severiz. Hep çay içeriz. Doğu Karadeniz Bölgesinde Gürcistan sınırından başlayarak Ordu ilinin Fatsa ilçesine kadar olan bölgede yapılmaktadır. Türkiye'de çay, kebap, mantı, lahmacun, baklava, köfte, zeytinyağlı sarma, pide, iskender ve döner ile tanınırız. Unutmayalım Türkiye'de özellikle afyon ve kayseri illerinin en önemli yemeği sucuk (et dediğiniz yemek). türkiye mutfağı kültür açısından en zengin ülkelerden biridir (çaydan buraya nasıl geldiğime inanmak zor)
14:07 as a Turkish person, i can confirm that we drink 3-4 tea cups a day. Even 10 year old kids drink 1-2 cups of tea per day
As a person that was in Turkey, yes they drink a LOT, and I don't know why it's so unknown.
I think Turkey rivals China and Japan in these matters, China and Japan also drink a lot of tea
@@Urielenr Japan is only the 12th whereas China is 21st. First 5 is Turkey,Ireland,UK,Pakistan and Iran.
That airport map is definitely missing something: There were quite a lot of pigeon posts throughout the rennaisance. Payload is limited, but I guess anything delivered by a homing pigeon qualifies as air cargo, which would make each pigeon post a cargo airport.
How to say "outside" in Polish?
North/West Poland: na dwór (to the courtyard)
South/East Poland: na pole (to the field)
Работать на поле быстро
Did you know that France used to be called Gaul and that their national animal, the rooster, has the species name Gallus gallus?
Hi
Drew accidentally insulting dozens of asian Coutrys by calling Luna new Year "Chinese new year"
14:41 Coffee literally invented by Turks in Ottoman Empire
7:09
Drew, it's not 100 IQ.
100 IQ is average.
Only yesterday I saw comics about Celts, Germans, Rome and Siouille, Germans, Rome. So you immediately made a video about them. So glad you're faster than me. Now I'm sure I'll never miss anything about my favorite characters
Kings and Generals made a series on the Celts. It is definitely worth a look.
Turkey produces A LOT of tea on the Black Sea coast, near Rize. They produce it, they consume it.
I'm pretty sure 6:10 is supposed to be a *MR. BEAST* reference
7:03 This is somehow interesting because Chinese people love the color red whereas the Koreans love the color white, hence the nickname 'People of white clothing'.
Whenever Chinese people handout money for celebration purposes, they hand them in a red envelope and white during mourning. But in Korea, it's white envelope for celebrating, red for mourning because red signifies blood and stuff.
The Manhattan Project was a research and development undertaking during World War II that produced the first nuclear weapons. It was led by the United States with the support of the United Kingdom and Canada. From 1942 to 1946, the project was under the direction of Major General Leslie Groves of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Nuclear physicist Robert Oppenheimer was the director of the Los Alamos Laboratory that designed the actual bombs. The Army component of the project was designated the Manhattan District as its first headquarters were in Manhattan; the placename gradually superseded the official codename, Development of Substitute Materials, for the entire project. Along the way, the project absorbed its earlier British counterpart, Tube Alloys. The Manhattan Project began modestly in 1939, but grew to employ more than 130,000 people and cost nearly US$2 billion (equivalent to about $24 billion in 2021).[1] Over 90 percent of the cost was for building factories and to produce fissile material, with less than 10 percent for development and production of the weapons. Research and production took place at more than thirty sites across the United States, the United Kingdom, and Canada.The project led to the development of two types of atomic bombs, both developed concurrently, during the war: a relatively simple gun-type fission weapon and a more complex implosion-type nuclear weapon. The Thin Man gun-type design proved impractical to use with plutonium, so a simpler gun-type called Little Boy was developed that used uranium-235, an isotope that makes up only 0.7 percent of natural uranium. Because it is chemically identical to the most common isotope, uranium-238, and has almost the same mass, separating the two proved difficult. Three methods were employed for uranium enrichment: electromagnetic, gaseous and thermal. Scientists conducted most of this work at the Clinton Engineer Works at Oak Ridge, Tennessee.
In parallel with the work on uranium was an effort to produce plutonium, which researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, discovered in 1940. After the feasibility of the world's first artificial nuclear reactor, the Chicago Pile-1, was demonstrated in 1942 at the Metallurgical Laboratory in the University of Chicago, the project designed the X-10 Graphite Reactor at Oak Ridge and the production reactors at the Hanford Site in Washington state, in which uranium was irradiated and transmuted into plutonium. The plutonium was then chemically separated from the uranium, using the bismuth phosphate process. The Fat Man plutonium implosion-type weapon was developed in a concerted design and development effort by the Los Alamos Laboratory.
The project was also charged with gathering intelligence on the German nuclear weapon project. Through Operation Alsos, Manhattan Project personnel served in Europe, sometimes behind enemy lines, where they gathered nuclear materials and documents, and rounded up German scientists. Despite the Manhattan Project's tight security, Soviet atomic spies successfully penetrated the program.
The first nuclear device ever detonated was an implosion-type bomb during the Trinity test, conducted at New Mexico's Alamogordo Bombing and Gunnery Range on 16 July 1945. Little Boy and Fat Man bombs were used a month later in the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, respectively, with Manhattan Project personnel serving as bomb assembly technicians and weaponeers on the attack aircraft. In the immediate postwar years, the Manhattan Project conducted weapons testing at Bikini Atoll as part of Operation Crossroads, developed new weapons, promoted the development of the network of national laboratories, supported medical research into radiology and laid the foundations for the nuclear navy. It maintained control over American atomic weapons research and production until the formation of the United States Atomic Energy Commission in January 1947.
14:20 As an Indian, that Map is insanely misleading. I can confirm that India has a lot of Tea Consumption per capita. Certainly not to the level of Turkey but a lot.
Gaulball: Roman Ball has freed us!
Roman Ball: Oh, I wouldn't say free. More like under new management.
Drew, I love that you are giving news of current events for the comics that are being referenced. Loved it. Keep it up.
Always love Drew's late night(IST) videos.
At 12:07 the comic is also referencing the movie Oppenheimer in which for the filming they created a real nuclear explosion in what I presume is Nevada
13:37 the missiles were french exocet anti-ship missiles , although the frech didn't give Argentina the activation codes so the argentinian intelligence had to decodify them in order
to use them
11:00 - me, an Austrian, wondering why ancient Germany talks about bears ...
11:20 didn't know bears were involved, but you should take all help available, I guess...
As a Turkish person I can confirm I’ve been drinking a cup per day since I was six
Only one??? You are a disgrace for us.
6 cups is a lot, how do you stand so much??? Me with 3 of tea I'm going crazy.
@@Urielenr because it tastes really good and it's way more cheap than coffee and you can drink it at any time of day
As a Filipino Puerto Rico needs to ask for that statehood harder, we were given the chance and we took independence biggest mistake. LMAO
14:24 I like to think it's because of the maritime silk road, which introduced east asian stuff, like tea
4:11 says the nation that pronounces it "war-dah"
13:20 well UK it self sold frigates to Argentina years prior the war, they even proposed Argentina to buy the Harriers for Thier aircraft carrier
Sweden and Turkey pranking eachother until one of them gives up first
13:54 Founded the Thumbnail!🇬🇧🇹🇷🍵
5:25 "The Romans have freed us!"
"I wouldn't say freed. More like, under new management
Hey does anyone else think about this?
8:29 where is Belgium and the Netherlands
13:15 actually if you look at the missile sideways where it's upright you can see it's actually an upside-down Netherlands flag
Louisiana: *colonial architecture, stunning scenery, Cajun cuisine, countless other historical landmarks*
Everyone: *ALCOHOL*
2:48 never knew there was a bigger Puerto Rico above Puerto Rico and also never knew regular sized Puerto Rico had a box around it
8:34 france where is he!? We’re is he!? We’re is bellguim!?
Not only is it more fun to say aluminium that way, it actually pronounces all the letters
Thank you drew for making me get into countryballs if it weren’t for you I wouldn’t have got into geography so thank you
ok, as someone who speaks a little bit of German, the German barbarians at 11:04 are saying the word “bear.”
“Bär“ is the German word for “bear”
Love your Videos. Keep it up
Tea is so popular in Turkey, even at my history class they taught us who first bringed and tried to grow tea in Turkey!
8:09 As a Spanish, the fact that they used pendejo triggerts me, THAT'S A LATIN INSULT,NOT AN SPANISH ONE
Petition for drew to make a Scottish ball for his countryball collection #1
And WELSH and English
8:15 "Bpendeho, pu…"
4:40 American actually removed the "u"s in words like color/colour. The USA (then the Thirteen Colonies) were a British Colony until it gained independence. They still used the English language, but created a new dialect, while also changing some words' spellings.
Petition for Drew to make a Smash or Pass video on country flags, day 2.
Actually, as a Turk, considering that tea is cheap and can be consumed at any time, 4 cups of tea per person is not that much 👀
My Step Dad Could Drink The Entire Ocean If It Was Tea
Exocet missiles have been exported pretty much everywhere. the US had a destroyer attacked with Exocet missiles at some point
3:00 - LOL, he announces this bill like it was some kind of a breakthrough as if Puerto Rico already didn't have a gazillion referenda on that issue.
5:06 Sounds so funny to me for some reason
12:44 As a Nevadan I can confirm although Drew did leave out our capital Carson City and also the city of Elko not the county is nice
New Orleans Mardi Gras is good, but I would recommend wearing a bulletproof vest if you’re gonna go. Most towns have a Mardi Gras and those might be better options. Also, for the record, from my years in Louisiana, I never met anyone who spoke French (there was an Olive Garden tho)
4:15 亚 versus 亞
East Frisians are world champions in drinking tea
over 300 liters per capita per year
By the way, East Frisian is one of 4 recognized official languages in Germany
As a turk, i dont see how i could live without tea. I dont know what makes us love tea but we love it A LOT. Its very rare you visit someone and they dont just offer tea and when they do you are probably gonna end up ''refreshing your tea'' often. Maybe its something about us migrating from Central Asia, we had a lot of interactions with the chinese. And nowadays our Black Sea coast especiially the city of Rize is full of Tea farms because of the climate there. The Turkish Tea glass has somewhat evolved into our symbol,(and it looks gorgeous) we even put it on r/place.
I commented this before i heard you say we aren't huge coffe drinkers and surprisingly coffe is really loved here as well! Both coffe and tea incredibly popular here but coffe isn't drinked as much as tea. People tend to love coffe but 99 percent of us CHERISH tea.
@@ScienceLover234 Çay ilk olarak çinde yetiştirildiği için belki vardır sandım teşekkürler.
We Turks drink tea more than any other country because northren side of Turkey grows tea. Our soil and the weather in the north ( Blacksea Region ) have the right conditions to grow tea. We consume the tea that we plant and grow and that's why Turkey is the number one consumer of tea in the world.
As a person from louisiana you can come for mardi gras in only about a month but as of about a couple weeks ago in early january mardi gras season has already started
14:00 before the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan they are second and third ones and Uk is fourth.
(4:45) Sure, if you want to write "color" and "rumor", then you also have to write "famos". The problem with American English is the inconsistencies. Brits write "doughnut" but also "dough". Americans write "donut" but still "dough". Brits write "defence" and "fence". Americans write "defense" but not "fense".
Turkey isn't just a "potential candidate" for EU membership. It's an official candidate and has been since 1987. However the ascension negotiations have been frozen since 2019.
As a Canadian Google docs spell check can be quite annoying since I spell a lot of words in the British way and a lot of words in the American way like Cheque or Reali(z)e
Drew i am a turkish person and i can tell you why we have a lot of tea. So the first Reason is we have a city in the Black Sea region. The city's name is Rize and we produce a lot of tea because according to Scientists, Rize has a lot of plants and farmers. In 2021, Turkey produced nearly 280.000 tons of tea. Oh and also, our so called "climate" can change the type of tea, For example we have lipton kiwi tea,normal tea, rabbitblood tea (which is the hottest tea), and we have the poured one, which is kinda hot. In the Aegean region Thanks to the wind coming from greece and the other balkan countries, We have a lot of plants which is an advantage for tea to step in. The black sea region has a lot of sunflower seeds like ukraine, And the region is really rainy. thats why plants grow really fast on hills. For example in the city of Rize we have the Ayder Hill which has a lot of resources to mak a cup of tea. In Trabzon we have Uzungöl which is "tall lake" in Turkish. A lot of Turkeys natural beauty is considered to be on UNESCO list. Anyway have a good life.
greeks be like: wind is greek
4:23 Same for Brazil and Portugal, Mexico and Spain, and Canada (Quebec) with France
Brazil and portugal woudnt fight about how things mean or how both speak differently, brazil people just completely laugh at portugal normal things because alot of portugal normal words are just swear words in brazil, like boy that is puto in portugal and puto stands for angry person in brazil (a bad way to say that someone is angry btw)
4:29
As a Taiwanese, IDK in which situation can 笨 can be pronounced as Yaˇ, and I'm happy of someone explain to me
As chinese it is pronounced as ya. (Im not chinese)
Fun fact: Latvia or as it was called back then Courland had colonies. Although when they would end up losing them.
9:24 What about Belgium’s “hands off” approach to their colonies?
💀
1:12 I do live in New Orleans and I see movies being filmed there all the time
As someone who went to Mardi gras, as a child, you definitely have to go as an adult 🤣🤣🤣
14:08 we're a nation that drinks the most tea, even in the 30 degree celcius weather in the summer and say: why is it hot bro 😭
3:54 wait what do i say? WHAT DO I SAY!? WHICH IS THE RIGHT ONE!?
13:50 as a Turkish person, i can confirm. But the panel showed it incorrectly as me and my friends drink a chug of tea everyday.
at 8:04 it's Bison actually. it is a very comon misconception buffalo are found in Asia and Africa; while bison are in North America and Europe. They are two completely different species.
Yea do come to New Orleans during Mardi Gras, I could give you my parade schedule next year and you could come experience Mardi Gras flavors and competing Marching Bands!
I'm a Turk and we drink both coffee and tea. We don't drink coffee as much as tea but we still drink coffee too. But for tea... No one can compite. We drink tea
- with breakfast
- when we are bored
- when we hang out
- while working
- whenever we eat outside
- when we feel sad
- when we want to
So it isn't much. I don't drink tea as much as everyone else in my family but my avarage is 2-3. Also my family doesn't drink tea that much compared to others. I know some people with an avarage of 10.
Anyway I think I know why we have an avarage that high. When Brits came to invade Otoman empire (after WW1), they discovered that black sea reagion is perfect to plant tea. After the invasion was over the tea were still there. It wasn't that common and only the rich drunk tea so tea was worth a lot. Seeing it's worth a lot, people of that reagion planted more tea. Than it was common and there was tea everywhere so the prize fell and everyone could buy tea. Than everyone bought tea because it was a sign of money. And they became addicted and made it part of Turkish culture.
13:30 paAanel
Haven’t been to turkey but a lot of Turkish places here in the US and around the world like places in Japan will serve coffee, tea, and hookah, so idk the statistics but they seem to enjoy both