Brits React to What is life REALLY like in the USA?

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  • čas přidán 13. 05. 2024
  • Brits React to What is life REALLY like in the USA?
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Komentáře • 338

  • @KittCrescendo
    @KittCrescendo Před 14 dny +17

    Mascarpone cheese isn’t like regular cheese, Millie. It’s what they use for Tiramisu and other kinds of desserts. It’s more in the same family as cream cheese.

  • @CptGreenJeans
    @CptGreenJeans Před 14 dny +28

    Privacy fences are extremely popular in America. Ours is 6 foot and wraps the entire backyard

    • @mbourque
      @mbourque Před 13 dny +2

      yup. we have a 12 foot one that is both front and back yards, but we live in a mostly rural area and outside the local city limits. but that's only on the acre the house is on. the other 9 acres just have a 6 foot chain link fence around it.

    • @thisSOBRocks
      @thisSOBRocks Před 12 dny

      Fences make good neighbors.

  • @eTraxx
    @eTraxx Před 14 dny +38

    It is common to see fenced in backyards

    • @skyhawk_4526
      @skyhawk_4526 Před 13 dny +2

      Depending on where you live in the US, I'd say it's almost unheard of NOT to have a fence around your backyard. This is because most suburban homes are tract homes where the backyard of one home backs up to the backyard of another home. The side and rear fences on a residential property are normally shared with the neighbors to the left, right and rear of the property. As such, these are often referred to as "good neighbor fences" since maintenance and repair costs are often shared by the owners of both properties that the fence separates. If one neighbor refuses to share the cost of replacement, then the other neighbor can replace it entirely at their own expense, but when that happens, the non-paying neighbor can lose all rights to the aesthetic design of new fence.

    • @vwager
      @vwager Před 10 dny +2

      I grew up in the Boston suburbs... it is not common to have fenced in yards. Even in new subdivisions. Over the years people may put up bushes or trees between houses. Fences are typically for a reason, like a pool or garden etc.
      Now obviously there may be neighborhoods where fenced in yards are common. Not the majority of neighborhoods.

    • @camryn_deja8968
      @camryn_deja8968 Před 10 dny

      @@vwageryeah I’ve lived in 3 different neighborhoods in 3 different cities within South Carolina. All of the neighborhoods were open yards. No fences anywhere. For me, it’s quite uncommon to see a fenced backyard or front yard. The neighborhoods my relatives live in are not fenced either. This is just my experience though. I know it depends based on location or sometimes just on an individual’s preference.

  • @skyhawk_4526
    @skyhawk_4526 Před 13 dny +3

    "Black pudding. What is that made out of?"
    Let's not think about that. 😆

  • @nickcarnevalino7462
    @nickcarnevalino7462 Před 10 dny +2

    IF you have a pool MOST states require you to have a fenced in yard ( keeps the neighbors kid from falling in) - hmm , $100 breakfast is not cheap (counting tip)

  • @borisbalkan707
    @borisbalkan707 Před 13 dny +2

    "We're here in America to have an all American breakfast"
    Proceeds to get an Irish breakfast. Why are they like this?

  • @user-fw1ji6ez1q
    @user-fw1ji6ez1q Před 14 dny +3

    I think foreigners just can't imagine how big and diverse we are, so assume the little bit they see represents the entire US. If you realize England is the same size as Ohio, Italy is the same as New Mexico, Germany a little smaller than Montana, etc. Those countries are much more homogenized.

  • @miammissophiapetrillo
    @miammissophiapetrillo Před 14 dny +5

    More likely called an “Irish breakfast” rather than an “English breakfast” in the Boston area because of the exceptionally strong presence of Irish ancestry.

    • @patricequinn7733
      @patricequinn7733 Před 14 dny +1

      Irish ancestry by History,yes but people in Boston now are much more diverse.The Irish influence is one of MANY cultures and not,by any means,the most prevalent.

    • @miammissophiapetrillo
      @miammissophiapetrillo Před 14 dny +1

      @@patricequinn7733, fuckin duh.

  • @usmc24thmeu36
    @usmc24thmeu36 Před 14 dny +20

    Amtrak is the national rail system in the country, but it is also a private company. They have cheaper prices because the federal government subsidizes them..

    • @denniss5505
      @denniss5505 Před 14 dny +4

      Amtrak is a public private partnership where it’s publicly owned by privately managed

    • @TobyBaker-hz3rw
      @TobyBaker-hz3rw Před 14 dny +2

      And a losing money pit.😁

    • @CCoburn3
      @CCoburn3 Před 14 dny +1

      @@TobyBaker-hz3rw Amen! So many people from Europe bemoan the fact that the US doesn't have high-speed rail. But compared to the US, Europe is TINY. And it has a much higher population density. Even in Europe, high-speed rail has to be subsidized. The ONLY place in the world that had a population density to support high-speed rail was between Tokyo and Osaka. But now, I doubt they are populous enough. (Japan's population has crashed.)

    • @AnnieDC304
      @AnnieDC304 Před 14 dny +2

      @@CCoburn3 I believe that the US and Europe are very similar in size. Yes, trains are subsidized, but so are cars, trucks, virtually all other transport.

    • @CCoburn3
      @CCoburn3 Před 14 dny +4

      @@AnnieDC304 If you count all the way to the Urals and the Scandinavian countries. But they don't have high-speed rail there either. No one thinks there should be a high-speed rail system connecting even Moscow with the rest of Europe -- much less a village in the Urals.
      Western Europe is a bit more than 1/2 the size of the US. And it has a much higher population density.
      The distance between Lisbon and Berlin is 1437 miles (by plane). This is approximately the distance between Little Rock, Arkansas, and Los Angeles. The distance between New York and Los Angeles is 2445 miles (by air).
      The US is much too large and has such a low population density that it would be insane to try to build a high-speed rail line throughout the US.

  • @heathermacdonald2680
    @heathermacdonald2680 Před 14 dny +13

    Irish breakfast is available in a lot of places in the Boston area due to the large amount of Irish immigrants and descendants of previous Irish immigrants.

    • @jdanon203
      @jdanon203 Před 14 dny +2

      Yeah like 30-40% of people in Boston are Irish. By far the highest concentration of any place in America.

  • @carlosmiro4932
    @carlosmiro4932 Před 12 dny +2

    Beesleys, early American history lesson: the earliest English settlements in what is today the United States (meaning in the original 13 colonies because there were already Spenish settlements elsewhere in places that later became part of the United Staes) were: Roanoke, North Carolina in 1584, whose settlers disappeared without a trace; Jamestown, Virginia in 1607, which was able to survive because of the tobacco cash crop; Plymouth, Massachusetts in 1620, where the English Puritans settled after a stay in Holland.

  • @johnpearson5616
    @johnpearson5616 Před 14 dny +32

    What is forgotten IN 2 many of these commentaries on faith on CZcams is that the United States has an incredible system for flying wherever you need to go. Also, that is part of our public transportation system.

    • @douglasostrander5072
      @douglasostrander5072 Před 14 dny +1

      Never had a problem, accept for whether.

    • @predigested
      @predigested Před 14 dny +1

      flying in the US is shit compared to Europe.

    • @user-nr5ux7gr2g
      @user-nr5ux7gr2g Před 14 dny +2

      ​@@predigested Depends on the airlines and what time of the day you're traveling , let's face it it's just a flying bus with more people crammed on them

  • @2012escapee1
    @2012escapee1 Před 14 dny +34

    In rural Nevada, like Elko, the only EVs charging at Walmart are passing through from California. In much of the US, like rural areas, a Tesla is a good way to get stranded.

    • @ffarmchicken
      @ffarmchicken Před 14 dny +4

      Yup. My state there are only a few charging stations in the whole state. Sub zero temps for weeks will leave you stranded in an electric car.

    • @RethaMitchell
      @RethaMitchell Před 11 dny

      @@ffarmchicken Occasionally, when the charging stations aren't working right, or it will take too long into the night, my son backs the Tesla into our backyard and plugs it into my husband's welding plug for the night. You need to plan your trips around where the stations are. My DIL drives it to work, about 45 miles each way. I imagine they save quite a bit on gas.

  • @mbourque
    @mbourque Před 13 dny +2

    IF you visit a major city in the U.S., go during winter. crime rates drop when it gets cold because criminals don't want to be out in the cold either....

  • @mbourque
    @mbourque Před 13 dny +5

    11:11
    basements in the U.S. are typically the same 'footprint' of the house (minus the garage). it can easily be smaller, but almost never larger than the floor plan of the house above it. some open out to the yard (especially when the house is on a hill), some just have windows. Some are 'finished', some are 'unfinished', some are part both. the 'finished' parts are usually space for the family. bedrooms, living/entertainment room, kids' playroom, ect... while the 'unfinished' parts will usually be where the mechanical stuff for the house will be (heater, water heater, air blower, house water filter, ect.) or just used for storage. and if it's 'finished', it will typically have a 1/2 bath (water closet) with just a sink and toilet.

  • @JIMBEARRI
    @JIMBEARRI Před 14 dny +2

    Some people have fences around their backyards. In fact, if you have a swimming pool local laws [and your insurance company] will probably require at least a 6 foot tall protective fence.

  • @mimsley5
    @mimsley5 Před 14 dny +13

    Tater tots… 🤣😜 My son’s fiancé is from England- she told us everyone in the U.K. thinks everyone in USA eats tater tots all the time! 🤪🤣😆 (My kids liked them when they were little)

    • @sherryford667
      @sherryford667 Před 14 dny +2

      I'm a mature American, and I think I may have had tater tots once or twice in my entire life. Not a regular food for many of us. Maybe for kids. 😊

    • @Knightowl1980
      @Knightowl1980 Před 13 dny +1

      It’s more of a school lunch item. But you can buy them and they’re good. And a restaurant I go to has pulled pork “totchos”

  • @3DJapan
    @3DJapan Před 14 dny +3

    You can get across the whole country on a train. It takes almost a full day but you can go from Philadelphia to Los Angeles on one Amtrak train.

    • @JohnWilson-hc5wq
      @JohnWilson-hc5wq Před 14 dny +6

      Philly to LA is more like 3 days, and you have to change trains in Chicago.

  • @Gloren50
    @Gloren50 Před 14 dny +10

    Our house isn't nearly as big or as opulent; it was built in 1929. It's in an old inner city neighborhood in Portland, Oregon (the old Polish neighborhood when American cities were segregated by race and ethnicity) . There's a basement, which was unfinished when we moved in, but we renovated/remodeled and put in a laundry room, bathroom, sleeping area and 'living room', which we refer to as our 'man cave'. We also re-purposed a storage room as a wine cellar and a second storage area is now my spouse's brewing storage area. He brews beer and wanted a brewing and keg storage space in the remodel. With the finished basement, there are three floors, each about 75 sq meters, three bedrooms and three full bathrooms. But it is a pretty old house from design to construction to style and there is no resemblance to anything as modern or as large as the house in the video. In fact, it's called 'English Style', which was popular in the 1920s and 1930s. Where I live a house like in the video would be somewhere around $1.5 to 2 million, and stylistically would only be found outside of the city in newer sections of the suburbs. And the property size is incredibly big. There aren't many suburban neighborhoods with lots that big in the Portland metro area. It's sort of a reminder how different and diverse American metropolitan areas are from each other.

  • @skyhawk_4526
    @skyhawk_4526 Před 13 dny +2

    As others have said, Mascarpone cheese is quite sweet and soft. Think of cheesecake filling. That's essentially the flavor profile, so it would actually go well with something sweet like Nutella or chocolate.

  • @SB-jd6zh
    @SB-jd6zh Před 13 dny +1

    I find it odd that in all these videos, there are limited fenced back yards when literally every home I've ever seen in the US is fenced

  • @philipem1000
    @philipem1000 Před 13 dny +2

    French Toast calls for Maple syrup. That's amazing.
    Basements are common in cold areas of the US because you need the house foundation to be at least four feet below the surface to get below the frost line to avoid upheaval of the foundation. They also made sense in the old days as a place to store coal and a coal-fired furnace. So you find these in the Northeast and across the Midwest where winters are very cold. If they are deep enough people finish them these days and the furnace is gas fired and fits into a little closet someplace.
    I live in Tucson where basements virtually never exist, the ground is extremely hard to dig up and there's no reason to do so; foundations are "slab on grade" an 8 inch reinforced concrete slab with 18 inch deep footings at the edges. Land is cheap so you don't need multiple stories; my furnace is a heat pump on my roof that gives me heat and A/C so no need for a basement. In Tucson nearly every home has a concrete block wall around the back yard for privacy and that's where you build your patio, pool, or other outdoor living areas. Wood fences are not favored as wood is shipped in from other states and termites are an ever present concern. Cement block is made locally and is fairly cheap and lasts forever. While wood construction is cheaper in labor we have a lot of homes here that have masonry walls for the passive solar/thermal capacity and inside they are insulated and lined with wood and sheet rock.

    • @stischer47
      @stischer47 Před 8 dny

      In my family, it was jelly or jam.

  • @Real_LiamOBryan
    @Real_LiamOBryan Před 14 dny +19

    Mascarpone is a little bit sweet and is often used like cream cheese in sweeter dishes.

    • @ahoyforsenchou7288
      @ahoyforsenchou7288 Před 14 dny +3

      Yeah I think she was thinking it was like cheddar or something lol

    • @Real_LiamOBryan
      @Real_LiamOBryan Před 14 dny +3

      @@ahoyforsenchou7288 Could you imagine: French Toast with Nutella and Cheddar? Rofl.

  • @luxleather2616
    @luxleather2616 Před 14 dny +10

    like many us of continue to say public transportation in the big cities & towns which was where y'all were visiting is alot better than in smaller towns & cities & rural areas....they're taking a train going between two different states which is a completely different transportation system than going on the subway or inner city trains....its real nice that they show differences in prices....that couple does make videos worth reacting to

  • @travr6
    @travr6 Před 14 dny +93

    Life outside of major cities like LA, Atlanta, NYC, etc... is quiet, safe, clean, and beautiful.

    • @emaniburton9422
      @emaniburton9422 Před 14 dny +14

      Life in major cities can be much the same 😂

    • @travr6
      @travr6 Před 14 dny

      @emaniburton9422 yes in rare spots. Life in major cities is mostly crowded and dirty with homeless crackheads roaming around.
      You are just used to it so it doesn't seem bad.
      Austin, tx has a huge homeless problem. Joe Rogan moved from LA to Austin and says it's great because there are less homeless.
      Your degree of filth is relative

    • @throneborn
      @throneborn Před 14 dny

      In comparison to away from the city, no. ​@@emaniburton9422

    • @georgekappos3222
      @georgekappos3222 Před 14 dny

      Not true. The grimeyness is spreading to the suburbs. I live 30 mins outside of Chicago an we got people begging for change on every corner. I just missed a homeless fight/murder next to the bar I was just getting too. Got to see the clean up though.

    • @ffarmchicken
      @ffarmchicken Před 14 dny +1

      I would agree with this. I live in a rural area and we leave our keys in our cars and our homes unlocked. Very safe out here in the northern plains.

  • @MichaelW969
    @MichaelW969 Před 5 dny

    Milly was offended they called it an "Irish"breakfast. LOL

  • @hayneshvac2
    @hayneshvac2 Před 13 dny +1

    I can't speak for everywhere, but here in Ohio, you can build a fence, but there are permits involved that you have to pay for, and any time you section off land with a fence, you risk raising your taxes as well. Great video, thanks for reacting.

  • @roybrady8434
    @roybrady8434 Před 14 dny +6

    You guys should come to Boston, you almost feel like you’re home. Boston are very historic old. It has a European feel and you can drive to Boston in 4 to 5 hours or even take the train. I think you guys would love Boston and the history

    • @roybrady8434
      @roybrady8434 Před 14 dny

      By the way I’m from Massachusetts. I live on the south shore. I’m about a half hour south of Boston.

    • @roybrady8434
      @roybrady8434 Před 14 dny

      Boston is considered a working class city full of hard workers. People work hard that we do have wealthy people here it’s few and far between it’s mostly a working class society here in Boston and throughout Massachusetts.

    • @annamariadenner2518
      @annamariadenner2518 Před 13 dny +1

      Go Red Sox!

    • @James-jl9lm
      @James-jl9lm Před 6 dny +2

      You missed a chance at saying "Please come to Boston." lol

    • @roybrady8434
      @roybrady8434 Před 6 dny

      @@James-jl9lm My life lol

  • @user-wf2rx8mj7s
    @user-wf2rx8mj7s Před 13 dny +1

    Most homes in the US have fences to define spaces and for privacy some are to contain pets and you can see through them and some are privacy if you have a large property you might only put up a partial fence instead of the whole property.

  • @jeffhampton2767
    @jeffhampton2767 Před 14 dny +4

    There are not too many restaurants in the United States that would serve an English or Irish breakfast but you can find it if you wanted it bad enough.

  • @pattymcnulty1332
    @pattymcnulty1332 Před 14 dny +1

    I feel like I filmed this. This is my town. The restaurant they went to for breakfast, called The Toast Office was my prior Real Estate Office. Also, my husband works at Boston College. I hope you come here someday. You will love the architecture and the history. Glad to show you around.

  • @joyannwesson
    @joyannwesson Před 14 dny +7

    We have a train in a tiwn about 1 hour from here. It is a scenic route and takes you through the canyons and by the river. To a small town, and then turns around and takes you back. You can up grade you seats and get free drinks and snacks. Holy Molly, it's been a while since I rode it. It's $950 for that car and a minimum of 6 people. The regular cars are over 100 per person.. it's a 4 hour trip. Beautiful country to see.

    • @jLutraveling
      @jLutraveling Před 14 dny +1

      I behave had black pudding before, but, I can say I didn’t care for it.

  • @pliny8308
    @pliny8308 Před 14 dny +4

    You could land in Boston, spend some time, take a train to NYC, spend some time, and then take a train to D.C.

    • @AnnieDC304
      @AnnieDC304 Před 14 dny +2

      And Philadelphia. It’s an easy trip with lots to see, no car needed.
      And flights from the UK are much shorter, usually direct, and cheaper than flying to the West coast.

  • @stevenhahn3442
    @stevenhahn3442 Před 14 dny +2

    There is too much crime in Boston. I recommend a southern state. There crime everywhere, but u have southern hospitality down south. The people are more friendly down south in your southern states.

  • @nersharific813
    @nersharific813 Před 14 dny +5

    I’m American, lived in Buffalo, NY my whole life, been to a handful of states, and I honestly can’t give a real answer as to what life is like in the U.S. because of how freaking huge this country is (Not exclusive to America obv). I could talk about my hometown, provide some brief commentary on places that I’ve visited, but that’s about all I feel confident in saying. Still on my bucket list to go farther west than Cleveland.

    • @philmccracken179
      @philmccracken179 Před 12 dny

      I’m almost 50, lived in the sf Bay Area my whole life and have never been east of st George Utah. Weird huh?

  • @Catbgone
    @Catbgone Před 14 dny +5

    A lot of people have fences in the backyard or garden. Specially if you have kids and animals❤

  • @mikemc7170
    @mikemc7170 Před 10 dny

    I grew up in 50's-60's in suburb of NYC. Every basement was half recreation and party area. The other half was workshop, storage and laundry area.

  • @jeffhampton2767
    @jeffhampton2767 Před 14 dny +4

    You can take trains and buses to just about anywhere in the united states. Back in the 1970s i and a friend of mine took a bus from the east coast to the Grand Canyon and spent a month backpack in the Grand Canyon of Arizona and then took a a bus back from Arizona right to the east coast and used connecting buses and I was dropped off two blocks from my parents' house.

  • @timmccoy4875
    @timmccoy4875 Před 14 dny +5

    Fences or walls depend on the area you live in. Closer to the city you probably have to get a permit. Further from the city, permits are not always needed.

  • @mbourque
    @mbourque Před 13 dny +1

    8:41
    you can virtually do or build anything on your own property. (there are some restrictions due to local city and county ordinances, but they're usually minor things and getting a permit mostly is easy and quick. You can easily build a fence or wall from short to very high with a simple trip for city hall for a permit and a quick review of the ordinances to see what the limits are. and once it's done, it'll need to be inspected to show that it was built correctly and won't interfere with a neighbor's property or fall down suddenly....

  • @JeffBishop_KB3QMT
    @JeffBishop_KB3QMT Před 14 dny +1

    Snow? Go north from Boston into the mountains of western Maine and deal with snow 4-6 feet deep for the duration of the winter. Sounds bad, but it's beautiful.

  • @Persephonetoo
    @Persephonetoo Před 14 dny +16

    If you go to New England, you should spend a day in Salem, Massachusetts. It's touristy, but unique.

    • @sherryjoiner396
      @sherryjoiner396 Před 14 dny

      I visited there a few years ago, very cool place!

    • @DENVEROUTDOORMAN
      @DENVEROUTDOORMAN Před 13 dny

      All Mass is unique ...Springfield in the Western part is fantastic with the Dr Seuss building

    • @DENVEROUTDOORMAN
      @DENVEROUTDOORMAN Před 13 dny

      Or Sturbridge and New London with the old Whaling ships

  • @tosweet68
    @tosweet68 Před 14 dny +1

    Most places you can put a fence up around your backyard but there are some areas that do not allow them.

  • @Merlinherk
    @Merlinherk Před 14 dny +5

    Fence, walls or hedges really vary. My first house we (me and my father) built a solid wood 6 foot fence for backyard. My house now has chain link and solid wood, my fence only has chain link alleyway fence. My grandmother had all backyard chain link and great-grandmother all but 1 (then 2) were chain link side facing they main road (busy road her words) was a tall hedgerow, about 6 years before she died 1 off her daughter (great-aunt) bought house next door so we torn down fence between (made mowing so much easer)

    • @RethaMitchell
      @RethaMitchell Před 11 dny

      I think when South Africans say walls, they may not mean fences. In SA the wealthier people live in compounds with actual walls that can't be easily kicked in or climbed, to keep most of the criminals out.

  • @catherinesearles1194
    @catherinesearles1194 Před 14 dny +1

    We have basement apartments here....most are gorgeous. This is more of a guest room

  • @JoshColletta
    @JoshColletta Před 14 dny

    That French toast was a diabetic coma on a plate! 😂

  • @bluflaam777
    @bluflaam777 Před 14 dny +2

    Tesla's can be had for about $40k - $150k in the US. It will depend on the model and where you buy it.
    They're living in an upper-middle class neighborhood. NYC is expensive and most cities on the east coast are, especially the northeast are also expensive relatively speaking.

  • @DurkMcGerk
    @DurkMcGerk Před 14 dny +3

    Hoo boy, 14 bucks for French toast. Welcome to America

  • @lyricalalchemist4091
    @lyricalalchemist4091 Před 14 dny +2

    Two places you should definitely visit whenever you return to the U.S. are New England, particularly the Boston area. The other location being "The Great Smokey Mountains" in Tennessee along with Nashville. So happy you enjoyed your recent trip. Its been fun watching your videos.

  • @JIMBEARRI
    @JIMBEARRI Před 14 dny

    The ride Northbound out of New York City is one of the most spectacular sights in the US. The train is on a viaduct high above the buildings of Queens as it approaches the Hell Gate Bridge. The view of the New York Skyline is stunning.

  • @mobus1471
    @mobus1471 Před 4 dny

    I’m from Boston. It is a great place to live. It’s expensive. (Not as expensive as California) but still expensive. And if you don’t mind the colder climate and snow, then it’s a great place to live.

  • @aliciazambri4237
    @aliciazambri4237 Před 14 dny +1

    Some fun facts: The train they took was a slower train, though it only takes about 20 or 30 minutes more to get to Boston from NYC than the "Acela" train which is the faster one. It still takes just under 4 hours, but the Northeast Regional is much cheaper. Also, the food on the train sounds better than it tastes. lol

  • @carolynm3523
    @carolynm3523 Před 14 dny +2

    It is VERY common to fence the back yard. I have a 6' wooden privacy gate. Some do their whole yard, some do none.

  • @norvaz94
    @norvaz94 Před 14 dny

    My husband and I took a train ride from Los Angeles, California to Houston, Texas. We had a roomette. It was a pretty cool experience.

  • @devinchandler3352
    @devinchandler3352 Před 14 dny

    Every house where I live has a fence on the backyard, a couple have small front yard fences but most don’t on the front yard

  • @JohnWilson-hc5wq
    @JohnWilson-hc5wq Před 14 dny

    There are a lot of Irish people in Boston. That's probably why Irish breakfast is popular there.

  • @skyhawk_4526
    @skyhawk_4526 Před 13 dny

    Re: "Irish Breakfast" terminology. In the northeast of the US, there is a large population of descendants of Irish immigrants. While that looks pretty much like a "full English breakfast" to me as well, it's probably listed on the menu as an "Irish breakfast" because the two are essentially the same thing, but there are more customers of Irish ancestry than of British ancestry in the area. I noticed this too with Shepherd's Pie, which is often advertised in the US as "Irish Shepherd's Pie," despite shepherd's pie being a British dish. Since Ireland was ruled by Great Britain for a very long time, many traditional and originally British dishes became popular in Ireland, and Ireland (and Irish-Americans) seem to have "appropriated" as being Irish in origin. The same is true for the famous "corned beef and cabbage" which is probably the most popular "Irish" meal consumed on St. Patrick's Day in America, despite corned beef not actually being Irish, but more likely English. The corned beef and cabbage dish actually has its origins in late 19th century New York and is an adaptation of the true Irish dish "bacon and cabbage" which is made with back bacon which is a cut of bacon that is not commonly found in the US. But now virtually everyone, including most Irish-Americans (incorrectly) thinks "corned beef and cabbage" is an Irish dish.

  • @TheMan21892
    @TheMan21892 Před 14 dny

    The “Cowbell” Easter egg 😂

  • @tomlundberg2121
    @tomlundberg2121 Před 14 dny

    When it comes to the fences/walls around American homes and properties in my experiences I've found that our "planned communities" generally have walls around their backyards and businesses at the very least for some privacy and security. What is a planned community? It's just an area like Continental Ranch in Marana AZ, or Patterson Ranch in Modesto CA for example, where everything has been (usually) carefully planned for housing, business districts, schools and whatever else. Since the homes and businesses are generally so close together in these areas they have the privacy block walls around them to help with prying eyes! These communities are seen throughout the US, but are huge in places like California, Arizona, and the big metro areas of Texas.
    Where communities that grew organically, you know the ones that just seem to kinda wander and the roads have lots of curves and hills and things. Those areas tend not to have the privacy fences because the properties are generally bigger and/or further apart from one another so the fences simply weren't needed. You simply couldn't see you neighbors anyway! So if you wanted to run around nude you where welcome to it and either your neighbors couldn't see you, where to polite to say anything, or where to busy laughing so say anything. But no, it's not uncommon to see those large properties without a privacy fence around the whole thing but instead to have a small area close to the house fenced off.
    Plus, have you priced fencing lately?! Holy crap! It would cost a small fortune to fence in a lot of properties I've seen thru the southeastern US!

  • @JohnWilson-hc5wq
    @JohnWilson-hc5wq Před 14 dny

    Walls aren't very common, but fences are in some towns. Whether you can have one depends on your town's laws, which vary widely. In my town, you can have a fence up to 6 feet (1.8 m) unless your house is on a corner, then you are restricted to 3 feet (0.9 m) so as not to obstruct the view of people driving.

  • @darkjedi74
    @darkjedi74 Před 14 dny

    I’m amazed they were able to find black pudding here in the states! It’s not easy to find, considering it’s illegal to import.

  • @rj-zz8im
    @rj-zz8im Před 14 dny +1

    You can have a walled garden, but it is not at all common for front yards unless it's an urban/townhouse situation. The only restrictions you may have would be with any community associations and city ordinances. If you have a pool, then it is a requirement to have a gated yard for safety reasons. Most people have fenced/private backyards.

  • @lisapagliaro4667
    @lisapagliaro4667 Před 14 dny +1

    Absolutely our food stretched your stomach, resist the hunger dont do it your stomach will shrink back in a few weeks

  • @JIMBEARRI
    @JIMBEARRI Před 14 dny

    They ordered four complete breakfasts to sample different items.

  • @katyareads221
    @katyareads221 Před 14 dny

    Tip call the train company and tell them you are a tourist and if they can do anything for you..sometimes they give you a deal.

  • @user-fw1ji6ez1q
    @user-fw1ji6ez1q Před 14 dny

    I have a six foot privacy fence around my backyard, none in front.

  • @Andrew-Collet
    @Andrew-Collet Před 14 dny +6

    As a very proud Bostonian, I very much encourage you guys to come and explore Boston. You took in a Dodger game, now take in a game at Fenway! And as you said, experience all the history. And the food.

    • @LongieR8er
      @LongieR8er Před 13 dny

      Ohhh god….i swear you people think your shit don’t stink….you want Boston Redsox history The Boston Red Sox were the last major league team to integrate, “holding out until 1959, a few months after the Detroit Tigers. This was due to the steadfast resistance provided by team owner Tom Yawkey”…disgusting

    • @Andrew-Collet
      @Andrew-Collet Před 13 dny

      @@LongieR8er Such a weird response to show how miserable your life must be. Anywhere you go in this country, there's good and bad history. That doesn't negate that it's America's most beloved ballpark.

    • @Pcbdude82
      @Pcbdude82 Před 13 dny

      ​@@LongieR8erwhat the hell is ypur problem? Dodgers Stadium and Fenway are among some of the most traditional/famous parks in the country. He was suggesting going there for a game.

  • @user-po3ev7is5w
    @user-po3ev7is5w Před 14 dny

    In the Rocky Mountain area we call black pudding, blood sausage

  • @CapeCodOutdoors
    @CapeCodOutdoors Před 14 dny +1

    As a "bloke" from Massachusetts that grew up in western Massachusetts (Holyoke area) and now lives and works as east in the state as you can go. I would say that there is so much variety in a very reasonable distance that it would be awesome to see you guys come on over. Lol.

  • @PEPPER2323
    @PEPPER2323 Před 14 dny +1

    I didn't realize that Jersey has a KFC fast food store.

  • @mzxeternal
    @mzxeternal Před 13 dny

    Irish-American cuisine is similar but different to traditional Irish cuisine. There is a distinct difference between the two. 😊
    You guys as Europeans, will love Boston, as it is the one North American city that’s laid out similar to an old world European city. Boston was pretty well laid out before the grid system or the car became popular. its a beautiful and unique city for what you’d typically expect for America.

  • @robrobertson4619
    @robrobertson4619 Před 14 dny

    The breakfast looks fabulous, but you must know us Americans really don’t eat like this every day. We go out for a big breakfast about once a month. At home it’s toast, cereal, fruit and yogurt for me and my wife.

  • @JIMBEARRI
    @JIMBEARRI Před 14 dny

    Northeast Corridor trains only have Cafe Cars [sort of fast food on wheels].

  • @Mentalpaused
    @Mentalpaused Před 14 dny +3

    There a some/many great train rides in The US.

  • @richardmartin9565
    @richardmartin9565 Před 14 dny

    In Boston, -2° C or 28° F is warm in the winter. I suppose near the water its colder. But notice, no one else was crazy enough to be out there with them.

  • @ciscokid0110
    @ciscokid0110 Před 14 dny +7

    Been to New York, would never want to live there and probably wouldn’t visit again.

    • @marydavis5234
      @marydavis5234 Před 14 dny

      New York or New York City, there is a difference.

    • @AnnieDC304
      @AnnieDC304 Před 14 dny

      @@marydavis5234 And many think both are more than worth visiting.

    • @runrafarunthebestintheworld
      @runrafarunthebestintheworld Před 14 dny

      ​@@AnnieDC304people are sleeping on Buffalo New York.

  • @jeffhampton2767
    @jeffhampton2767 Před 14 dny +3

    If you come to the United States and go to the Northeast it's best to go between April and October unless you like winter weather. I would say the nicest months to come to the northeast or April May June and then August September October the middle of summer can get hot and then winter time is cold

    • @AnnieDC304
      @AnnieDC304 Před 14 dny

      If you add in Washington DC I’d try to avoid August. Brutally hot and humid.

  • @skyhawk_4526
    @skyhawk_4526 Před 13 dny

    Public transportation in big US cities is generally quite good and reliable, but it's nearly nonexistent outside of large cities. Unlike the UK, passenger rail service in the US primarily serves as transportation from large cities to other large cities with smaller towns not having any train stations. Most small towns (unless they're remote) are served by county or regional buses but wait times at bus stops between buses can often be 30 minutes or an hour. This is one of the main reasons for the automobile culture in the US. Many in NYC or dense metropolises like Boston, San Francisco, Chicago, etc., can and often do get by without owning a car since taxis, Ubers, buses and trains or subways are plentiful. But if you live outside of a major metropolitan area, you really have no choice but to own a car and drive to work, school, shopping, etc. The smaller the town, the more this is true since you'll likely have to work and shop in a completely different town or city and the limited public transportation makes driving necessary. Also, whereas in large cities people of all sorts routinely use public transportation, this really isn't so much the case in more rural areas where pretty much the only people who use the buses to get around town or to go to nearby towns are the people who can't drive (either for competency reasons, poverty, addiction, or because their licenses have been suspended or revoked for criminal offenses). This makes riding the bus a pretty unpleasant experience for most since the regular bus passengers are usually not the type of people that most other people are comfortable being around.

  • @rnkelly36
    @rnkelly36 Před 13 dny

    In Boston things are more Irish. Being New England that is the area that was mostly first colonized by English settlers but post Revolutionary War anything English was mocked or the name changed by the New Englanders. For example I lived for a time in New London, CT. We have a river that ran through it called "The Thames River". It is pronounced just as it is spelled. Of course in London it is pronounced more like "Tim's". If you are in New London they insist on it being the "T H A M E S". That was basically to stick it to the Redcoats.

  • @LadyofFe
    @LadyofFe Před 10 dny

    We always had a fence until we moved where we live now. We had wooden fences.

  • @devildog1912
    @devildog1912 Před 14 dny

    According to Tesla's website, the base model, Model 3, is selling for $35,000.00 (27,797.18 pounds/ 32,345.77 euros). Now, that's just the entry-level, no frills, get-your-foot-wet, Tesla. There are other Tesla's that can go as high as, $200K+ (158,846.00+ pounds/ 184,818.00+ euros). The type of job you would need comes down to many variables; such as your expenses, family size, etc....

  • @shawnb4938
    @shawnb4938 Před 14 dny +1

    I wonder if they know about takeout boxes for leftovers?

  • @JasonCrow187.
    @JasonCrow187. Před 13 dny

    I was born and raised 20 minutes from Boston, a city called Lynn. Don't go to Lynn 😁

  • @gregoriancatmonk6904
    @gregoriancatmonk6904 Před 14 dny +1

    East coast is much better at public transportation, it seemed like as they started going west they just gradually gave up.

  • @3DJapan
    @3DJapan Před 14 dny

    I've been to Boston but just for the weekend. One of my oldest friends lives there and my friend and I were visiting him.

  • @neishann1
    @neishann1 Před 14 dny

    Go to Boston in the fall. The colors are gorgeous. Boston has a lot of Revolutionary War period history. !750’s to 1800

    • @patricequinn7733
      @patricequinn7733 Před 14 dny

      Charlestown,Lexington and Concord-very historical areas,

  • @andrewgalindo6959
    @andrewgalindo6959 Před 14 dny +1

    Boston is full of history, I would love to visit someday. But I served with more than a few guys from Boston and all gave me the same warning. Boston is very very cold so you have to be careful. But I'd still like to visit.

  • @catherinesearles1194
    @catherinesearles1194 Před 14 dny

    You can get from NYC to California by train but it takes about 4 days. By bus even longer

  • @ciscokid0110
    @ciscokid0110 Před 14 dny +8

    I’ve never met anyone with a Tesla and probably never will. We have no public transportation in our town unless you can hop on somebody’s car😂😂. Boston is very expensive. My brother-in-law lives in the suburbs.

    • @amandaBlair334
      @amandaBlair334 Před 14 dny +1

      Hi. I’m Amanda. I have a Tesla. Now you’ve
      met someone. 😂

  • @jimcathcart5116
    @jimcathcart5116 Před 12 dny

    Most houses have fences in back yard we don’t need security walls

  • @garryp.8451
    @garryp.8451 Před 14 dny

    Tesla is just a regular car in Seattle, Vancouver and just about everywhere here in America. They're not that expensive here.

  • @bzick405
    @bzick405 Před 13 dny +1

    Personally I don't like being able to see a window from my window. any of them. Been there done that I prefer cabin in the woods.

  • @ssmith548
    @ssmith548 Před 14 dny

    Boston is a great city to visit but I don’t know if you’d like living there unless you like brutally cold winters. That’s true of all the northeastern states.

  • @MaryShearer-Brennan-gw8db

    Boston is very Irish

  • @KNGSLYR1669
    @KNGSLYR1669 Před 9 dny

    could easily do an east coast historic tour in a week... DC Philly and Boston. wouldnt cost that much either

  • @kevindunn5650
    @kevindunn5650 Před 12 dny

    Where I live all houses have fenced in back yards and open front yards

  • @davisnanette
    @davisnanette Před 14 dny +2

    You can get a bus to anywhere in the USA - it would be miserable because it would take several days. Trains go across the country also but you can rent a sleeper - but still miserable several days. Easier and quicker to fly. I have family members with Teslas and they are everywhere on the roads. The prices have come way down from what they used to be.

    • @jeffhampton2767
      @jeffhampton2767 Před 14 dny +1

      Some people love taking trains across the United states. When I was young we took a bus across the United States and it was not miserable it was just okay

    • @TobyBaker-hz3rw
      @TobyBaker-hz3rw Před 14 dny

      Teslas.😂

    • @JohnWilson-hc5wq
      @JohnWilson-hc5wq Před 14 dny

      Trains are way better than buses for long distance travel, and usually comparable in price.

  • @robrobertson4619
    @robrobertson4619 Před 14 dny

    Boston University has one of the top hockey teams in college athletics year after year!

  • @annamariavalatka636
    @annamariavalatka636 Před 14 dny

    Marscapone can be sweet when you mix it with powder sugar

  • @stephenulmer3781
    @stephenulmer3781 Před 14 dny

    No corn bread with breakfast 😂