My DNA Heritage test results (I WAS SHOCKED)

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  • čas přidán 7. 05. 2022
  • I am totally hitting up that Nigerian prince now. He was right all along.
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Komentáře • 8K

  • @GeographyNow
    @GeographyNow  Před 2 lety +1958

    My whole life I thought I was Kor-tal-ir-ench. With some mafia and monkey stuff mixed in. Turns out I'm....not exactly what I expected. WOW. Can't believe THIS was the result. Who knows! Maybe you're my cousin! Thanks Myheritage.com for the test! Check them out!

  • @Nolaris3
    @Nolaris3 Před 2 lety +9970

    Paul is my favorite Korean-Japanese, Chinese-Vietnamese, Central Asian, Scandinavian, Italian, Scottish-Irish-English, Jewish-North African, Native-American, maybe Black and virtually non-French CZcamsr
    Edit: Okay I get it I forgot the Welsh, cymru am byth and whatevs

    • @m.kajsik
      @m.kajsik Před 2 lety +268

      😂😂😂

    • @GeographyNow
      @GeographyNow  Před 2 lety +1786

      I dunno man. I'm sure the other ones have way better content

    • @crose7412
      @crose7412 Před 2 lety +71

      @Awatierz Is there a reason you missed out Wales?

    • @thecursed01
      @thecursed01 Před 2 lety +259

      @@crose7412 maybe forgot because he doesn't look Welsh at all. no scales, doesn't breath fire, can't fly....

    • @alexbalan_5623
      @alexbalan_5623 Před 2 lety +18

      💀💀💀

  • @commonwealthrealm
    @commonwealthrealm Před 2 lety +1547

    Mr. Worldwide, Paul ;) Couldn´t be more fitting with this channel.

    • @GeographyNow
      @GeographyNow  Před 2 lety +197

      CONRAD YOU'RE MY COUSIN NOW!! (He's the guy in the Poland episode and is half Norwegian)

    • @100subsguy
      @100subsguy Před 2 lety +7

      @@GeographyNow Yo i like you're content mate.

    • @liljackass6998
      @liljackass6998 Před 2 lety +11

      @@100subsguy fellow sephardi jew here :D
      if you were wondering
      sephardi jewish genetics is usually a clustering mixture of southern european, northern african and levantine genetics - a complete condensed mediteranean mix mash
      welcome to the tribe!

    • @silentmann4686
      @silentmann4686 Před 2 lety

      @@GeographyNow and mine

    • @alwaysshit
      @alwaysshit Před 2 lety

      WHAT YOU'RE A FAN OF GEOGRAPHY NOW MY MIND IS BROKEN I THOUGHT I WAS THE ONLY PERSON WHO LIKES GEOGRAPHY AND ZELDA /J

  • @MattKatar
    @MattKatar Před 10 měsíci +153

    I'm French, took the test and discovered I'm 0% French as well but:
    - I had 30% Keltic and some of my ancestors for sure come from Brittany so maybe your Britton descent got mixed with the Irish indeed!
    - Also I'm 25% Scandanavian, maybe due to the Norman invasions in France, IDK
    Point is these 2 DNA bits I have and you have too could be sources of your French descent. Don't worry you're still French to me ❤

    • @piter4595
      @piter4595 Před 9 měsíci +2

      and you're serbian?

    • @MattKatar
      @MattKatar Před 9 měsíci

      No but my girlfriend is 😄@@piter4595

    • @matthiasblum6555
      @matthiasblum6555 Před 6 měsíci +5

      Most people don't understand, that those DNA tests take only the routes of maternal and paternal lineage (mother to grandmother to grand grandmother and so forth). Not because they want to, but that's how it works with DNA testing. So its very well possible that 21 generations down, you had a lot of other DNA mixed to it. 21 generations down, are over 1 million ancestors, so its possible, that your grand grand grand and so forth grandfather and grandmother were Celtic/Scandinavian and 950.000 other ancestors were something else. So those DNA test are always just indicators for your heritage, they can't tell the full story ever.

    • @humanwhodoesstuffindeed
      @humanwhodoesstuffindeed Před 6 měsíci

      celtic*

    • @Nightraven26
      @Nightraven26 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@matthiasblum6555when you say 1 million ancestors, I think you underestimate the level of interbreeding that happened in small communities in the distant past

  • @JoAnneMOwens
    @JoAnneMOwens Před 10 měsíci +18

    You have an infectious personality, I really enjoyed this video as a result. I had my test done by Ancestry and was pleased with the findings as they were pretty much what I expected. One thing I find really interesting is that they can determine which parent provided what regions. My father was made up of so many different regions! My mom, basically British Isles, not as interesting. Anyway, you might be able to find out more about your mother’s genetics by doing a test with Ancestry.

  • @Wombat_Astronaut
    @Wombat_Astronaut Před 2 lety +6294

    Take 23&me, it’s much better. My heritage is notoriously inaccurate and also DNA testing is banned in France which is why it’s very under represented in ethnicity tests. You could definitely still be French

    • @amegalodonwithinternetacce5863
      @amegalodonwithinternetacce5863 Před 2 lety +227

      I would say they say are equally accurate when it comes to people like me and Paul were both extremely mixed and it can be difficult for our dnas to be explained I took a 23&me test knowing full well I had scandanavian ancestry And it only came back British while my ancestry gave a far better explanation most likely due to its cheaper price and being far easier to get your hands on due to that

    • @atacama1000
      @atacama1000 Před 2 lety +400

      Why is DNA testing banned in France?

    • @israelilocal
      @israelilocal Před 2 lety +117

      ancestry is also solid from what I heard but yeah my heritage is very "Jew forward" so it is useless for Moroccans and ethiopians

    • @zennec8319
      @zennec8319 Před 2 lety +44

      @@israelilocal I am Moroccan and I wanna try it

    • @mhdfrb9971
      @mhdfrb9971 Před 2 lety

      @@atacama1000 because France are Xenophobic

  • @sonja5058
    @sonja5058 Před 2 lety +695

    Remember that a DNA test only tells you what percentage of these genes that YOU inherited - if your family members took tests they could get quite different percentages just by luck of the draw! It doesn't tell you everything about your ancestors so you could definitely have ancestors from different places :) also took me a (weirdly) large amount of digging to find out that myheritage tells you where your ancestors were up to about 700 years ago. Things to keep in mind when interpreting your results!

    • @sonja5058
      @sonja5058 Před 2 lety +30

      So yeah getting family members to take the test as well can be a good way of filling in some gaps!

    • @danielzhang1916
      @danielzhang1916 Před 2 lety +5

      his mom definitely looks mixed Asian like my cousins, the rest are probably from dad's side

    • @meltayy
      @meltayy Před 2 lety +11

      Exactly! We did it both with my mum and she got lots of Italian genes that I did not inherit at all! That was really interesting! Paul, you should maybe try with your mum to see whether she has those French genes or not

    • @TopFix
      @TopFix Před 2 lety +2

      Yes it does tell you about ancestors because that's what DNA heritage is, it spans back to Neolithic times

    • @PuntinoNero
      @PuntinoNero Před 2 lety +1

      These tests don't test genes. Genes don't mutate nearly as fast to be useful for a test like this. These test analyze DNA that doesn't do anything (junk DNA). The vast majority of genes that do something are the same among any ethnic group.

  • @jonye7511
    @jonye7511 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Just watched until he found his roots explaining his hair. As an African I saw that one coming. Loved his light-hearted approach.

  • @valiaudet3415
    @valiaudet3415 Před 5 měsíci +3

    This was so cool. One of the best reveals on genetics I've watched 🎉🎉🎉🎉.

  • @koletonnelson6310
    @koletonnelson6310 Před 2 lety +1026

    Here’s the thing, Paul-you don’t actually inherit an even 50/50 DNA from all of your parents haplogroups; instead, you’ll get a random selection from both. I, for example, have had this same test, as has my mother-Turns out she is significantly Scandinavian-but I have no Scandinavian *whatsoever*. Through random chance, none of her Scandinavian DNA was passed on to me. BUT! That does not, of course, mean that I’m somehow not descended from Scandinavian *people*.
    So, in other words, what I’m saying is-just because you don’t have any French DNA, doesn’t mean you don’t have French *ancestry*. KEEP THE DREAM ALIVE, PAUL!!!

    • @zi326
      @zi326 Před 2 lety +5

      You sure that your father isn't also scandinavian because you got a scandinavian last name

    • @koletonnelson6310
      @koletonnelson6310 Před 2 lety +25

      @@zi326 Nah; Nelson I got from my mother, who got it from her first husband (whom I am not related to). My fathers actual surname was Boss.
      Also, that wouldn’t change anything; I have no Scandinavian genes, so even if my father DID, it would only mean I didn’t get any of his, either.

    • @Chaotic_Pixie
      @Chaotic_Pixie Před 2 lety +49

      This is exactly why family trees that have been verified through documents are SO IMPORTANT. DNA should be used to support the family tree, not in place of the family tree.

    • @slkjvlkfsvnlsdfhgdght5447
      @slkjvlkfsvnlsdfhgdght5447 Před 2 lety +10

      actually you do get it 50/50 from mom and dad. the reasons for what happened to you are different

    • @G.F.SF55
      @G.F.SF55 Před 2 lety +73

      I think people can get a little confused, you *DO* inherent 50/50 from your mom and dad, but WHICH 50% of moms and WHICH 50% dad's DNA you GET os random more or less

  • @lucapeuch2240
    @lucapeuch2240 Před 2 lety +516

    If one of your ancestors was from Algeria it's not that weird if they presented themselves as French at the time.

    • @jennw36
      @jennw36 Před 2 lety +5

      Lol how they represented themselves doesn’t mean you are genetically french!

    • @Ninja-gt3zi
      @Ninja-gt3zi Před 2 lety +111

      @@jennw36 read what he said again

    • @lucapeuch2240
      @lucapeuch2240 Před 2 lety +84

      @@jennw36 But it's nothing to do with genetics, if he's a french citizen it's not awkward to say that he's french or a member of the french community.
      So if they're remembered as a french person it's not weird

    • @toha7924
      @toha7924 Před 2 lety +5

      tunisian too

    • @neptune9238
      @neptune9238 Před 2 lety +40

      Yeah, and Algeria wasn’t even a colony of France, it was part of the mainland.

  • @maryslack6169
    @maryslack6169 Před rokem +2

    Love it so glad you had some insight into your heritage

  • @holaeats
    @holaeats Před rokem +14

    I did my DNA test through Ancestry which can give you specific countries in your test. I was curious because my mother used to talk about her paternal grandmother and how she used to talk about having French heritage. We were born in Mexico, and of course Mexico had a lot of French influence, especially among the states along the Gulf of Mexico. My mother was born in Veracruz and on her father side they were born along Tabasco, Campeche, and other parts of the Quintana Roo Peninsula which has a lot of French influence.
    I did the test for me and I turn out to have just 1% percent French, but the other surprise was that I had 2% Basque which is an area in both Spain and France. Having said that, I was more intrigued and wanted my mother to do the DNA. It took me a while to convince her, but she finally did it. Her results were even more fascinating. She had 4% French, and 3% Basque. Among the other surprises in her DNA, she has 1% Irish, and 2% from Iceland, the Faroe Islands and Norway which blew my mind.
    I really wish I could have done a DNA test for both my grandpa and even my father, but they all passed away a long time ago. Anyway, it is interesting what you can find.

  • @Damian-qv6wh
    @Damian-qv6wh Před 2 lety +197

    I think your “French relative” was actually a Sephardic Jew from Algeria. I remember researching a lot about naturalisation laws in France around the time Algeria became independent and they gave Jews rights to citizenry in metropole France whilst muslims were excluded from this right and would remain under the newly independent Algeria. Could be this relative lived in France but was of Algerian (Jewish) descent most likely

    • @user-vg7mk8ur9c
      @user-vg7mk8ur9c Před 2 lety +10

      You right

    • @Robert-ne4xd
      @Robert-ne4xd Před 2 lety +11

      That is exactly what I was thinking too

    • @Alex_Plante
      @Alex_Plante Před 2 lety +7

      Until Algeria became independent in 1962, Algeria was technically part of France, so that meant that many Algerians could easily become French citizens. Most of the Jewish population left Algeria soon after independence and most ended up in Israel or France. The same thing happened to most of the Jewish population in Morocco and Tunisia.

    • @Damian-qv6wh
      @Damian-qv6wh Před rokem +3

      @@Alex_Plante the french made it much harder for muslim algerians to become citizens. They originally tried to make a system of citizenship to a greater france, excluding metropole france for French west/north african nations but that failed

  • @rebeccacanales
    @rebeccacanales Před rokem +1058

    If you have ancestry from France but a dna test shows Scandinavian instead, that is an indicator that you have Norman ancestry.

    • @LovinglfDesigns
      @LovinglfDesigns Před rokem +74

      Huh. We have a great grand father that is French and both my brother and I have Scandinavian in our DNA results.

    • @user-qo8yj4zl4j
      @user-qo8yj4zl4j Před rokem +53

      Scandinavian dna maybe come from north France but also from the Britain ( he was both English and Gaelic dna).

    • @rebeccacanales
      @rebeccacanales Před rokem +39

      The Normans were a mix of Northern French with both Scandinavian and Celtic with some Britonnic.

    • @lawalkyrie4051
      @lawalkyrie4051 Před rokem +34

      All my ancestors came to Canada from France in the 17th century. Yet, I am 75% Scandinavian and East English, which is explained by the predominance of Norman immigrants in my tree. Only 25% French, mostly from the South-West of France. And I, a convinced Québécois nationalist who has been fighting for decades for the protection and promotion of the French language in my Province. 🙃I was disappointed, as I so hoped to find a nice chunk of Celtic genes and significant First Nations blood. Nope, my roots did not dip in any of that juice.

    • @xenotypos
      @xenotypos Před rokem +17

      Another factor makes everything related to France's genetics inaccurate/uncertain: genetic tests are "technically" forbidden in France (even if nobody would be ever be prosecuted for this lol), so the gene pool coming from France in their algorithms is relatively little compared with the data they have for the neighbours.
      Also, France had a lot of immigration early in their history. France dominated North Africain the late 19th century and until the mid-20th century, so the Jewish ancestry may be derived from either that or the Italian part, hard to say.

  • @sunharper-zahn8788
    @sunharper-zahn8788 Před 11 měsíci +11

    Black, Jew, Samurai, Viking, Pochahantas.💀

  • @osphranterrufus
    @osphranterrufus Před rokem +3

    Great accents, bro! You have a good sense of different cultures without otherizing them.

  • @zyxwut321
    @zyxwut321 Před 2 lety +1268

    It's the "Italian" ancestry. Italians are genetically basically a mixture of various European, eastern Mediterranean, Middle Eastern and North African peoples combining since at least the Roman times. I've had so many Italian-American friends who get completely unexpected genetic testing results.

    • @Amaling
      @Amaling Před 2 lety +32

      Yeah that makes sense, but then there's also a straight up Italian section. Where's the distinguishing factor?

    • @jarrodmcdonald9950
      @jarrodmcdonald9950 Před 2 lety +35

      @@Amaling that's an interesting question. Basically, it has to do with when the genetic sequence split into a new defined group. These groups can be defined from genetic mutations that happened tens of thousands of years ago. Sustained periods of interbreeding between already defined groups such as between Northern African group and Italian group happening in the last few thousand years would result in a family having both those two now separate genetic groups passing down their distinct DNAs. Sorry if I don't explain it too well it's been a long time since I've studied this

    • @MichelleObamasBBC
      @MichelleObamasBBC Před 2 lety +47

      @@Amaling my Corsican friend got 98.3% Italian, 1.4% Greek and 0.3% North African. I think it's mostly the isolation that hepled them stay true. He has light skin and very dark and curly hair with brown eyes too.

    • @Amaling
      @Amaling Před 2 lety +63

      @@MichelleObamasBBC "stay true" has some suspect vibes my friend not gonna lie. Genetically/biologically, being mixed is actually much better as you are much less likely to be at risk of recessive harmful traits, have vulnerable mutations etc

    • @jto2161
      @jto2161 Před 2 lety +17

      @@Amaling that's a myth

  • @rosalinaayala5963
    @rosalinaayala5963 Před 2 lety +517

    I am Puerto Rican but my dad always said he had a Chinese ancestor, we laughed at him. The DNA for me came out 54% Europe,22% Native American,18% African and 5% Chinese. You can't make this stuff up it's hilarious.

    • @daja57
      @daja57 Před 2 lety +4

      What DNA site did you use?

    • @rosalinaayala5963
      @rosalinaayala5963 Před rokem +5

      @dajanna. 23 and me

    • @user-ur2ly5jv8p
      @user-ur2ly5jv8p Před rokem +104

      "I'm black, my wife is Korean... and our kids are somehow Puerto Rican."
      --Dave Chappelle 🤣

    • @birdyashiro1226
      @birdyashiro1226 Před rokem +1

      Wow...XD PogU

    • @georgekech4903
      @georgekech4903 Před rokem +22

      It's because of the similarity of East Asian people with the Native people of Siberia that are the ancestors of native people of the Americas. As a Puerto Rican you have ancestors that were Taino Indians. These ancestry DNA test results are not straight forward, "hard science", but estimations.

  • @ynotchristian1366
    @ynotchristian1366 Před 5 měsíci +1

    What a great video! You are wonderful!❤❤

  • @BORN-to-Run
    @BORN-to-Run Před 4 měsíci +2

    This is SO FUNNY!
    This is straight-up the FUNNIEST DNA video I’ve ever seen!
    Thanks for sharing yourself

  • @STALKER777LK
    @STALKER777LK Před 2 lety +176

    'Complicated ethnic background"
    Literally the whole Brazil

    • @FlamingBasketballClub
      @FlamingBasketballClub Před 2 lety +21

      "Complicated ethnic background"
      Brazil: So, welcome to the club lad.

    • @Nike.Crystalia
      @Nike.Crystalia Před 2 lety +19

      Thats why you guys so beautiful and unique !!

    • @lady.p.
      @lady.p. Před 2 lety +11

      So handsome and beautiful

    • @prisoner_of_hope8386
      @prisoner_of_hope8386 Před 2 lety +2

      lol true

    • @weinishyusi
      @weinishyusi Před 2 lety +5

      Brazil is overwhelmingly PORTUGUESE, with some Angolan/Mozambique and some amerindian. Very simple.

  • @lexwolfhale1729
    @lexwolfhale1729 Před 2 lety +900

    Scandinavian makes sense for someone with Irish heritage (or heritage from the British Isles in general) as the degree of contact and colonization by Scandinavian people in Ireland (and the British Isles) was quite large, also a lot of Scandinavian people emigrated to the US in the 1800s so that may also influence your degree of Scandinavian heritage.
    (edit) And yeah, the North African heritage is probably linked to Italian heritage, especially if your family is from the south of the country as we had a lot of crossover between the populations....

    • @SuperExodian
      @SuperExodian Před 2 lety +27

      not just for britain does viking make sense, they were all over the continent duting the viking golden age, for example as varangian guards in constantinople or the normans that ruled northern france and later went to sicily under robert the fox of normandy.

    • @dazzathakilla6364
      @dazzathakilla6364 Před 2 lety +11

      If your talking about the Anglo-Celtic archipelago as a whole. North England would be the most Scandinavian. Ireland and Scotland would have a much smaller percentage of Scandinavian as they never got any sort of hold on either of the countries unlike in England with the danelaw. Admittedly the Vikings did create a lot of the main cities in Ireland but the were only there for a few decades, not nearly as long to produce such a vast scope of Scandinavian heritage across the Celtic lands unlike in England. Also don’t forget the Vikings lived in areas of northern France on the border with Brittany

    • @Tomatnaufmaugn
      @Tomatnaufmaugn Před 2 lety +31

      North African heritage could also be linked to France, they did a lot of colonizing there and nowadays there's a lot of people with heritage from the former colonies living in France.

    • @slicer2938
      @slicer2938 Před 2 lety +3

      also with that little bit of english im suprised there was absolutely no french. england was conquered by the french and thats partially why so much of the english language is french

    • @R_V_
      @R_V_ Před 2 lety +9

      Scandinavia may also make some sense if the French ancestry comes from Normandy, where all the nobility and higher social classes came from Scandinavia - hence the name of the region.

  • @ruchika_pal_kaur
    @ruchika_pal_kaur Před 10 měsíci +1

    Im a nerd for these hertiage shows, and just found out you did this video. I love these videos where you try to find out more about your roots n where you came from. :)

  • @swedhamurugesh
    @swedhamurugesh Před rokem +11

    It seems your people were enjoying each and every Continent thoroughly 😊

  • @anonymanonym1814
    @anonymanonym1814 Před 2 lety +302

    I did this test a few months ago. My grandfather always told us about his love for Eastern Europe and his fascination with the languages ​​and cultures there. It turned out that my roots are mostly from Eastern Europe! I wish I could tell him that - I'm sure he would be delighted ❤

    • @SI-ej8hw
      @SI-ej8hw Před 2 lety +5

      which part? the balkan or the central-north-baltic?

    • @SXavierA
      @SXavierA Před 2 lety +3

      I got Scandinavian, North Baltic and Eastern Europe which was wierd because my family always claimed descent from the Middle East

    • @pranky16
      @pranky16 Před 2 lety

      How does it work? The test I mean do they really do some research or it is just fun?

    • @markokovacevic1550
      @markokovacevic1550 Před 2 lety +3

      @@pranky16 they just do an analysis because everything is written in your DNA. And based on the facts some genes are connected to some areas of the world and comparing your results to those genes would tell you results!

    • @pranky16
      @pranky16 Před 2 lety +1

      @@markokovacevic1550 Thank you Marko.

  • @eh1702
    @eh1702 Před rokem +647

    The “native American” component is often interchangeable with some (central or east) Asian ancestry just because some of these testing companies have very few samples of some populations. Keep tabs on it and in future years they may refine it substantially.

    • @patlehman2733
      @patlehman2733 Před rokem +6

      agree needs refining..

    • @jm5390
      @jm5390 Před rokem +26

      Agreed. Many indigenous, native groups are severely underrepresented as are Middle Eastern populations. Checking the results about twice a year and you'll see tweaks to your estimates. :)

    • @victorzusman3467
      @victorzusman3467 Před rokem +21

      And also because some migration from Asia took place relatively recently making exact separation between Asians and Native Americans hard to detect

    • @kathyborthwick6738
      @kathyborthwick6738 Před rokem

      Yes -Land claims are an issue in Canada and the US!

    • @bobklahn42
      @bobklahn42 Před rokem +4

      I forgot that part in my comment. And yes, you are absolutely right.
      I read, long ago, Hungarians can't get good testing on Native American ancestry thanks to Attila the Hun.

  • @carlosdoriaespitia
    @carlosdoriaespitia Před rokem +12

    I really love when people that know about geography and also about human migrations through history understand how a DNA test works. Cool!

  • @simpleelace
    @simpleelace Před rokem +9

    I took a test and it was spot on. I am mixed, mom white and father black. My mother is a 2nd generation immigrant so I knew where exactly they come from, (Czechoslovakian and Welsh) other 1/2 Nigerian. Taking the test, I did find a long lost brother, I knew about but didn't know where he was at.

  • @mshrade3580
    @mshrade3580 Před 2 lety +434

    Please consider encouraging your mother to take a DNA test also and any siblings you have as well. It is fascinating to see the relationship through DNA of related people. I would love to see that episode, if you do it.

    • @DaDARKPass
      @DaDARKPass Před rokem +2

      Isn't that usually a horrible bombshell that never ends well?

    • @vpuik
      @vpuik Před rokem +7

      @@DaDARKPass or if there's some secrets waiting to be found out

    • @mshrade3580
      @mshrade3580 Před rokem +8

      @@DaDARKPass Rarely. Every person in a family will be different. It is amazing to discover which side of your family you really take after. For an adoptee or someone who only knows one side of their ancestry, it can lead to discovering more about the missing parent's family history and relations. I assist adoptees with developing their family tree. all the people I have worked with have told me they feel more "complete" when they know more about their ancestors on that side.

    • @SvensssonboiMapping
      @SvensssonboiMapping Před rokem

      isn't it ver y expensive tho

    • @breeze1121
      @breeze1121 Před rokem

      @@SvensssonboiMapping depends, here in the us they average around $100 per kit but they go on sale for the holidays for like $70 per kit

  • @Mcgoohan6
    @Mcgoohan6 Před 2 lety +173

    I am French and my heritage :
    53,9% iberian: (south of France🇫🇷, Spain🇪🇸,Portugal🇵🇹)
    38,8% Scandinavia : Norway🇳🇴,Danemark🇩🇰,Sweden🇸🇪) probably my father its a norman and all the family 🇫🇷.
    7,3% Greece and italien : 🇬🇷 🇮🇹

    • @TheMrbadaboum
      @TheMrbadaboum Před 2 lety +11

      Vikings arrived in Normandy in 10th century, i don't know if it could have much infuence over your genetic.

    • @Mcgoohan6
      @Mcgoohan6 Před 2 lety +3

      @@TheMrbadaboum Yes I don't know🙂
      What I do know is that my father's surname meant ram in the Middle Ages and it's an old French surname.
      But I found the experience very pleasant🙂

    • @alexnavarro6941
      @alexnavarro6941 Před 2 lety +2

      @@TheMrbadaboum Also many barbarian tribes that invaded the Occident Roman Empire came from Scandinavia, Baltic and East Europe. The vandals I think were scandinavian, the very first vikings before the vikings hahaha

    • @felicepompa1702
      @felicepompa1702 Před 2 lety +1

      @@TheMrbadaboum maybe selective breeding? I know that sicilians preserved their norman ancestry because the fairer haired people were inclined to put up families with similarly light people (also the whiter you were the nobler your family)

    • @WildcardASMR
      @WildcardASMR Před 2 lety +1

      @@TheMrbadaboum 100% it could have. On my dad's side I am (supposedly -- wouldn't take genetic research as gospel) descended directly from Rollo. Norman roots expanded in the following centuries fervently, and alongside sparse -- we're talking one of the most spread-about ethnic petri dish there has been in recorded history-- Viking Scandinavian mixing with local European populations, remnants of Norse groups which persisted into the later modern age, mimicking the pattern of French-Norman concentrations, would definitely stand to reason that they would have had a great influence on that.
      Edit: I should have prefaced the immediate point by saying that the relation to Rollo is in contrast of being Irish (born in Australia, just in case any ethnic gatekeeping trolls lurk these parts -- fuck off).

  • @donnav7103
    @donnav7103 Před rokem +1

    Holy cow! You are a mix of everywhere. And I do mean everywhere! Congrats!

  • @terrymoser2028
    @terrymoser2028 Před 11 měsíci +1

    A beautiful story from a Beautiful Young Man. The best of all worlds!❤❤❤

  • @motaboat5187
    @motaboat5187 Před 2 lety +631

    You should take Ancestry DNA test. It's more accurate then My Heritage and you can now see which ethnicity comes from which parent. Also never take an ethnicity test too seriously, especially the lower percentages.

    • @cle-loumehl6172
      @cle-loumehl6172 Před 2 lety +72

      Beyond accuracy, DNA does not necessarily reflect the Cultural Heritage. Many DNA test of siblings from multiple ethnic heritage, while sharing the same parents, have sometime a huge disparity. For example, on a DNA test, one of the siblings was 60% French/German, while the other was only 10%. This is because you only take half of the DNA of your parents.
      If both parents are half French, it could be possible to have two children with one at 0% French DNA (took both half of non-French) and the other one at 100% French DNA (took both French half). Yet, both of them has the same French heritage, have the same interest and learnt the same from their parents. They are both legitimately inherited French culture. It is even more true today when generation of people from foreign background lived all their life in a different country: whatever their genetics say, their place are the country they always lived in.
      It doesn't matter what is in your blood: it doesn't define who you are. What define you is your education, and what want to be.

    • @danielzhang1916
      @danielzhang1916 Před 2 lety +3

      yeah I think the Europe figures are kinda off, a lot of people migrated around

    • @descalzitao6779
      @descalzitao6779 Před 2 lety +32

      @@cle-loumehl6172 that's why American claiming to be nationalities they clearly aren't like German, Irish, Italian and so on just because some of their immigrants ancestors came from those places always struck me, an European, as extremely weird. Are they ashamed of being American or what ?

    • @juliethomsen4121
      @juliethomsen4121 Před 2 lety +18

      Right.. I'm half German and half Danish and according to MyHeritage I'm 100% Scandinavian. They heavily overestimate Scandinavian on MyHeritage.

    • @ShonTV15
      @ShonTV15 Před 2 lety +43

      @@descalzitao6779 well most Americans do that because if we’re talking from a purely ethnic standpoint the only true Americans are Native Americans. The U.S is still a relatively young country compared to places like France or England that have been around long enough to genetically create their own distinct ethnic identities.

  • @DemonofChaos264
    @DemonofChaos264 Před 2 lety +474

    The French héritage that you believed you have is most likely Pied-Noir Algerian. If you have 6.6% English and also some Celtic heritage you are likely have an ancestor from Dublin or Northern Ireland.

    • @SiPakRubah
      @SiPakRubah Před 2 lety +12

      Sounds logical

    • @RealUlrichLeland
      @RealUlrichLeland Před 2 lety +28

      Dublin ancestry would explain the Scandinavian stuff because Vikings founded Dublin.

    • @chimera9818
      @chimera9818 Před 2 lety +21

      Yeah I can see it has one of two stuff(outside of what he said): from the Jewish Sephardi community (majority of modern French Jewish community is Sephardi that fled there post Arab expulsion after Israel was established but he could originate from the Jewish community of Algeria that the French gave citizenship but not to the regular Algerian)Italian that moved to France

    • @salutaldegrandfan6171
      @salutaldegrandfan6171 Před 2 lety +5

      @@chimera9818 why you don't speak when Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia welcome jews when Spain and Portugal expulsed jews

    • @command_unit7792
      @command_unit7792 Před 2 lety +4

      What about the Scandinavian part?
      Normans are a thing...

  • @rns7426
    @rns7426 Před 5 měsíci +1

    😂 dude you are entertaining and having fun with this! Great vid!

  • @jennyjou
    @jennyjou Před rokem +1

    How lovely!
    Would u consider a 23 and me dna test episode?
    Thank u!

  • @maliekjcksn
    @maliekjcksn Před rokem +252

    This is by far the most entertaining video on DNA ancestry results I've seen.

  • @cestmoi8811
    @cestmoi8811 Před 2 lety +332

    Literally laughed out LOUD at 7:55, the hair productsss 🤣😂 So interesting finding more about your heritage, and learning more about yourself! Very cool, tres bien and we all def could be cousins somehow lol
    Keep spreading knowledge, bro! Much love💪🏾🌍❤

    • @tannekag.811
      @tannekag.811 Před 2 lety +19

      The Murray's was hilarious to me 😆I didn't expect that 😆

    • @OCKMEER
      @OCKMEER Před 2 lety +10

      I LOOOOOOVE ME SOME MURRAYS FOR WAVES!!!!.....AN THEN MOTIONS HAIR PRODUCTS

    • @joneshugh
      @joneshugh Před rokem +7

      Being Black, I laughed at. I was remembering my sister/mama using that

    • @toyadean
      @toyadean Před rokem +8

      Funniest part is he totally took on the attitude. He felt black - hilarious 🤣

    • @MsT_ThatsMe
      @MsT_ThatsMe Před rokem +3

      Girl me too. Murray's though??? ROFL!

  • @DonTiamo
    @DonTiamo Před 3 měsíci +1

    I've also done it. It's wild when you find out something so surprising about yourself as an adult. I knew most of me are from Finland, but the rest is something I've always drawn to and I couldn't explain it before, but now I need to explore things more.

  • @donalddelano3948
    @donalddelano3948 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Great video, so entertaining! KD

  • @jarinarline7075
    @jarinarline7075 Před rokem +590

    I'm black, he had me dying laughing with the hair texture🤣

  • @RuinYourChildhood0
    @RuinYourChildhood0 Před 2 lety +607

    I am sad to say that my Dad left two children in Korean. A son and a daughter. I hope one day to meet them and/or their families. They are my family too.

    • @ree4061
      @ree4061 Před 2 lety +13

      Did you take a dna test, yet?

    • @RuinYourChildhood0
      @RuinYourChildhood0 Před rokem

      @@ree4061 No

    • @sailorsun1513
      @sailorsun1513 Před rokem +9

      Did he tell you about them? I really hope you have a reunion soon

    • @moretolifemmg2703
      @moretolifemmg2703 Před rokem +1

      💖

    • @deleted72636
      @deleted72636 Před rokem +13

      You should take a DNA test. Ancestry DNA will show you the people closely related to you that have also taken the test, and you would be able to possibly reconnect with them if they were to take the test.

  • @buddhaspet4042
    @buddhaspet4042 Před rokem +2

    Welcome brother 👍❤️

  • @johnny07652
    @johnny07652 Před rokem

    LOL this was so awesome! Great video!

  • @lesliesanderson1300
    @lesliesanderson1300 Před 2 lety +95

    I've had my DNA for many years and it has changed so much as more people are taking the tests
    I started our as 78 % Scottish and now down to 58%.

    • @mizzpoetrics
      @mizzpoetrics Před 2 lety +9

      Yep, mine keeps changing too! 😌

    • @jr3753
      @jr3753 Před 2 lety +33

      It keeps changing because the more people that join increases their database and it becomes more accurate

    • @lesliesanderson1300
      @lesliesanderson1300 Před 2 lety +6

      @@jr3753 yes exactly

    • @nathan9368
      @nathan9368 Před rokem

      Mine too and I got new results

    • @orangeradishneo
      @orangeradishneo Před rokem +3

      That’s the one thing I dislike about people taking these tests so seriously - you have to take it with a grain of salt especially with different databases. The 3 major testing companies all will give different ethnic backgrounds.
      I know for sure my family has a lot of German, Irish, English, and more recently found out how through family tree research, a lot of French (Canadian) I have on my paternal grandfathers maternal side. I just did my test and my largest % outside of those four, was about 2% Cypriot! That’s not something I’d expect at all without any other results (maybe 1% Scandinavian, that makes sense though). Now I’d need my parents to do dna tests to figure out where it comes from!

  • @ARHemant
    @ARHemant Před rokem +255

    How fitting that the person with the best geography channel on CZcams has much in common with so many people around the world. This is perfect.

    • @untitled6391
      @untitled6391 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Well it's not like that is a coincidence

  • @kvdp3806
    @kvdp3806 Před rokem +1

    That was a fun video! Thanks.

  • @caligulacaligula2810
    @caligulacaligula2810 Před 12 dny

    No matter WHAT you are, you are beautiful!!! I really enjoyed your reveal. 😊

  • @Bryzerse
    @Bryzerse Před rokem +182

    BARBS! This is very relevant to you so I hope you see this but my mum did a DNA test with 23andme, and when we uploaded the DNA file to MyHeritage it came up with very different results. Just to be sure, we uploaded it to several other genetics websites and they all backed up 23andme's analysis. MyHeritage said my mum was like 20% Scandinavian, which didn't appear on any other DNA testing sites. On 23andme, it instead showed FRENCH ancestry, as well as some Gujerati, Native American, and Ashkenazi Jew, so I implore you to do a DNA test with a more reputable site like Ancestry or 23andme which both seem to give the most reliable results! Fascinating video all the same :)

    • @anonymousprivet1227
      @anonymousprivet1227 Před rokem +9

      The reason there are higher percentages and a less diverse history with a few others are due to their number of regional divisions and sub divisions. 23andMe does not offer subdivisions of genetic make-up like MyHeritage does. 23AndMe tend to group ancestry into larger regions which would cause the pecentages to be different. The reports are valid. It's just reported differently, some reports with a deeper dive into the breakdown of your past.

    • @Gracie746
      @Gracie746 Před rokem +1

      This is an Excellent comment. Let’s keep in mind that getting DNA from your dad and mom would give you ALL of it I would think?! 🤔😃

    • @rosey312
      @rosey312 Před rokem +3

      Yeah 23 and me has a larger data base and tweaks it more often. My origins 23 and me said I was 2% asian, then that was revised to native American and then I got the explanation that Asian DNA and Native American are so similar. But 23 and me depends on its members to update and tell details about themselves which can lead to some incorrect physical features for your DNA profile. As a person that ID's as Black, it says that most people with my profile have straight hair. ..... But anyway, I don't participate in the research after I found out that the information is gonna be used to make DNA targeted meds and sold eventually.

    • @SIC647
      @SIC647 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Showing up as French in some tests and Scandinavian in others can be due to Norman ancestors.

    • @Bryzerse
      @Bryzerse Před 7 měsíci

      @@SIC647 This is a very interesting point, especially given the situation with DNA testing in France, it would make sense to me that some sources can only match it to some distant Scandinavian genes.

  • @jamesfrancisdonaghy7472
    @jamesfrancisdonaghy7472 Před 2 lety +59

    Paul, your channel demonstrates the importance of geography in society as a whole. Your My Heritage video fully encapsulates how much a man of the world you are! Congratulations on the Irish/ Celtic percentage, being Irish myself, you can legitimately do St Paddy’s Day!

  • @0713mas
    @0713mas Před rokem +1

    Great reaction lol
    I think I had a similar reaction to my DNA results. What I've discovered is a little confusing and somewhat contradictory to what we are told about genetics.
    Basically genetic percentage results can change periodically, based on how many people add to the database and you don't just get 50% of every percentage from each parent.
    Although each parent can only give youna percentage of what they have you can get more or less than half of the percentage a parent has.
    As far as crazy DNA ancestry or heritages, popping up from places or peoples, we never knew our families were associated with. A lot of what we see in DNA results can be attributed to old DNA like African, Asian, Middle eastern/ Jewish, Hispanic/ Mediterranean, Germanic Celtic /Scandinavian, Slavic and Indigenous American.
    But when you really break it down all people are really just mixtures of ancient groups of people who mixed and maybe migrated or traded at different times boiling down each melting pot for a period long enough to form their own identities. Ancient DNA can basically be traced back to 4 groups who are all also related to eachother African & Sub-Saharan African, Asian/ Mongolian and Germanic/Viking People or Caucasian (who are related to asian)
    Basically everyones related and if you don't think Adam and Eve or Noah's Ark makes any sense because we'd all be closer related, go into your ancestry DNA database filter by 4th cousins (or people who share 1% DNA) and then scroll down, everyone has thousands and thousands of 4th cousins!

  • @ninauccello360
    @ninauccello360 Před rokem

    You are totally amazing! : )

  • @Classyferret
    @Classyferret Před rokem +454

    I'm from Quebec and I took a 23 and me test and expected a lot of variety coming from family telling stories about ourselves. Expected some Irish, some German even some native American along with the obvious French. Turned out to be 100% European, 90+% French, the rest Spanish/Iberian and broadly southern European. Verdict...I'm probably more French than a lot French people out there.

    • @Classyferret
      @Classyferret Před rokem +55

      @bastiat Iberia includes Portugal as well not just Spain and yes those are part of Europe I am well aware of that.

    • @Classyferret
      @Classyferret Před rokem +30

      @bastiat Thank you for your absolutely amazing educative comment. :)

    • @hugotremblay-pierre5384
      @hugotremblay-pierre5384 Před rokem +4

      C'était sur voyons, les colons arrivés en nouvelle-france était strictement d'origine française et il n'y a pas eu beaucoup de métissage avec les autochtones. Par la suite ,notre peuple a été isolé autant d'un point de vue culturel que génétique, Les canadiens-français forment l'un des peuples les plus homogènes au monde.

    • @SuperMewKittyKatGaming
      @SuperMewKittyKatGaming Před rokem

      Cou cou~

    • @raynemichelle2996
      @raynemichelle2996 Před rokem +8

      @@hugotremblay-pierre5384 There wasn't a united Spain when Portugal first came into existence, so you are obviously ignorant about Iberian history

  • @meissoun
    @meissoun Před 2 lety +169

    My boyfriend is half-Japanese and he totally can relate to the "finally I fit in" thing in Hawai'i! People thought he was a local until he started speaking.

  • @acchindra7399
    @acchindra7399 Před rokem +1

    you truly are the perfect host for this channel lol

  • @evalationx2649
    @evalationx2649 Před rokem +3

    I was actually shocked in the reverse of your results. I am French, born in France yet my results came back only 40% French. It is the largest single %, but I thought it would be much higher. The second highest % comes from Germany, followed by "British isles"(a little bit of everything native to that region), then Italy and Spain being the two lowest.
    I was born in the city of Limoges on the border of central/southern France. I've lived in America since I was 16 though, 25 now.

  • @huygia-ku7ez
    @huygia-ku7ez Před 2 lety +154

    I'm guessing that your french heritage would probably be like algerian- french one, which make sense since lots of algerian immigrant had fleed to france during colonial era and there is huge percentage of your heritage come form north africa.

    • @phonzy
      @phonzy Před 2 lety

      Christopher walken’s monologue in true romance

    • @GoldenBoyDims
      @GoldenBoyDims Před 2 lety +3

      algerian french is not french heritage its north African

    • @andreilin113
      @andreilin113 Před 2 lety +21

      @@GoldenBoyDims Algerians who became french

    • @pine_needle
      @pine_needle Před 2 lety

      yeah thats likely especially if they're jewish

    • @chatonmignon8724
      @chatonmignon8724 Před 2 lety

      The north african jews where officially French since 1870 !
      Le décret Crémieux (du nom d'Adolphe Crémieux) est le décret no 136 qui attribue d'office en 1870 la citoyenneté française aux « Israélites indigènes

  • @almaznegus5067
    @almaznegus5067 Před 2 lety +199

    I loved your sense of humor, you’re lightheartedly hilarious, keep it up! Above all we all belong to the same species called human; the rest is secondary, let’s all get along🙏🏼

    • @angeliqueowens5515
      @angeliqueowens5515 Před rokem +9

      This statement deserves far more votes!

    • @Juleesuz
      @Juleesuz Před rokem

      Agreed to that! We are all human beings!

    • @jamesmiller8758
      @jamesmiller8758 Před rokem

      When the real facts about humans is given, people cannot accept the truth. It scares the hell out of people when they think they have no black ancestors. Latest genetic information proves all humans evolved from Africans.

  • @jeffreyroland2212
    @jeffreyroland2212 Před rokem +2

    Whatever your combination is, it sure works well!!! 😍

  • @mj48187
    @mj48187 Před 5 měsíci

    Awesome! A true Earthling then! Happy Holidays! 🙂🌲🧑‍🎄

  • @Entername-md1ev
    @Entername-md1ev Před 2 lety +32

    The fact that you are of all those ancestries makes it just that more fitting for you to be hosting geography now 🌎

  • @Violinissred
    @Violinissred Před 2 lety +8

    Somehow this was the most fun I’ve ever had watching one of your videos Barbs. Love to see you connecting with all the research you’ve done! It makes me want to fit every country into my DNA! You give us all respect and understanding for the unknown. And that makes this video so much more rewarding: to see you discover that within your own genetic makeup

  • @junehitchcock170
    @junehitchcock170 Před 5 měsíci +1

    You are such a comedian!! 😂. Made my day! I suppose with such a great mix you can be called mongrel?! 🤣🤣

  • @donnamcdonald3709
    @donnamcdonald3709 Před rokem +2

    How cool! Thanks for celebrating ALL your heritages (if heritages is a word). :D

  • @StephanieCheng
    @StephanieCheng Před 2 lety +36

    This is so cool! My 23andme test said I was 100% Han Chinese. I was so shocked because I thought no one, no one was 100% one thing.

    • @maryavatar
      @maryavatar Před 2 lety +3

      If you do a more detailed test, you might find some variation. 23 & Me is a bit generic when it comes to profiles. I got 100% British with 23 & Me, but Scottish, Welsh, Irish, Norwegian, Swedish & Danish from Ancestry DNA.

    • @turkishissunlanguage
      @turkishissunlanguage Před 2 lety +1

      There are many people who get %100. I'm so sure I will be one of the people who will get 100% from my genetic tests because it is so likely my ancestors spent most of their time in the mountains region that my family LEFT for the first time in generations of our ancestors.
      Don't ask me how you know it. I just do. There is nothing in my village. Just mountains and a couple of houses made out of mud. Who could migrate there? They speak their unique tone of a minority language in the country and as I've watched from the people from my minority getting their DNA test, nearly half of them had %100 in their test and the others got like %90, %10 etc. It just can't be a coincidence.

    • @afdalridwan3813
      @afdalridwan3813 Před 2 lety +1

      @@turkishissunlanguage i can confirm, i was 100% as well but 100% Melayunesian since we arrived in 200 AD and never sail and assimilate to neighbooring races we were lefted pure alone amongs mixed world, so i didn't find to needed to accept motto's of "your nation ..... Not only for you" to fit on my nation

    • @jacob_and_william
      @jacob_and_william Před 2 lety +2

      These ancestry tests only record the last 500 years of genetic information so while it's unusual to be 100% one thing, it's not like this means your ancestors lived in the same Chinese town since the dawn of humanity.

    • @StephanieCheng
      @StephanieCheng Před 2 lety +1

      @@turkishissunlanguage would you be Fuzhounese by any chance?

  • @chance9947
    @chance9947 Před 2 lety +42

    I wouldn't put a ton of stock in the results of your test. I took one, the results have changed several times over the years. My first test results differ greatly from my most recent test. Enjoy the journey.

  • @judytran3514
    @judytran3514 Před 6 měsíci

    I LOVE IT! YOU ARE THE WORLD!

  • @MidEastAmerican
    @MidEastAmerican Před 4 měsíci

    That was awesome! 💕

  • @michael-df8vt
    @michael-df8vt Před 2 lety +38

    Very important to remember that French DNA is always a bit of a problem on these tests as France actually has laws against the collection of DNA samples for demographic research so often these tests rely on people who have emigrated from France. It is unclear and not always accurate.

  • @jeansmith3064
    @jeansmith3064 Před rokem +11

    Love your humor and your honesty. It's good to embrace who we are, after all we can't change it.

  • @keelahrose
    @keelahrose Před rokem +2

    I've been wondering about your ethnicity for years! Many thanks!

  • @starbrand3726
    @starbrand3726 Před 6 měsíci +5

    OMG! I use Murray's Pomade too. 😂 Nothing else keeps my curls in check.

  • @noahcartermusic2546
    @noahcartermusic2546 Před 2 lety +137

    Don’t completely rule out French - my mother’s maiden name is a French name, so her family says “we’re French”. But the last paternal French ancestor was born 300 years ago, so long ago that French would not show on a DNA test.

    • @hirsch4155
      @hirsch4155 Před 2 lety +4

      My great-great-grandfather was born in Germany, do you think that would show up? Was wondering .

    • @noahcartermusic2546
      @noahcartermusic2546 Před 2 lety +14

      @@hirsch4155 Maybe. The amount of DNA you inherit is random, so it just depends. For example, if my dad was English and my mother Irish, it probably wouldn’t say 50% for each. However I don’t think DNA tests are necessary.. if you build a family tree you can find it out for yourself. It’s more fun, too.

    • @in4mal_baker270
      @in4mal_baker270 Před rokem

      Yep. DNA should be used to support the family tree, not in place of the family tree.

    • @MomtoaFullHouse
      @MomtoaFullHouse Před rokem

      @@hirsch4155 Both of my great-great-grandparents (following my paternal line) were born in Germany. I am 50% German. Interestingly, my husband is also 50% German and 3 out of 4 of our kids drew heavily from both of our German sides and have more percentage of German than either one of us individually. One of our daughters actually came back with 70% German! (The remaining 1 out of 4 is 48% German, which is still the majority for her)

  • @melin4ted_bookworm632
    @melin4ted_bookworm632 Před 2 lety +119

    As 1 of ur African-American subscribers, I wanna say welcome 2 the family Barbs!!! And yes, the "Ethnic Haircare Aisle" is sumthin else 😂😂😂, though many of our major retailers are getting much better at stocking them up, & in my opinion the local beauty supply shops are even better 2 wander around. Thank you 4 sharing your heritage with us 🥰🥰🥰

    • @Drobib
      @Drobib Před 2 lety

      lets see his yt side welcome yo lack of knowledge having azz to the family..smdh

    • @catherinelomas318
      @catherinelomas318 Před rokem +1

      In order to not be offensive, I think it's called the curly hair section.

    • @ms.coleman8403
      @ms.coleman8403 Před rokem

      @@catherinelomas318 not to be rude but I. Some states it's called ethnic hair, it depends where we are

    • @bellacortez
      @bellacortez Před rokem

      @@ms.coleman8403 most places are separating curly hair. Anything over 3c will be in the black section. Most of the " white section" is now for curly hair.

  • @Shainagffsgggd-kw1hy
    @Shainagffsgggd-kw1hy Před 3 měsíci

    That was such a fun video

  • @tangyuanwang3238
    @tangyuanwang3238 Před rokem +1

    i love your story and happy for you

  • @Dangic23
    @Dangic23 Před 2 lety +86

    My DNA Test resulted exactly like how what we were taught in school.
    Schools in Puerto Rico teaches kids from Kindergarten and on, that PuertoRicans are European, African. And Taiínos.
    My DNA came back as
    60% European
    25% African
    15% Taíno

  • @moulayismail1546
    @moulayismail1546 Před 2 lety +109

    It may sound weird but the melody in your french is Actually good .
    I think the french side in you can be explained by the fact that jews and many Harkis ( Algerians ) were expelled from Algeria after collaborating with the french .

    • @L4wr3nc3810
      @L4wr3nc3810 Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah thought of that, too

    • @lyes6033
      @lyes6033 Před 2 lety +1

      hhhhhh no i dont think he is a Harki 😅 , maybe his italian blood explains it because italians and berbers mixed a lot during the roman empire

    • @babymilksnatcher
      @babymilksnatcher Před 2 lety +3

      This is pretty recent history, though. Algeria was only freed 60 years ago and the exodus of the Sephardim population happened mostly in the 70's.

    • @user-pt2ql2gd3e
      @user-pt2ql2gd3e Před 2 lety

      @@lyes6033 nah harki all the jews that became french are harki / traitors.

    • @humanbeans5474
      @humanbeans5474 Před 2 lety

      Was it really after 'collaboration' with the french ? Because Algeria lost at least 1.5 million people during that time. I'm just reading comments about FRANCE and the french And with the current state of Mali It is important to be honest about what happened.

  • @Gracie746
    @Gracie746 Před rokem +1

    You Gotta Luv this Guy!!!

  • @shawsr7
    @shawsr7 Před rokem

    You go dude!

  • @oh2mp
    @oh2mp Před 2 lety +160

    You have extremely cool mixture 🙂
    I live in Finland and made a DNA test in 2017 and even made a video about that. I'm roughly about 90% Finnish and the rest East European. The only surprise was that I am so pure Finn. But then something hilarious happened. My wife has curvy dark hair like you and the stereotype says that Finns are blue eyed blondes. She was wondering that she must have some foreign ancestry. And then her result was 100% Finnish 😃😃

    • @perttilaamanen44
      @perttilaamanen44 Před rokem +7

      I am half Finnish and my dad blonde and he gas blue eyes but I have dark culrly hair. I did not take DNA tests right now but I wonder a lot.

    • @hollyharvey1986
      @hollyharvey1986 Před rokem +7

      For some reason my paternal Aunt, who looks like an Eskimo (or Native American), got her results back and we are 2% Finnish. I’ve always wondered if we truly could have heritage from the Sami…

    • @lucianaromulus1408
      @lucianaromulus1408 Před rokem +17

      People forget Caucasian people can be almost transparent skin, super straight blonde hair with ice blue eyes all the way to dark brown eyes, black curly hair and tan skin. It's the most diverse racial group...we aren't all Nord stereotypes lol

    • @cornpop7176
      @cornpop7176 Před rokem +1

      @@lucianaromulus1408 exactly

    • @The053199
      @The053199 Před rokem +2

      @@lucianaromulus1408 My redgaurd friend was saying the same thing

  • @Theturtleowl
    @Theturtleowl Před 2 lety +208

    I really want to do one of these tests, see if I can shock myself and my parents with some information and learn about myself a little bit more.

    • @LightoZtriker
      @LightoZtriker Před 2 lety +4

      Same
      I really wanna know how Irish I am.
      I know I am most Irish maybe like Above 50% since I am from there.

    • @israelilocal
      @israelilocal Před 2 lety +7

      Please don't do Myheritage watch the video put out by the channel usefulcharts comparing 5 DNA sites to see why

    • @zikopro7369
      @zikopro7369 Před 2 lety +4

      Bruh i am gonna be like 90% berber/arab

    • @mochalo4912
      @mochalo4912 Před 2 lety

      they probably steal your dna data or something , idk but its better to keep your dna for yourself

    • @archer_wsk1408
      @archer_wsk1408 Před 2 lety

      @@zikopro7369
      people from Algeria/morocco have on average 80-97%berber and only 0-2% arab most are more Jewish than arabic

  • @duncan3417
    @duncan3417 Před rokem +4

    Your great, I really liked this ! I was told I had native American heritage. I did the test and was 13-15 % West African . It said Nigeria, Togo, Cameroon, Senegal. . I got my mom's dna right before she died and she had the same just higher amounts, She had been abandoned at birth and found in a church, This was 1921. The funny thing is some people asked if I had Asian heritage. When my glasses are off they see the shape of my eyes and are curious. No body is pure anything. Best Wishes

    • @MichaelDaApe
      @MichaelDaApe Před 6 měsíci

      Yes and no, You can still be pure African, pure European etc despite all the ethnicity mixes

  • @Kate-qq3ez
    @Kate-qq3ez Před rokem +2

    The map showing Italian ancestry is large and includes a part of France (Savoie border region in the Alps between France and Italy) and also the area around the city of Nice (border on the Mediterranean seaside)
    We always had a lot of exchanges from these point between France and Italy (exchanges of all kinds 😉)

  • @charlottedelamo5928
    @charlottedelamo5928 Před 2 lety +27

    i’ve never seen such a unique ethnic makeup tbh

    • @dontbothermeimjust12
      @dontbothermeimjust12 Před 2 lety +2

      I have 11 different, but they only range south america and europe. this guy has a few others.

  • @user-gr9fq9gt9w
    @user-gr9fq9gt9w Před 2 lety +143

    *About being a French* - a lot of Maghrebi Jews from Morocco and especially in Algeria were assimilated in also French culture ever since Algeria became French colony, since the 1830's.
    So you can probably claim some French cultural heritage, even if not origin.
    But generally, Jews did not assimilate with other ethnicities as much as others. So about the African side, it is a possibility - but it's rather low.

    • @jacob_and_william
      @jacob_and_william Před 2 lety +9

      This! I know plenty of Maghrebi Jews who were born in Colonial Algeria that spoke French as a first language and the whole gamut. I wouldn't discount this at all. And as you said, the likelihood of Black ancestry from them is very low, maybe heritage from the Berber side but nothing within the past 500 years which is what these admixture tests pick up on.

    • @guyr.6053
      @guyr.6053 Před 2 lety +4

      And to add on that - Sephardic Jewry were expelled from Spain in 1492 to the entire Mediterannean region (including the Maghreb) but also north to certain cities in Germany, England and the Netherlands of today.

    • @simonetta6191
      @simonetta6191 Před 2 lety +1

      No, it's from his Italian side.

    • @user-pt2ql2gd3e
      @user-pt2ql2gd3e Před 2 lety

      As an Algerian I can see that it's known that we had alot of jews that choosed to claim france during the colonization

    • @user-gr9fq9gt9w
      @user-gr9fq9gt9w Před 2 lety +1

      @@user-pt2ql2gd3e
      What do you mean by """chose to claim France"""?

  • @Metch238
    @Metch238 Před rokem +1

    You are so funny! I enjoyed it.

  • @tedtimmis8135
    @tedtimmis8135 Před 5 měsíci +1

    First time viewer. Very funny on multiple levels.

  • @nmat6183
    @nmat6183 Před 2 lety +57

    North African heritage could easily be your French bit. Lots of people exchange between Algeria/Tunisia/Morocco and France over the last 2 centuries.

    • @ryennfilms6429
      @ryennfilms6429 Před 2 lety +8

      is this a joke? because that is absolutely not true 😂 Most north africans are a mix of sub-saharan african, north african, arabic. French as a language is common but not that genetically. Maybe one every 30 or something like that.

    • @atumra4125
      @atumra4125 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ryennfilms6429 It is very possible that North Africans crossed the Mediterranean and lived in France. That could have happened as recently as the French colonization of Algeria to as far back as the Carthiginian Empire

    • @ryennfilms6429
      @ryennfilms6429 Před 2 lety +2

      @@atumra4125 🙄 I already know its possible, because blacks have been in Europe for tens of thousands of years, the intermix of greek and roman empires allowed for such as they were multi-ethnic, spain had been occupied by north africans (berbers) for almost as long. And i'm talking about ancient berbers, not modern ones which more arab than they are african.
      France is incredibly new, so why are you suggesting that it had been colonized as long? it wasn't colonized, it was settled. Before France, there was carthage, yes. But carthage, like Rome, Athens, etc, was multiethnic. Racism was pointed towards Europeans back then, not Africans. Portraits of Hannibal Barca depict him black, written accounts describe as such, so why are you saying Algeria is French? they speak French, but they ae not French genetically.
      genetically, they are mainly African and Arabic. the Arab invasion of north Africa is perfectly described by people like ibn Battuta and West-African explorers.
      Carthage was a trading city, African and Arab traders throughout the empire and outside of it came to it just for trade.
      the ancestors of the Carthaginians came from Phoenician, a part of Israel, and were not really Arabic but Semitic.

    • @nmat6183
      @nmat6183 Před 2 lety +1

      @Ulrich Leland It has nothing to do with genes. If someone says "your grandpa was Irish/French" or whatever is was, they're not looking at their DNA. That Frenchman, French citizen, French speaking, culturally French, could easily be of immigrant descent. And there's been lots of N African immigration to France ever since colonial times.

    • @ryennfilms6429
      @ryennfilms6429 Před 2 lety

      @Ulrich Leland And you do? I starting talking about genes then pushed into skin colour which was the main point of the argument. If your going to act stupid, then don't butt in.

  • @KaniniTheJeli
    @KaniniTheJeli Před rokem +8

    He’s so entertaining. Like great content. Never boring

  • @michellepolk4646
    @michellepolk4646 Před rokem +1

    LMBO! When you brought out the pomade😂😂😂. My great-grandfather tamed his wavy hair with that.

  • @tonyapendleton7467
    @tonyapendleton7467 Před rokem +1

    I realize this is a year ago but this was hilarious. It's also hilarious that you use Murrays. It was my father's #1 hair product so thank you for that memory. No idea anyone under 75 used it. LOL

  • @alesiawms
    @alesiawms Před rokem +375

    You are hilarious and so intelligent. Yes, dude, your skin tone and hair literally screams African heritage. I am African American and got 2 DNA tests done. Both indicated that I have Scandinavian, Ireland/Scotland, Great Britain and small percentage of Asian bloodline, in addition to the majority African heritage. History certainly reveals itself through these DNA tests.

    • @tastx3142
      @tastx3142 Před rokem +17

      Skin tone and hair color/texture is determined differently than the percentage of ethnicity.

    • @mizzmolly7649
      @mizzmolly7649 Před rokem +7

      Seriously. Not sure why he's so surprised.

    • @janicema3959
      @janicema3959 Před rokem +3

      It does! My totally white father had some Japanese heritage. My second brother said that must be why we're so short. lol Actually most Japanese aren't as short as we are.

    • @sandrataylor7892
      @sandrataylor7892 Před rokem

      @@mizzmolly7649 why you think beside everyone wants to be white.

    • @Tobias_2024
      @Tobias_2024 Před rokem +4

      I thought the same about skin tone and hair! We have the same skin tone and I am a PROUD African American

  • @jslferrell
    @jslferrell Před 2 lety +58

    In regards to the Sefardi ancestry: that also includes certain groups of people from Portugal and Spain. During and after the Inquisition years, the Iberians, the Portuguese especially, deported people of Sephardic ancestry to France. A line of my family was deported from Portugal to Normandy.

  • @marcellemccalla6325
    @marcellemccalla6325 Před 6 měsíci +2

    That was awesome. I had a similar reaction getting my results as they were nothing like the stories I'd been told. I did Geni (which is connected to My Heritage ) and 23andme. Honestly because the first one came as such a shock so for accuracy sake it made sense to do it through a different company. I might do a third but only to try to find actual relatives since my supposed ethnic background was a lie...

  • @spaceforgrace3312
    @spaceforgrace3312 Před 10 měsíci

    I loved this video!

  • @florence2095
    @florence2095 Před rokem +92

    Congratulations 🎉 on being an Earthling 😂 I’ e never seen such a large mixture. A real Heinz variety 😂😂🐨🦘

  • @pratosaurusrex1128
    @pratosaurusrex1128 Před 2 lety +54

    Dude you’re a mix of pretty much everything. That’s awesome!
    I’m English but I know I have Scottish, Indian and parts of Southern Europe in my family.

    • @francoisdaureville323
      @francoisdaureville323 Před 2 lety +6

      English and scottish is normal england and scotland are literraly on the same island

    • @Br-xb1np
      @Br-xb1np Před 2 lety

      everything that makes up a gypsy

    • @pratosaurusrex1128
      @pratosaurusrex1128 Před 2 lety +9

      @@francoisdaureville323 true but to say they are the same is just wrong

    • @francoisdaureville323
      @francoisdaureville323 Před 2 lety +10

      @@pratosaurusrex1128 culturally obviusly no, but genetically more alike than what they would like to admit celto-germanic basically like most of britain

    • @vikramaditya6812
      @vikramaditya6812 Před 2 lety +1

      @@pratosaurusrex1128 Indian....British Raj?

  • @crisl9079
    @crisl9079 Před rokem +5

    That’s cool. Looking at you, I guessed: Asian, European & African (because of your hair) before you revealed the results. Sorry to hear you didn’t get the French you were looking for but welcome to the Viking club! 😁 I also found out I was one too and NEVER saw it coming! Though I knew I was 100% European, I thought we were English, German and Polish. When my last updated results came in I was about 30% Scandinavian-I was stunned!…All I can say is Vikings must have visited our ancestors’ English villages?🤷‍♀️

    • @gosera-1108
      @gosera-1108 Před rokem

      Look up the Swedish emigration to the United States by 1890 the US Census was reporting almost 800'000 swedish americans living there

    • @juliaforsyth8332
      @juliaforsyth8332 Před 6 měsíci

      Viking is not a race. You go a-Vikingr, to raid and trade, so it's a verb.

    • @crisl9079
      @crisl9079 Před 6 měsíci

      @Julia I Never said Vikings were a race. Vikings are a people group(s) from Scandinavian countries.