15 American Things Europeans Find Weird | Get Germanized

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  • čas přidán 29. 06. 2024
  • Here are 15 things Europeans find weird about America! I've recently been to the USA and will share my experience with you! SUBSCRIBE: bit.ly/SubToGetGermanized
    15 things in Europe that Americans find super weird: bit.ly/15EURO
    MY GAMING CHANNEL: bit.ly/GetGermanizedGaming
    The article this video is based on: www.businessinsider.de/things-...
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    Background music by Josh Woodward: www.joshwoodward.com/?yt#/
    0:00 Einleitung
    0:39 1. "HOW ARE YOU?" AS A GREETING
    1:18 2. ICE CUBES
    1:42 FREE REFILLS
    2:25 PORTION SIZES
    2:45 FOOD COMBINATIONS
    3:17 THE QUESTION GAME
    3:45 TIPPING
    4:26 SUPERMARKT PRICES
    4:51 AIR CONDITIONING
    5:33 MEASUREMENT SYSTEMS
    6:43 THE RANGE OF OPTIONS

Komentáře • 26K

  • @GetGermanized
    @GetGermanized  Před 6 lety +150

    I visited the South of the USA (Georgia)! Find my travel videos about it here: bit.ly/2v6awfp

    • @Enderborn272
      @Enderborn272 Před 5 lety +2

      I live in Georgia, your experience with Air conditioning, yeah, people just like it that cold, i hate it and wear a jacket all summer because of it, but that wasn't because of you, those people were probably feeling fine

    • @kenbray5682
      @kenbray5682 Před 5 lety

      Whales do that ! They have extra layers of fat and that's how they stay warm in fridge waters !!!

    • @kenbray5682
      @kenbray5682 Před 5 lety +4

      I respect your opinion, but I don't agree with you, the people in the States just like feeling comfortable ! My AC stays on 68 degrees in the summer it's a comfortable temperature and that's the only reason Americans like feeling comfortable, if you went to India you'd die of a heat stroke lol,,, I was a US Marine for sixteen years and in the Middle East the temperature is unbearable ! Once I was 10 miles off shore at night waiting to assist other soldiers on land and it was 110 degrees at night on a ship in the middle of the ocean.... So yes we like our AC.....

    • @kenbray5682
      @kenbray5682 Před 5 lety

      Zavhytar do you believe in global warming ? I couldn't care less what people think or even scientists ! It's all about money, the weather has been changing since the beginning of time ! Why do you think there are so many animals or creatures that are extinct !!! A couple thousand years it's cold like the ice age, and then I go so hot that nothing was able to survive, think about it my friend you have a good night....

    • @kenbray5682
      @kenbray5682 Před 5 lety +2

      And global warming is all about money !!!

  • @benfranklin7121
    @benfranklin7121 Před 7 lety +2326

    I like this guy. He doesn't judge American's, he just talks about it.

    • @silverrain530
      @silverrain530 Před 7 lety +51

      Ben Franklin I agree

    • @coyotelong4349
      @coyotelong4349 Před 7 lety +25

      +Ben Franklin
      I have to agree

    • @rebekahmcdermott5504
      @rebekahmcdermott5504 Před 7 lety +119

      Ben Franklin I agree! I can't stand when people bash us because things are different from their country, as if everything they do is the right way.

    • @benfranklin7121
      @benfranklin7121 Před 7 lety +55

      Rebekah McDermott Exactly! I was almost expecting that to happen in this video but it didn't at all!

    • @hannesw8436
      @hannesw8436 Před 7 lety +18

      People don't only bash you because they think "it's just different" but I see your point. I mean no one likes to get bashed for the country they live in but mostly I think it's a mean and a little less efficient way of constructive criticism. Would be easier for people to say it in a nicer manner without bashing the people as hard and more people would listen. Well I guess people like to argue. Just remember that most people don't mean too much of what they say.

  • @Lola-re6ny
    @Lola-re6ny Před 6 lety +4765

    In America it pretty much goes:
    How are you?
    Good. How are you?
    Good.

  • @owenb19
    @owenb19 Před 5 lety +251

    in America it usually goes down like "how are you?" "good, how are you?" "I'm good" "that's good" even if you're not good

    • @lwasnothere
      @lwasnothere Před 4 lety +2

      yup

    • @tiefseehase9503
      @tiefseehase9503 Před 4 lety +20

      In Germany (at least) it goes like: "How are you?", "Oh, dont get me started. My back hurts for 4 weeks straith, my wife broke 2 of her nails trying to cut a flower, the neighbours cat just died 2 days ago, our useless son failed to pass his last exam....."

    • @kelly3014
      @kelly3014 Před 4 lety +5

      Sometimes we just shorten it to, “Sup.”

    • @bluecollarperspective9079
      @bluecollarperspective9079 Před 4 lety +9

      Yes in America it's just a greeting. It's just polite to say good how are you. If we say how are you, and you go into your life story. It's considered annoying and dramatic

    • @mattm7798
      @mattm7798 Před 4 lety +8

      Pretty much. It takes ALOT for us to say we're anything but "good" or fine". I think it's because Americans are more private people as a whole.

  • @classclown55210
    @classclown55210 Před 4 lety +166

    You forgot this
    USA: Month/Day/Year
    Europe: Day/Month/Year

    • @FrederikoCMR
      @FrederikoCMR Před 4 lety +2

      The German way is day.month.year

    • @arenagrenade9672
      @arenagrenade9672 Před 4 lety +1

      And then Asia: Year/Month/Day

    • @dddhhh9884
      @dddhhh9884 Před 4 lety +6

      Month is more important for American people.

    • @BobuxGuy
      @BobuxGuy Před 4 lety +7

      @@dddhhh9884 Day is more used than the month unless you're really dumb and don't know in what month you're in.

    • @DailyDoseofSpace.
      @DailyDoseofSpace. Před 4 lety

      Also in Australia it's day/month/year

  • @kipperjd
    @kipperjd Před 6 lety +715

    walmart at night is fucking lit

    • @MrDrumliner
      @MrDrumliner Před 6 lety +52

      Lesleigh Garcia if by lit u mean lit up by gunfire then ur absolutely correct

    • @Mexicanninja68
      @Mexicanninja68 Před 6 lety +6

      😂😂^

    • @Flomkarsten
      @Flomkarsten Před 6 lety +22

      yeah thats the fun part, if someone shoots at you, you shoot back

    • @MK-ex4pb
      @MK-ex4pb Před 6 lety +21

      I should hope so. Can't really shop in the dark

    • @gracefrances6604
      @gracefrances6604 Před 6 lety +7

      Karsten Flom especially in Texas😂

  • @alexandrk.5052
    @alexandrk.5052 Před 7 lety +1966

    I'm an American and usually if you ask someone "hey, how are you?" it's expected you respond with "I'm good thank you." Or "I'm good, how about you?" Even if you're not feeling well.

    • @TK-Titanium
      @TK-Titanium Před 7 lety +32

      I'm also American and I'll admit that I have also always had difficulty responding to "how are you,' especially since i work retail and probably initiated the conversation with a simple "good morning," since I am required to say hello to every customer I meet. If they then respond with "how are you," I'm stuck with, "Fine thanks," but then feel the need to respond, "How are you?" and it's awkward.

    • @alexandrk.5052
      @alexandrk.5052 Před 7 lety

      T.K. Titanium I'm a pizza delivery boy and I almost always get people greeting me at their doors with "how are you today?" or "How's your day going?"

    • @pringelsthegamefreak
      @pringelsthegamefreak Před 7 lety +2

      I'm American too

    • @Jennifer-vv5qv
      @Jennifer-vv5qv Před 7 lety +17

      I'm American as well, and I have always hated the how are you greeting. It always seemed so disingenuous. Most people don't really want to know, they aren't asking because they care, and if that is the case, they should just say hello and leave it at that. I always respond with "I'm doing well, thank you, and you?" and make a point to meet the person's eyes so that they understand that I am genuinely asking how they are. I typically get an honest response also.
      As for Philp Ahn Deese's question - I actually got heat from people when I said I was American while I was visiting Brazil. They didn't seem to like the fact that I was calling myself American and taking over the name of both the continents of North and South America. They consider themselves to be American because they are from South America, but this was very confusing to me and I asked (several people actually) why I couldn't call my self American or say I was from America. They said, I should say I'm from "The States" because we were all from America (meaning the names of the continents). I wonder if other countries don't realize that we aren't simply called the United States. That we are actually the United States of America. Mexico is actually called the United States of Mexico (in Spanish, of course), but they are called Mexican. Australia is actually the United States of Australia, but you don't hear them saying their from the USA. They are from Australia (which is also a name of a country and a continent). I don't understand why we can't call ourselves by the name of the country we are from without people from other countries getting annoyed at us.

    • @itsmetheherpes1750
      @itsmetheherpes1750 Před 7 lety +4

      what i find weird at americans is that men don't sleep in the same bed.
      there was an american in my group and we had to share a hotel bed and he said he feels awkward, and when i took my underpants off he said he wants to sleep on the floor.
      is this how americans are? or it was just an isolated case?

  • @secretsociety1636
    @secretsociety1636 Před 5 lety +124

    coke literally pays 8 cents to make 2 liters of soda, so paying two dollars for a cup with free refills is pretty generous

    • @meesehead3202
      @meesehead3202 Před 5 lety +11

      They may only pay 8 cents to make 2 liters, but they also have to pay for workers to manage factories, people to harvest materials, packaging, and shipping everything. Also the $2 you are paying for the soda doesn't go to the soda company, it goes to the retailer, the soda company only makes what they sell it to the retailer for, which is much less than what they're selling it for. In the end, they aren't making the $1.92 you think they are, but probably only around 10 cents

    • @beatnickblanket
      @beatnickblanket Před 5 lety +14

      @@meesehead3202 Definitely not. As a former restaurant manager I can tell you that soda is a HUGE earner. A $2.50 cup of soda costs the restaurant about 2 cents out of pocket.

    • @ronclark9724
      @ronclark9724 Před 5 lety +1

      @@beatnickblanket But have you ever paid the monthly lease on a commercial property? The utility bills? The insurance? The payroll? The sales taxes? After all of that is paid, restaurants and retail outlets barely earn ten percent, if that... This nonsense restaurants earn over 90 percent is just that, utter nonsense... If that was the case everyone of us would have invested and would be operating a restaurant...

    • @beatnickblanket
      @beatnickblanket Před 5 lety +5

      @@ronclark9724 Literally the only comment I said is that they earn a 90% markup on soda. That has nothing to do with what the final takeaway a restaurant has in total financials.

    • @postersandstuff
      @postersandstuff Před 5 lety

      Dr Pepper costs 25 krones for a small bottle in Norway as almost no one buys it :/

  • @evillemike2009
    @evillemike2009 Před 5 lety +84

    I've seen several people doing this kind of comparison video, and the thing that really strikes me is how well these folks speak English. Outstanding.

    • @LouisSantos-vu4kr
      @LouisSantos-vu4kr Před 4 lety +2

      In Europe we are taught English in school,as a requirement,that's why we speak more than one language I myself speak 3 am learning a fourth,to keep the brain active,lol

    • @addisonmoss4526
      @addisonmoss4526 Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah. Around most of Europe- they speak multiple languages. It’s actually pretty interesting.

  • @fcadcock
    @fcadcock Před 6 lety +1066

    The American answer to "hi, how are you?" Is "good, you?" It doesn't matter if you broke your leg and are bleeding out, that's still the answer.

    • @michele-kt
      @michele-kt Před 6 lety +53

      Forrest C. Adcock. Yep. It's not a real question. Just sort of a nicety...an acknowledgement of the other person.

    • @schokomuffin09
      @schokomuffin09 Před 6 lety +12

      That’s so sad :(

    • @zenith8417
      @zenith8417 Před 6 lety +2

      Well...Didn't expect to have that mental picture today.

    • @TheMariemarie16
      @TheMariemarie16 Před 6 lety

      Franny B why is that sad?

    • @schokomuffin09
      @schokomuffin09 Před 6 lety +23

      TheMariemarie16 well, I think it’s a bit hypocritical. Pretending to be interested in the person you’re talking to when it reality you’re not.
      When I ask someone how he/she is, I truly wanna know how they feel :)

  • @wolffang7359
    @wolffang7359 Před 7 lety +2254

    I am american, but my British friend says it is odd here because you can't turn or look anywhere without seeing a flag, while in most countries, flags are only really noticible on national holidays. Is this true?

    • @fredo_credo5689
      @fredo_credo5689 Před 7 lety +309

      yeah, or sports events like football(soccer) because nationalism, especially in germany is connected with the Nazi stuff

    • @heimskr2881
      @heimskr2881 Před 7 lety +303

      We Americans do have our nationalism. There's a code on how to hang The Flag and what do do if it falls down or another situation happens.
      Just some quotes about flag code. below.
      "It should never touch anything beneath it, such as the ground, the floor, water, or merchandise. It should never be carried flat or horizontally, but always aloft and free."
      "When displayed either horizontally or vertically against a wall, the union should be uppermost and to the flag's own right, that is, to the observer's left. When displayed in a window it should be displayed in the same way, that is with the union or blue field to the left of the observer in the street."
      " it is the universal custom to display the flag only from sunrise to sunset on buildings and on stationary flag staffs in the open. However, when a patriotic effect is desired, the flag may be displayed 24 hours a day if properly illuminated during the hours of darkness."

    • @rampant5139
      @rampant5139 Před 7 lety +54

      WolfFang 735 depends on the country, in Poland and many balkans countries they have just as many flags as in the US

    • @SentientMeatloaf1
      @SentientMeatloaf1 Před 7 lety +131

      WolfFang 735 many European countries have a stigma against national pride. often times it leads to wars and the like. I would assume that the only countries willing to do this would be those that are consistently on the correct, or at least victorious, side of history. anything else could lead to bad memories. I hear Germans don't want anything to do with national pride nowadays thanks to wwII, and have taken up regional pride instead.

    • @cooleybooley4910
      @cooleybooley4910 Před 7 lety +34

      Radicrash Here are some rules that I find to be interesting:
      "The flag of the United States of America, when it is displayed with another flag against a wall from crossed staffs, should be on the right, the flag's own right, and its staff should be in front of the staff of the other flag."
      "The flag, when it is in such condition that it is no longer a fitting emblem for display, should be destroyed in a dignified way, preferably by burning."
      "The flag should never be used as a covering for a ceiling."

  • @mercye.9892
    @mercye.9892 Před 5 lety +44

    26 DAYS OF VACATION? TWENTY-SIX DAYS?!?!? My mom’s an RN Nurse, and she’s only allowed to take 3 sick days off per YEAR.

    • @gawkthimm6030
      @gawkthimm6030 Před 5 lety +2

      most nordic contries has paid vacation laws

    • @jeffburnside8230
      @jeffburnside8230 Před 4 lety

      Mercy Ewoodzie I’d love to have 26 days. I get 5 vacation days and 3 sick days

    • @ivanatetkic5222
      @ivanatetkic5222 Před 4 lety +8

      I have 29 payd vacation days. And Every time I am sick I go on sick days and payd too, but little less. I don't understand how are you living the dream 🤔🤔 I live in Croatia, Europe

    • @FrederikoCMR
      @FrederikoCMR Před 4 lety +1

      So in Brazil there are 30 days of paid vacation! just as in Germany, if you are sick, you can just not go to work and bring the doctors note on the other day. I made a surgery and stayed 15 days off and some months after that I got more 30 days of vacations

    • @nimer_06
      @nimer_06 Před 3 lety

      In Italy we usually have 3 months of vacations from school and 1/2 months from work

  • @bobrosswighair4473
    @bobrosswighair4473 Před 4 lety +56

    “They have some weird combinations”
    2019: KFC: COME GET YOUR CHICKEN DONUT SANDWICH!

    • @kelly3014
      @kelly3014 Před 4 lety +1

      XxNeedy xX Nope.

    • @proberts34
      @proberts34 Před 3 lety +1

      Or some of the wierdness that comes out of Taco Bell. It's like Frankenstein food.

  • @KC-up7hf
    @KC-up7hf Před 7 lety +678

    Try American movie theaters, then you will learn frigid AC.

    • @victoriarichardson1471
      @victoriarichardson1471 Před 7 lety +62

      Grocery stores during the summer. Talk about freezing.

    • @NakulGanapathy
      @NakulGanapathy Před 7 lety +45

      K California I don't know why people complain about it. It fells good when it's hot outside

    • @ShadoeLandman
      @ShadoeLandman Před 7 lety +8

      @ Nakul No, it just makes it feel too cold inside and even hotter outside. Maybe they don't make it as cool where you live, but I often wear a jacket in stores because it will be in the 60's. I like my AC at about 75 degrees. Maybe 80 if I'm trying to save on the electric bill.

    • @hailsimos7414
      @hailsimos7414 Před 7 lety +7

      Coming from a fellow cali resident everyone pretty much enjoys a cold theater especially when its hot just take a sweater.

    • @orange.circles402
      @orange.circles402 Před 7 lety +5

      K California
      it's cold in movie theaters bc the temp keeps people awake

  • @notyourtypicalblondiey1442
    @notyourtypicalblondiey1442 Před 7 lety +2331

    If you think bacon and pancakes are weird, wait till you try chicken and waffles

  • @Techhunter_Talon
    @Techhunter_Talon Před 5 lety +65

    1:25 Being honest here, the amount of ice restaurants put into drinks is absurd.

    • @jeffburnside8230
      @jeffburnside8230 Před 4 lety

      Techhunter Talon I agree

    • @ellac8958
      @ellac8958 Před 4 lety +4

      *Laughs in loves eating ice*

    • @trainsplanesandotherthings5187
      @trainsplanesandotherthings5187 Před 3 lety +5

      Its done on purpose to save the restaurant money. The more ice in the cup the less soda you get. Displacement.

    • @chexnfx7161
      @chexnfx7161 Před 3 lety +1

      @@trainsplanesandotherthings5187 you get unlimited refills, and people like drinks cold. And because of the tipping environment, you get refills before your drink is even gone. Nothing absurd about it.

    • @trainsplanesandotherthings5187
      @trainsplanesandotherthings5187 Před 3 lety

      @@chexnfx7161 True, I was thinking of the drinks given in drive thru, can't get refills that way. But yes in sit down restaurants with unlimited refills is not an issue.

  • @cherylschaeffer6268
    @cherylschaeffer6268 Před 5 lety +8

    I lived in Germany when I was a kid and I learned to drink my sodas room temperature. Point number two: My dad told me before we went over there to remember that I was a guest in their country and to behave accordingly. Every country has it's own rules and customs. Respect them and you'll have a much more enjoyable visit.

  • @orphic1430
    @orphic1430 Před 6 lety +489

    Bruh we don't understand our sizes either 😂😂

    • @onixxfilth
      @onixxfilth Před 6 lety +6

      Em Plays Especially women's pants! Why do women's and men's pants have to be sized differently?!

    • @redjeik
      @redjeik Před 6 lety +26

      eclecticaspie because they have different hips

    • @kingz5348
      @kingz5348 Před 6 lety +1

      Em Plays we certainly do not

    • @RemitheRat274
      @RemitheRat274 Před 6 lety +2

      Em Plays or metric system 😂

    • @Londronable
      @Londronable Před 6 lety +2

      Jacob J
      Nah, it's a marketing thing, nothing more.

  • @jackkellyattorneyatlaw8921
    @jackkellyattorneyatlaw8921 Před 7 lety +327

    Someone: Hey, how's it going.
    American: Good, you?
    and that's how it goes 99% of the time

    • @jackkellyattorneyatlaw8921
      @jackkellyattorneyatlaw8921 Před 7 lety

      on average we get 14 days paid vacation. and maybe a handful of paid sick days.

    • @sexycat8883
      @sexycat8883 Před 7 lety

      Darth Snow my dad gets almost 30

    • @Sorensenator86
      @Sorensenator86 Před 7 lety +7

      That is also here in Canada, except some people might add eh at the end of how's it going.

    • @fastfox23
      @fastfox23 Před 7 lety

      I earn 24 days per year and can accumulate 34.5 days before I start losing it. I tend to keep it around 25-30 days balance.

    • @TakeNoShift
      @TakeNoShift Před 7 lety

      hey there bud hows it been eh
      not bad bud pretty good
      Right, there bud been doing good too

  • @floormee
    @floormee Před 2 lety +7

    I had a supervisee who requested to take off every other Friday instead of taking a week's vacation. It was so inconvenient to the team because we didn't always have a way to cover his work--but I always approved his time, because it was his. This was very early in my career, but I remember thinking, 'They don't take their career very seriously, being away this often.' I feel a lot differently now that I'm older and more experienced.

  • @owenprater3141
    @owenprater3141 Před 5 lety +318

    Dipping French fries in milkshake

    • @khouseright517
      @khouseright517 Před 5 lety +33

      Owen Prater dipping French fries in ice cream is the mother of all good snacks.

    • @tinabarbour2568
      @tinabarbour2568 Před 5 lety +9

      Love dipping my fries in my milkshake. Also like dipping them in Mayonnaise.

    • @MyYTwatcher
      @MyYTwatcher Před 5 lety +1

      @@tinabarbour2568 Mayonnaise I understand. But that it completely different taste. I cant understand fried with milkshake.

    • @djengefrett
      @djengefrett Před 5 lety +10

      It’s soo good and I’m not even natural born American

    • @nareshkite9361
      @nareshkite9361 Před 5 lety +12

      I'm 57 & have lived in the US all my life & I have never seen a person dip a french fry in a milkshake. Maybe it's a regional thing?

  • @briansmobile1
    @briansmobile1 Před 7 lety +830

    Why US Citizens are fat. (I'm American and I've been to Europe)
    - 24hr. stores
    - Portion sizes
    - free refills
    - Food combinations
    - Limited vacation days (lots of sitting)
    - High sugar diet

    • @Oliver-ww4eh
      @Oliver-ww4eh Před 7 lety +6

      briansmobile1 I'm American and I agree. I think each country has it's pros and cons.

    • @Multiman2943
      @Multiman2943 Před 7 lety +1

      Change it to why your average american is fat, not all.

    • @torbit2713
      @torbit2713 Před 7 lety +6

      briansmobile1 oh come on we arn't fat (stop faking you are not American) most if us are not fat hell most of us are more fit than there are fat.

    • @JACpotatos
      @JACpotatos Před 7 lety +32

      briansmobile1 US has more obese AND more physically fit than most eu countries from what I've seen. just less of a middle ground

    • @JACpotatos
      @JACpotatos Před 7 lety +12

      just to add. if you've simply travelled to a place for a short time, you shouldn't make assumptions

  • @XItaSasux4ever12
    @XItaSasux4ever12 Před 7 lety +711

    Tipping is a big thing in America because waiters in most cases, get paid less than minimum wage($7 an hour) My brother got paid only $3 an hour at one place and he even helped complete contrustion for them to open.

    • @rragaming3862
      @rragaming3862 Před 7 lety +22

      XItaSasux4ever12 WHAT! Just $7 an hour! The minimum wage in Europe is €18 an hour, which is equal to $19!

    • @XItaSasux4ever12
      @XItaSasux4ever12 Před 7 lety +35

      I wish the wage was that high. But sadly, we have to work with what we have for the time being. ):

    • @Novusod
      @Novusod Před 7 lety +21

      Low wages for the bottom rung of society is the American Way. The trade off is low wages provide encouragement for people to work harder and get promotions. If you want better pay you have to earn it in America. No free rides.

    • @MrColaKO
      @MrColaKO Před 7 lety +31

      See it the other way round. If tipping didn't exist, then managers would need to pay decent salaries to their waiters. Free market competition would stop menus from raising that much. We tip in salons or restaurant but not in places where workers offer an excellent service like supermarket cashiers so I don't see that they would do a bad job just because they would have no tips.

    • @kylieyoder1
      @kylieyoder1 Před 7 lety +5

      XItaSasux4ever12 What state do you live in? Here in Florida the minimum wage is $8.50 but servers usually get paid about $5

  • @grapes385
    @grapes385 Před 5 lety +94

    Honestly I am American and I still think it’s weird if I say “hi how are you?” And they just reply with hello and don’t answer the question

    • @emilypeyt0n
      @emilypeyt0n Před 5 lety +9

      I just say good and go on with my life lol

    • @dfreeman13
      @dfreeman13 Před 4 lety +2

      I thought I was crazy.

    • @neoir8514
      @neoir8514 Před 4 lety

      soflo23 lmao gottem

    • @SoCalFreelance
      @SoCalFreelance Před 4 lety

      It's actually a joke here to follow-up by burdening the person asking with all the details about how you actually are 😂

    • @emmi5815
      @emmi5815 Před 3 lety +1

      I won’t stop asking how you are until you answer.

  • @FriskyPanda167
    @FriskyPanda167 Před 5 lety +21

    Not all states have taxes added to food.

  • @lifeyang2
    @lifeyang2 Před 6 lety +324

    I lived in the USA all my life and never even traveled abroad, so I never knew these things were strange to outsiders. Thx for sharing.

    • @MrAbsalomdavid
      @MrAbsalomdavid Před 6 lety +4

      always travel when you can and are able! it will be one of the things you will always regret not doing! safe travels to you!

    • @kevbirss7397
      @kevbirss7397 Před 6 lety +1

      +Absalom David he could be 6months old, he can't travel then

    • @Azubrael
      @Azubrael Před 6 lety +2

      Just don't travel to North Korea...

    • @icemule
      @icemule Před 6 lety

      They were bible thumpers thinking they could change those commie scum.

  • @amelie4847
    @amelie4847 Před 7 lety +732

    We went to europe a couple days ago (we're american) and my dad had no idea how to tip! He tipped 15% and the waitress thought he was crazy

    • @elsik4607
      @elsik4607 Před 7 lety +63

      Amelie D LMAO OMG I would think u were crazy 2.

    • @cdressel53191
      @cdressel53191 Před 7 lety +47

      YesSiOui MC a lot of waiters here make shit money like $3/hr and rely on the tips. I used to work at a restaurant, during the week they may have taken home $50 a night in tips but could make like $200 on a good weekend night.

    • @ericburton5163
      @ericburton5163 Před 7 lety +9

      We have quick casual restaurants that basically are kind of cross between fast food / full dining. So if you visiting the US and are worried about tipping I would recommend these (QDOBA, Chipotle, Noodles & Company, Panera, etc...) Full service restaurants have tried getting rid of tips before (I think Joes Crab Shack was one chain that tried it) and paid their staff more. It doesn't work because you have more expensive food and worse service. Granted, maybe if servers had to be paid minimum wage, this would cut down on loosing a competitive advantage because of the more expensive food and worse service (as all restaurants would have to abide), but being at restaurants where servers are tipped vs. where they are paid minimum wage, the service is waaaaaaay better at restaurants where servers are paid in tips. Good servers can make good money, and therefore you get higher quality people serving (and not only bad but even mediocre servers end up quitting to work an easier job because they don't make good money). That being said, do remember that in the US, not only do servers make less than minimum wage (in my state they make $3.65 an hour), but they are making that little bit of money before the restaurant opens and after it closes, when they aren't making any tips and are cleaning / prepping. Also, at many restaurants servers have to "tip out" to give some of their tips to other staff such as hosts/bussers/bar tenders, etc.

    • @ForceHunter1
      @ForceHunter1 Před 7 lety +26

      Amelie D Its because waitresses get a fair pay here, tips are just a nice extra :)

    • @flawlessproxx7374
      @flawlessproxx7374 Před 7 lety +2

      YesSiOui MC I worked in a restaurant in California and earned $10/hr with tips being extra. It's always nice to have some cash on you at all times for gas/petroleum and such

  • @neddowling7488
    @neddowling7488 Před 5 lety +10

    The classic line for Australians is
    “Hey, howya goin”
    “Good, yourself?”

    • @jimmyjams9048
      @jimmyjams9048 Před 4 lety +1

      yeah awright.
      id say howzit garn?

    • @jimmyjams9048
      @jimmyjams9048 Před 4 lety

      another reply might be, life is rocking on the ducks guts cos shit is fully sick at the moment!

    • @jimmyjams9048
      @jimmyjams9048 Před 4 lety

      dead set!!

  • @leslietharp4244
    @leslietharp4244 Před 5 lety +194

    We tip because it's the waiters main source of income. They are paid a lot less than the minimum wage because of this

    • @eternalodin5665
      @eternalodin5665 Před 5 lety +7

      well they get a lil over 2 dollars an hour plus their tips... but if the 2 dollars an hour plus tips weekly doesnt equal min wage the company is supppsed to make up the difference tho alot of places dont kno or ignore it and they should be reported

    • @Smoer1
      @Smoer1 Před 5 lety +31

      Problem of the system, not mine.

    • @largewoodenbadger7195
      @largewoodenbadger7195 Před 5 lety +6

      If you don't tip, that's fine, but don't go back to the same place twice, or wear a disguise when you do, because the waitstaff knows if you are a bad or nontipper.

    • @pubcle
      @pubcle Před 5 lety +10

      @@Smoer1 then you're just an asshole. Ultimately the consumer is the boss of every buisness, you're the one who pays, in resturaunts in the US you're just expected to pay the waiters directly rather than management. Without tipping the cost would be added to the bill instead. The advantage of ripping us it encourages good waiters and waitresses and can give raises and bonuses for job well done, failure is it can create an unreliable income.

    • @realGBx64
      @realGBx64 Před 5 lety +2

      so it is a positive reinforcement. tip me because my wage is low - I can't get higher wages because my boss thinks I will be tipped.

  • @yoitsannajo
    @yoitsannajo Před 6 lety +189

    "Hey, how are you?" "Good, how are you?" "Good" "Good" ... end of conversation.

    • @HaZadeur1
      @HaZadeur1 Před 6 lety +2

      But how would you react if someone would say that they feel really shitty today ? I can imagine some weird looks....

    • @aj_aka_alan
      @aj_aka_alan Před 6 lety

      I'm honest. If I'm tired, I say I'm tired. Some people are interested, some not.

    • @Phoenix_2169
      @Phoenix_2169 Před 6 lety +1

      HaZadeur1 If someone says they feel really shitty I would respond "that sucks".

    • @SouthTexasPodcasts
      @SouthTexasPodcasts Před 6 lety +2

      I hate that too, What I do now is actually tell them how I'm actually doing, good or bad. Maybe next time they will think before asking.

    • @suurherraposkiluu7200
      @suurherraposkiluu7200 Před 6 lety +5

      Anna Reed Hah! In Finland, goes like this:
      "Hey."
      "..."
      End of conversation.

  • @Tuchulu
    @Tuchulu Před 7 lety +3017

    I found prescription drug commercials on TV really weird.

    • @Tuchulu
      @Tuchulu Před 7 lety +19

      Also that they don't have VAT.

    • @reference2me
      @reference2me Před 7 lety +212

      I am an American and I do not approve of drug commercials ...

    • @mollygrace3068
      @mollygrace3068 Před 7 lety +123

      Yeah, that shit became legal in the 90's. I remember being in middle school and people being shocked by those commercials. Now we're used to it.

    • @jawilson2405
      @jawilson2405 Před 7 lety +153

      I'm American and I find prescription drug commercials ridiculous

    • @aj_aka_alan
      @aj_aka_alan Před 7 lety +47

      All that came about because there was a problem in the 80's with pharm companies not revealing all sources of information and all side effects and they passed laws requiring full disclosure for sources of information, whether the person was compensated for the commercial, or even if it is an actor. So, the pharm companies tipped the scales the other way because they are afraid of the lawsuits. When you see stupid shit like that in america it's because the lawyers ruined it for everyone. For example, at Thomas Jefferson's home Monticello in VA, no one is allowed in the second story. Do you know why? Because in the 1700s when the home was built, he didn't know that the Americans with Disabilities Act was going to pass in the mid 70's which required equal access for everyone, even those with disabilities. So, since not everyone can get up to the second floor, no one gets to go. #damnlawyers

  • @xzandria1
    @xzandria1 Před 5 lety +46

    OMG! Root beer floats are the best!

  • @zoeyn100
    @zoeyn100 Před 5 lety +73

    15% is a good tip in america. 20% is if the service was really good.

    • @BL-zi9wb
      @BL-zi9wb Před 5 lety +2

      Lol dude some places are expecting a 20% minimum tip these days. Insane!

    • @MidranKidran
      @MidranKidran Před 4 lety

      @@BL-zi9wb Do they get mad if you dont tip?

    • @BL-zi9wb
      @BL-zi9wb Před 4 lety +3

      @@MidranKidran I've only been confronted about a tip once in my life and it was by an Italian working at a chain restaurant. Other than that, I have no clue! I've probably pissed some people off by not tipping but it's my money and I'll do as I please. I use tipping more as a reward than as a necessity. There are plenty of restaurants I eat at regularly where I don't tip or tip "badly" (whatever that means) and it has never affected the service or meal quality.

    • @MidranKidran
      @MidranKidran Před 4 lety

      @@BL-zi9wb Ohw ok, and i think the way you use tipping is good in my opinion

    • @Caracajou
      @Caracajou Před 4 lety

      @Romeo Tango Actually, 10% or less if you're cheap, but sometimes the service is just okay in which case it's perfectly fine to tip 10%. And some servers can make as much as $200 in a five hour shift so I don't think 10% is too bad, though I usually tip 20% or more, though only if the service is exceptional.

  • @chameleom9410
    @chameleom9410 Před 7 lety +303

    Dialogue should go as followed:
    Bob: Hey, how are you?
    Sarah: good, you?
    Bob: good, thanks
    Sarah: bye
    Bob: see you later
    Small talk at its finest

    • @jeremiahsalvadorjuarez553
      @jeremiahsalvadorjuarez553 Před 6 lety

      HeyitsPagers why Bob and Sarah? It's America so we have a lot divirsity stop being racist

    • @TheFlyingMonkey12
      @TheFlyingMonkey12 Před 6 lety +10

      3102540 You must be kidding...

    • @DeHerg
      @DeHerg Před 6 lety +1

      dialogue in northern germany:
      Stefan: *eye contact* , *nod*
      Dieter: *nods in return*
      at most a "hey"/"hi" is exchanged, there is no reason to waste each others time/breath if you have nothing substantial to say

    • @Rikard_Nilsson
      @Rikard_Nilsson Před 6 lety +8

      Bob: Hey how are you?
      Shaniqua'wana: I'm fine how are you?
      Bob: I just threw out my back so...can't complain!
      Shaniqua'wana: Great, see ya.
      Bob: See ya!
      But everything wasn't great, and Shaniqua'wana died later that day from a brain anuerysm caused by having a weird ass name.

    • @iblindsamurai2677
      @iblindsamurai2677 Před 6 lety +3

      Rikard Nilsson dialogue in ireland:Bob:"well"
      Sarah:"Well".

  • @jojo7996
    @jojo7996 Před 6 lety +573

    Basically, when responding to "how are you" just say good.
    Even if you are dying in the inside.

    • @tracksekta9268
      @tracksekta9268 Před 6 lety +26

      Yeah, 'murica is based on lies in many aspects :D

    • @mrsman992013
      @mrsman992013 Před 6 lety +4

      I'm getting better about answering honestly. Sparing detail s except to those I know well.

    • @cobydacat7564
      @cobydacat7564 Před 6 lety +19

      You say "Good, and you?" even though they will just say good and so its actually pointless to ask in the first place

    • @ryanrzjr
      @ryanrzjr Před 6 lety +5

      Okay im a triggered american now, its not good, its "Im doing WELL!" Sorry just need to vent about that.

    • @byronschroedel432
      @byronschroedel432 Před 6 lety +14

      There is no fixed response, other than being short in you answer. Like; great, thanks or not feeling so well today, thanks for asking. The key is a short response, that you can say while passing!

  • @rogerurby
    @rogerurby Před 5 lety +3

    I'm 27 and I remember being a teenager, 10-15 years ago, with my first debit card. It was very common to run into stores that required a minimum purchase amount with a debit card. Like 3-5 bucks minimum and sometimes more. Now it's quite rare.

  • @Ijuststopthepucksbro
    @Ijuststopthepucksbro Před 5 lety

    I like how some of these are positive, some negative, and some just neutral observations. Good on you for giving us a balanced report. :)

  • @jonehret6221
    @jonehret6221 Před 7 lety +1177

    I agree with him, the US should have the tax already calculated into the price not at the register

    • @nickiyoder3777
      @nickiyoder3777 Před 7 lety +20

      they do in some states.

    • @southernbman
      @southernbman Před 7 lety +56

      I feel that the reason that is not common practice is due to different states charging different percentages in sales tax. Take for example Georgia and Florida that charge 7%, Massachusetts that charges 6.25%, and New Hampshire that has no sales tax at all. Not including sales tax in price tags on shelves is common practice for businesses that have branches in many states, as it would be difficult to change prices per store because of location.

    • @bluep51
      @bluep51 Před 7 lety +24

      Also both prices and tax rates change all the time

    • @IcelanderUSer
      @IcelanderUSer Před 7 lety +22

      southernbman That's not the reason. All stickers and labels are computer generated. Different locations have different prices. So calculating the price with the tax included is no big deal whatsoever.

    • @johngallahhh
      @johngallahhh Před 7 lety +18

      We live in a world of computers and this can generate the correct price. It's a con, they don't display the full price because most things sell ending in 99for example $3.99,, why end with 99,,,, because it psychologically sound a better price than $4.26. The technology is there and the yanks keep making up excuses and don't want to believe they are getting ripped off. By the way i lived in the states for 5 years and it was Texas (the worst out of the bunch for changing things).

  • @kath.1060
    @kath.1060 Před 7 lety +868

    People tip so much in America because our servers are not payed decent wages. They live off of tips.
    Correct me if I'm wrong, but in Europe servers are payed fairly good wages.

    • @sebastianruegg8611
      @sebastianruegg8611 Před 7 lety +39

      kat H. yes. In europe nobody expect that you tip

    • @nickhollasatyou
      @nickhollasatyou Před 7 lety +16

      We tip our servers to incentive them to do good service, If you pay servers with tips then they will get more tables done and be curious to the customers. Tipping is genius!

    • @gimmethegepgun
      @gimmethegepgun Před 7 lety +54

      If everyone tips by default because it's expected that you tip (and sometimes they automatically add the tip) then it doesn't work in the slightest as an incentive. All it ends up doing is making it so that they barely get paid at all when no one's there, which is mostly controlled by the time of day.

    • @Vaguenoodle
      @Vaguenoodle Před 7 lety +13

      Servers make the same wages as every other minimum wage employee, per federal law (if tipped wage + tips does not equal minimum wage, the employer must pay the difference).
      I don't see anyone rushing to tip the clerk at Walmart.

    • @rragaming3862
      @rragaming3862 Před 7 lety +10

      Vaguenoodle This is not true. There actually is a seperate "minumim wage" for shopkeepers, waiters, etc.

  • @Mindraker1
    @Mindraker1 Před 5 lety +4

    Automatic responses and greetings can get cross-wired.
    "How are you?"
    "I'm fine, how are you?"
    "Fine, how are you?"

  • @michaelwhite2823
    @michaelwhite2823 Před 3 lety +2

    This was positive. You're a nice person. I hope everyone treated you well and had a good trip,

  • @jk-gt9dv
    @jk-gt9dv Před 7 lety +214

    Wow, as an American I didn't realize these things were so out of the ordinary. Thank you for the highly informative video. I hope you will visit again ( so many different climates to choose from) thanks for your video, I am a new subscriber and liked this really interesting take on life in US.

    • @stanspb763
      @stanspb763 Před 6 lety

      Each state or region is very similar with only minor speech habits. It would not seem much different for a foreigner from a very different society. I have been in 90 countries and see more similarities between regions of the US than, say, regions of China which are much different. Regions of the EU are getting less and less different as time goes by which is really unfortunate that unique cultures are disappearing as are borders and laws.

  • @RobertLeBlancPhoto
    @RobertLeBlancPhoto Před 6 lety +384

    I’m South Korean.
    I was adopted by a Canadian-Frenchman.
    My wife is Italian.
    Our kids are Itasian.
    We speak English.
    Our cars are German.
    We live in the US.
    ☺️

    • @gamingwithbryton1529
      @gamingwithbryton1529 Před 6 lety +8

      Robert LeBlanc lol cool

    • @WuHa105
      @WuHa105 Před 6 lety +10

      Itasian...haha

    • @sofsande
      @sofsande Před 6 lety +1

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @reyjose7882
      @reyjose7882 Před 6 lety +12

      And I gave 0 fucks😁

    • @summersnow1779
      @summersnow1779 Před 6 lety +14

      And this is a great example of what an American is made up of. My father came from Sweden, and my mother is from German and English decent. So that makes me pretty much a mut. But they say muts make the best pets.

  • @rithvikyagnamurthy6560

    Great job on these vids... I’m learning German and these are really helpful

  • @davidtiffany4761
    @davidtiffany4761 Před 5 lety +19

    Rootbear float are amazing man lol

    • @lynnwest4307
      @lynnwest4307 Před 5 lety

      Try a root beer float with chocolate syrup

    • @memphismagpie7514
      @memphismagpie7514 Před 4 lety

      Ever had a Bullseye? Nothing tops them. Here's what you do: chill the root beer just enough that it gets a little icy, but not frozen. Then you add the ice cream. I prefer vanillla, but it's recommended with chocolate. Finish it off with the classic whipped cream and maraschino cherry. Wanna know why it's called a Bullseye? It always hits the spot. Satisfaction guaranteed. Every time.

  • @TheTurpin1234
    @TheTurpin1234 Před 7 lety +666

    As an American. I really enjoyed this video. He didn't just call us a bunch of fat idiots, because a lot of us aren't.

    • @alyssaknierim349
      @alyssaknierim349 Před 7 lety +7

      luke saylor true. Like im lazy but ya im not fat

    • @loridelia8806
      @loridelia8806 Před 7 lety +15

      luke saylor I agree completely!

    • @JohanRuda
      @JohanRuda Před 7 lety +11

      No sane person would do that though. Keep that in mind :)

    • @m.inecraft8629
      @m.inecraft8629 Před 7 lety +16

      luke saylor that's true a lot of us aren't 400 pounds but that's what every one else thinks (according to my international Friends)

    • @Rcrobodude
      @Rcrobodude Před 7 lety +2

      Yeah thanks

  • @abigailg7790
    @abigailg7790 Před 6 lety +80

    In America, we want a response to "How are you?", but most people just say something along the lines of "I'm fine, how are you?" It's really just to be polite.

  • @hk4124
    @hk4124 Před 5 lety +21

    "How are you?"
    "Good, you?"
    "Good"
    That is how it goes, even if you aren't good just say you are, ya it's disingenuous and I personally don't like it but you get use to it.
    Ya, don't tip 20% unless the service was amazing. That is crazy.
    Ya the American dream is work till you die, most low skill jobs are 5 days a year if you are lucky 10 days.

    • @selcovoilucian8253
      @selcovoilucian8253 Před 3 lety +2

      It's strange greating ... If someone asks "how are you" my instinct is to say "I'm hungry/I am tired/etc"
      How about "good day" or "hello"
      How are you sounds like a question

  • @hacksaw5918
    @hacksaw5918 Před 5 lety +9

    I have worked in some kind of service industry all my life and have never asked how are you without meaning it. I always like to hear the person that answers back living the dream!

  • @arekusu7765
    @arekusu7765 Před 7 lety +206

    15 American Things Europeans Find Weird: Massive Patriotism

    • @Jakromha
      @Jakromha Před 7 lety +9

      World/European Cup Football. Just because it's only once every two years, doesn't mean we don't know massive patriotism.

    • @riploljustforfu9929
      @riploljustforfu9929 Před 7 lety +13

      Jakromha a couple of weeks a year is different from 365 days a year

    • @iwogwardecki
      @iwogwardecki Před 7 lety +6

      Visit Eastern Europe not this leftist, muslim West

    • @seamuscooper7379
      @seamuscooper7379 Před 7 lety +35

      Well when we get patriotic we throw barbecues and brag when Europeans get nationalistic they ignite global conflicts resulting in the deaths of millions

    • @MickyAvStickyHands
      @MickyAvStickyHands Před 7 lety +15

      Germany tends to be the most patriotic country in the world every few decades. Check out some of their rallies in the late 30's.

  • @sergioflores477
    @sergioflores477 Před 7 lety +1398

    When we say "how are you?" we still expect a respond. It is a question, used to greet someone. But we obviously want a respond like "I'm fine, thank you, how are you?"

    • @albertquigley5236
      @albertquigley5236 Před 7 lety +73

      Sergio Flores Yeah, that confused me. I have lived in America all my life and that greeting always requires an answer. What is weird though is "what's up?". That greeting goes unanswered a lot.

    • @karlypearl4587
      @karlypearl4587 Před 7 lety +28

      Yea or the classic "whats up." & responce= "whats up." certainly not a question...not even a rhitorical one. It is a long way of saying 'hi'.

    • @ethanscrima4439
      @ethanscrima4439 Před 7 lety +27

      Albert Quigley A lot of times people say "hey what's up?" and people respond "hey I haven't seen you in a while, what's up?" and don't answer the question.

    • @dombon6
      @dombon6 Před 7 lety +24

      Albert Quigley
      Yeah it's less of a literal question and more of a read-between-the-lines positive conversation opening that functions as a greeting.

    • @brycedavidson1655
      @brycedavidson1655 Před 7 lety +4

      Well it's common curtesy it's a lot like shaking hands with someone.

  • @pocketstars3215
    @pocketstars3215 Před 5 lety

    When I was in Germany, ice was not put in drinks at fast food places because ice takes all the space of the drink. At restaurants I noticed not much ice was put in the glass cups. I got used to it. The liquid beverage was cold so ice was not necessary.
    This video brought back memories. I really enjoyed watching your video ♡

  • @badwolfhomes376
    @badwolfhomes376 Před 5 lety +42

    Ok let me explain tipping from a server/waitstaff view. In the US we are paid on average (depending on the area - the coasts will get more I'm sure) $3.50 per hour (bartenders $5.00). The rest of our pay is from the tip (or gratuity). Now, we don't get all of that money either. In most cases we have to also "tip out" the busser(based on total sales), bartender(on bar sales) and, in some cases, the host/hostess (total sales). Plus don't forget those taxes! I think the national "average" is 18% but more and more 20% has become the norm. Believe me, as someone who worked in this industry most of my life, we would love to just get paid and not have to worry if serving a table may actually cost us money. It's not the best system, but it's the one we have. So, when going out to eat or to the bar, tipping should be factored into your expected cost. PS. please don't blame your server if your food isn't cooked correctly. That's the kitchen's job. Just nicely let your server know and we will get it fixed for you. We really do want you to have a good experience!

    • @joyr36
      @joyr36 Před 5 lety

      In the 80's, I was surprised to find out that a restaurant could count 60% of an employee's tips as salary. If that still true?

    • @kimrena7452
      @kimrena7452 Před 5 lety +8

      Hey. Its soon 2019. And you live in usa, not 3rd world country. You guys really should do something about changing labour law as usd2 or 3 or even 5 per hr salary just doesnt make sense. That is more of slavery. I think all of you should not tip (unless you wanna say thank you to your server), and it will be impossible to live with usd 2 or 5 or whatever an hr. Someone should come up and say its about time to fix that. Thank god i do not live there....

    • @RickTobin98
      @RickTobin98 Před 5 lety +1

      @@kimrena7452 usually wait staff will make more than min wage, its why its a popular job. However most of our earnings do not come from our employer but from the customers. An average tip is about 15-18% a decent tip is 18-20% a great tip is anything over 20%. Also some restaurants servers get 50% of the desert sales. Also restaurants are still required to pay their staff the fed min wage if the tips are below the 7.25 an hour wage. So if i make say 5 an hour including my tips my employer has to make up 2.25. But yes we do need to start paying living wages and benefits.

    • @kimrena7452
      @kimrena7452 Před 5 lety +5

      @@RickTobin98 i do not live in the usa and i know it workd that way. But why should a customer pay the wage of the server in a name of 'manner'? A tip should be paid if i am happy with the service, and if i wish to pay, not a mandatory thing. In the end, the owners of the restaurants are the ones using the free labour. Isnt that so wrong???

    • @orangeziggy599
      @orangeziggy599 Před 5 lety +1

      @@kimrena7452 I am an American in the south and I very much agree with you. I hate the American way of mandatory tips. It is all so pretentious and deceitful. Why dont we just pay what we want to, that's what a 'tip' is supposed to mean, it's supposed to mean that we enjoyed the service; it's not supposed to mean that we are paying someone's salary!

  • @jzargo7443
    @jzargo7443 Před 7 lety +977

    As an American, the one that kind of shocked me the most was the idea that pancakes and bacon is weird to you guys. To me, they go together like peanut-butter and jelly.
    wait . . . don't tell me . . . Do you not do peanut-butter and jelly sandwiches either?!?

    • @verafonteyne6927
      @verafonteyne6927 Před 7 lety +46

      J'zargo nope

    • @protekron7184
      @protekron7184 Před 7 lety +31

      J'zargo I don't know why I laughed at your username and profile pic.
      Probably because I've killed you least once.

    • @Atticblur
      @Atticblur Před 7 lety +43

      I don't think pancakes and bacon is weird in Europe. At least not here in the Netherlands. But yeah Peanut-butter and jelly is not a thing here :). Our peanut butter is very different from your peanut butter. It doesn't go together with jelly (or Jam for us) very well

    • @aswtx75
      @aswtx75 Před 7 lety +6

      J'zargo I think I've read that the Japanese find peanut butter and jelly sandwiches a very strange combination.

    • @TGE77
      @TGE77 Před 7 lety +76

      aswtx75 Ah yes, Japan, a European country located in Eastern Asia.

  • @coasternut3091
    @coasternut3091 Před 7 lety +1079

    26 days off?!?!?!? I need to move

    • @GetGermanized
      @GetGermanized  Před 7 lety +62

      Go for it :D

    • @mollygrace3068
      @mollygrace3068 Před 7 lety +28

      Seriously. Most companies give you 5-10 days vacation and may not give any sick time.

    • @evildonald742
      @evildonald742 Před 7 lety +9

      You're working for some crappy companies. 5 days your first year going up to 20 after 5 years, with 5 or so sick days is more like it.

    • @MrC0MPUT3R
      @MrC0MPUT3R Před 7 lety +33

      Too bad the US is one of the only countries in the world that requires you to pay income tax while living abroad. So you essentially pay tax twice 🙂

    • @srebrnaFH
      @srebrnaFH Před 7 lety +69

      In both Germany and some other countries (Poland for example) it's not what company you work for, but just labor law. In PL, if you have a normal working contract and you're university graduate, you have 20 days vacation a year (or rather you "earn" 20/12th of day every month you work), then after 2 years you go up to 26 days. Plus if you're a parent, additional 2 days as long as you have a kid under 14. Sick leave is not limited, but you have to get official doctor's note for it, and if you go over 30 days off in one block, you have to get official checkup to make sure you can go back to work. Maternity leave (up to a year now, I think) may be split with the father and dads get 2 weeks leave for a new kid just for themselves (all paid). Also father can take one or two days off for the birth. Also paid. And bank holidays do not deduct from our vacation days, and from what I read about US, they do there... So, yeah. Sweet sweet EUR labor laws :)

  • @Connor-kz5tx
    @Connor-kz5tx Před 5 lety +5

    In England we say
    ‘Hey, you aright?’
    Yeah, you?
    ‘Yeah thanks’
    Or simply ‘alright!’
    ‘Alright mate’

  • @artembentsionov
    @artembentsionov Před 5 lety +9

    Yeah, I have a friend who came over from Europe. He’d always complaint that American restaurants serve tap water, since he’s used to bottled water being served in his home country. Then again, US have tighter water standards for tap water than bottled water (that’s right, tap water is safer).

    • @SommerIsley
      @SommerIsley Před 4 lety

      Artem Bentsionov I dunno about that. I am in Spain (I’m American) and EVERYONE drinks tap, and I in America I NEVER would EVER drink tap. The tap water here is so much better. And also my German friend says a lot of Germans drink tap too?

  • @KillKitty
    @KillKitty Před 7 lety +873

    American here. Visited Germany and Finland about a month ago (first time outside the U.S.). So these are the things I thought were "weird" about Europe:
    1) The water spraying wand in the restroom. Turns out it is not for cleaning the sink.
    2) The fact that people will say "I'm going to use the toilet" instead of "restroom". This would be somewhat rude to say here. Also there is way less water in the toilet.
    3) Sparkling water. If you order water, that is what they bring you. You have to specify "still" if you want regular water.
    4) People in Europe smoke cigarettes a lot I think. They had entire rooms in the airport dedicated to it.
    5) The machines that processes your credit cards work WAY WAAAAY faster than the ones in the U.S.
    6) Saw full frontal nudity both male and female on a TV show. Just a normal show. In the middle of the day.
    7) Grocery stores in Finland trap you inside them.
    8) No ice cubes in the drinks. European Orange Fanta apparently has orange juice in it. It is a completely different color/taste than the orange Fanta here.
    9) People park and drive on sidewalks. Very confusing.
    10) A lot of cars shut off at traffic lights, cars are small and look similar to one another.
    11) Europeans dress way better than we do. We look like slobs.

    • @noahjonsson4641
      @noahjonsson4641 Před 7 lety +7

      Kill Kitty o

    • @tr4nsg0th1ca
      @tr4nsg0th1ca Před 7 lety +57

      so if i go to Europe, i should pack my suits & my nice slacks & shirts?

    • @KillKitty
      @KillKitty Před 7 lety +90

      I think you should do what is comfortable and be prepared to feel embarrassed. haha.

    • @robertrijkers4923
      @robertrijkers4923 Před 7 lety +137

      4) smoking is prohibited in many public places so you can smoke in designated smokerooms that have an airfiltering system-put in place in legislation to protect the personnel from second hand smoke-so people actually smoke less but you notice them in concentrated areas ;p.
      10) modern cars have auto stop-start engines at trafficlights to save gas and pollution.

    • @KillKitty
      @KillKitty Před 7 lety +67

      hkistreet, yes that is exactly what I mean. They have those little gates that shut behind you after entering. It's just...weird. I thought you had to buy something in order to leave. They also don't bag your groceries for you. My sister let them pile up because she didn't realize you were supposed to bag them yourself. The cashier thought she was stupid I think or maybe inconsiderate, but here they just do that for you so she didn't know what was happening

  • @Zack-ue9qp
    @Zack-ue9qp Před 7 lety +628

    I'm an American when I heard no free refills I was shocked

    • @piercegrissen8275
      @piercegrissen8275 Před 7 lety +27

      When I visited Germany I felt so deprived and snubbed not getting a free refill. You pay for one glass and if you want another, you have to pay for a whole new drink. It was depressing

    • @Londronable
      @Londronable Před 7 lety +43

      In Europe drinks is basically what the restaurant make their profit on.

    • @pakaskittles5981
      @pakaskittles5981 Před 7 lety +13

      Pierce Grissen you only need 1 sugar filled cancer potion, fat fuck

    • @lonestars1158
      @lonestars1158 Před 7 lety +3

      welll depends... some places charge refills... some dont :P

    • @Esablaka
      @Esablaka Před 7 lety

      well.... every place charges refills. Maybe not for water in fancy restaurants. And other than that only KFC doesnt charge for refills. Some cafes dont charge for coffee refills tho

  • @michaelogara9056
    @michaelogara9056 Před 4 lety +1

    A recommendation for tipping, when at a restaurant keep in mind this. 5% for bad service, 10% for ok service, 15% for good service, 20% for amazing service, that's a pretty good way to put it. Annother good rule of thumb would be to keep in mind that waiters get a much lower wage, a 3-5 dollar per hours decrease. So tipping anywhere from 3-5 is accepted normally. Also the same is said for delivery drivers like pizza and stuff like that, but you might wanna tip a small bit more, because they are spending their own gas money most of the time, keep in mind the company will cover a small bit of their gas but not all the time just thought I share this to maybe help people out

  • @xuchain
    @xuchain Před 5 lety

    Small towns like mine don't always have 24 hour stores. Tip for temperature going from Celsius to Fahrenheit: Think of Fahrenheit as a percentage. The hottest being 100 (sometimes a bit more, but for this tip let's assume 100 is maximum heat) and 32 being freezing, but it can still get colder. So 85% of the maximum heat is warm but not killer. 85F is 29.5C. Hot, but it could be worse. 50F is 10C, not too cold and not warm. I hope that helps. I know we are backwards using this system, but because no one here is going to change, this is a helpful way to convert a senseless number in your head to something you can use.

  • @susanc1179
    @susanc1179 Před 7 lety +331

    Casual American greeting:
    Hello! How are you?
    Fine, thanks. You?

    • @behemothokun
      @behemothokun Před 7 lety

      So you both ask a question without expecting an actual answer. . . seems exremely odd.

    • @haleberry5939
      @haleberry5939 Před 7 lety +16

      Yet no one is expecting a life story lol .. just a "good" or "fine" or "ive been better"...but no explaination or details are expected otherwise it sounds needy. No one wants to hear how you are better then them... and they dont want you to bring them down with your problems. It is awkward when you dont get any response I want to hear a "Fine, how are you?" lol 1 might be 20 feet away in the opposite direction by then, so many times i dont have to reply at all because they wouldnt hear me even if I did yell from the distance "FIne Thanks!" ..and folks thats the American way!

    • @brycedavidson1655
      @brycedavidson1655 Před 7 lety

      My favorite is the what up head nod it's easy and you don't have to say much ha ha ha!

    • @ATLMinecraft
      @ATLMinecraft Před 7 lety

      Same in the UK lmao

    • @ashtonparker8901
      @ashtonparker8901 Před 7 lety +21

      "My grandma just died and I'm depressed."
      "That's great! See you later!"

  • @KeithDunnFernandez
    @KeithDunnFernandez Před 5 lety +752

    Not only do we have few vacation/sick days here in the US but most of the time we are GUILTED by our employers into not taking them.

    • @Stettafire
      @Stettafire Před 5 lety +9

      Ew... Here it felt like that when I was working for retail, but as soon as I got a job with my degree it was much easier to get time off ect. Here, legally you are meant to be entitled to a certain number of days per year, but if you get them or not depends on your boss or what your job is. Don't get me started on zero hour contracts, you have no holiday entitlement at all with those!

    • @ericp9479
      @ericp9479 Před 5 lety +68

      True. Calling in sick is a cardinal sin in the US.

    • @EricBishard
      @EricBishard Před 5 lety +30

      This is a major problem in the U.S. and leads to overworked, beaten down citizens scared to loose their jobs. But not all companies are this way.
      Especially in the Bay Area we are seeing better situations, and the ability to work from home as a salaried employee is more attractive because it's easier to justify when not sitting in traffic 2 hors a day.
      If smart you will find a company with rollover vacation days, unfortunately, you search your entire career to find a good work balance it doesn't cone easy in the states and for this reason we should look to our European friends

    • @thisisme8204
      @thisisme8204 Před 5 lety +21

      Yeah, I have like 30. I don't even know tbh, I just know it's plenty. 25 is actually the legal minimum here in Germany. I don't know how you guys do it and I'm so sorry, it's just not enough. Whenever I went to the US I was always amazed at all these amazingly beautiful parks and sightseeing spots being kinda void of big crowds but then I learned about the amount of vacation time they get there and the penny dropped...

    • @diamoneevans3975
      @diamoneevans3975 Před 5 lety +10

      Keith Dunn-Fernandez so true. I had a job where my boss who wasn’t even the head of the company take two months off and didn’t care that we were short staffed for two months. But, when I wanted to take a week off she acted like it was the worst thing ever. She made me feel so bad I cut my trip in half and didn’t get to see half of my family that I haven’t seen in a year.

  • @roddymoore
    @roddymoore Před 5 lety +1

    As an American from the Southern US (North Carolina) and who has lived in Germany for about 20 years altogether, you are right on. Even I have trouble when I go back trying to get on with all the choice and superficial friendliness. If you live in GA, then you will understand 'Have a goot one'. Thank you for your video.

  • @btetschner
    @btetschner Před 5 lety

    Great video, thank you for your observations!
    I think it is annoying how tax isn't included in the price (and I live in the United States).

  • @matthewandersen7699
    @matthewandersen7699 Před 6 lety +141

    The air conditioning made me laugh, "are you making it freezing because of me? " no brother, in the summer there's no such thing as too cold.

    • @SonshineLady7
      @SonshineLady7 Před 5 lety +7

      @Matthew A - Amen to that!!! (I live in FL) I was laughing when he thought they were turning the A/C lower for him as well.

    • @trunkskoolkid
      @trunkskoolkid Před 5 lety +9

      Texas here and AC is life! I’ve driven a car for 4 years without it, and it suuuucks. Air-conditioner=civilization.

    • @grandpanoogie2665
      @grandpanoogie2665 Před 5 lety +3

      @@mr.purplet-rex2774 and then summer hits and bugspray is life.

    • @swtv1754
      @swtv1754 Před 5 lety

      I live in Seattle and most of us do not have AC. It usually doesn't get hot enough for it. We have a few weeks were we do get a heatwave. Lots of businesses have it, but a lot don't.

    • @wisskier
      @wisskier Před 5 lety

      Yeah we use AC way too much.

  • @blossomwing9910
    @blossomwing9910 Před 6 lety +548

    *Don't you even dare start on our beautiful Rootbeer floats.*

    • @spangelicious837
      @spangelicious837 Před 6 lety +27

      A cream soda floats, and orange soda floats, or sherbet in fruit punch. They just don't know what they're missing.

    • @CenturianCornelious
      @CenturianCornelious Před 6 lety +2

      lol

    • @luciao5276
      @luciao5276 Před 6 lety +6

      They're dElICIOus

    • @TravisLackey
      @TravisLackey Před 6 lety +8

      There is no greater beverage on the planet. It transcends mundane drinks and becomes so much more. Also, replace the standard rootbeer with alcoholic rootbeer (I recommend "Not Your Father's Rootbeer") and it positively sings to your soul.

    • @yoloswagmaster-vz8ln
      @yoloswagmaster-vz8ln Před 6 lety

      i am a fan of Boston coolers ginger ale and ice cream.

  • @ingridgustad9932
    @ingridgustad9932 Před 2 lety

    ❤ this informative video ❣😊 Greetings from me in Norway 🇧🇻

  • @soundiboi1749
    @soundiboi1749 Před 5 lety +1

    You should always talk about your needs to hotels and if you have complaints please speak up! Most of us are happy and willing to help you to adjust

  • @patrickhodson8715
    @patrickhodson8715 Před 7 lety +122

    If you're in the midwest in the USA and you ask "how are you," you'll likely get an actual answer, especially if you're talking to someone a little older.

    • @patrickhodson8715
      @patrickhodson8715 Před 7 lety +1

      That is, _more likely._ It's still rare though.

    • @lordblazer
      @lordblazer Před 7 lety +1

      midwesterners are dickwads

    • @FinalBreathofAnalog
      @FinalBreathofAnalog Před 7 lety +1

      Thank you! I live in south west Missouri and I always respond with an answer and ask it back,everyone in this area does.

    • @DOFT.mp4
      @DOFT.mp4 Před 7 lety +2

      Phantasma Geist I live in the south, specifically North Carolina and I always answer and ask it back too, but I've encountered people who don't answer, but that's not common

    • @FinalBreathofAnalog
      @FinalBreathofAnalog Před 7 lety

      it's funny,it's almost as if along the way we got confused as to what those greeting really mean lol

  • @MorganasTurtle
    @MorganasTurtle Před 7 lety +156

    I didn't realize pancakes and bacon was unique to America! I love it!

    • @davidethelberg2091
      @davidethelberg2091 Před 7 lety +3

      Morganachan It is not, American pancakes Maybe:)

    • @alyssaknierim349
      @alyssaknierim349 Před 7 lety

      Morganachan you're making me hungry

    • @Chris008987
      @Chris008987 Před 7 lety +3

      We have them in Norway also

    • @quabledistocficklepo3597
      @quabledistocficklepo3597 Před 7 lety

      How about...ta da...avocados and bacon!!! I don't know why the thought had never occurred to me, but after I heard about it on some TV show, I thought, OF COURSE!!!
      Well, so much for that.It sounded like a great idea, but it just didn't work. True, I used a variety of avocado that I had never tried before, but I don't think a Fuerte or Hass would be any different. So, I can now say, forget about it.

    • @truedat508
      @truedat508 Před 7 lety

      It's not I'm American and i eat it as breakfast sometimes

  • @avomne
    @avomne Před 5 lety +2

    Vacation time swings wildly here, too, depending on the employer and position. My employer give a percentage of hours worked for a biweekly pay period. We start at 8% from day 1, but can't use it until 90 days have passed. it goes up 1% each year the first 2 years. Then it's 1% like every 2 more years. I'm up to 10% per pay period. So, I earn 8 hours of vacation every 2 weeks or 26 days/year.

  • @danielbudney7825
    @danielbudney7825 Před 5 lety +2

    For Days Off: you mention 26, but does that include Holidays? Companies in the U.S. have a set group of Holidays (9 or 10, depending on the industry you're in) which everyone gets off (paid). In addition, you have Vacation Days. Sick Days seem to vary from company to company, so you need to check. I've worked with 15 "days off" which combined Vacation + Sick Days, but the beauty of that system is that there isn't any doctor visit required. If you aren't feeling well, you decide if you want to spend the day at work, or at home in bed, or if you want to make the trip to visit a doctor, and you get paid in all three cases. If you don't go to work, the day comes off your paid "time off" days. Generally, any days you haven't used at the end of the year roll over to the next year, or you can get extra pay for them (your choice). If you have split Vacation Days and Sick Days, then the Vacation Days roll over (or are paid), but any Sick Days you haven't used are taken back by the company.

    • @hjawesomme
      @hjawesomme Před 5 lety

      Holidays don't take away your off days (21-28 days a year) , and there are no sick days. if you're sick you don't need to work if you have doctors note. Depends on contract if you get paid or not when you're sick.

    • @kjf5681
      @kjf5681 Před 5 lety

      Yes. Many employees don't use their vacation days because they would rather have the extra 2 weeks of pay.

  • @ivunnk3336
    @ivunnk3336 Před 7 lety +865

    I am Australian and when ever someone says "how are you?" you usually just say "im good thank you, how about you?"

    • @derkthejerk7206
      @derkthejerk7206 Před 7 lety +73

      Kenuvi De Zoysa I'm American and that's what I do and that's what my family does.

    • @StevenTheAristolianNerd
      @StevenTheAristolianNerd Před 7 lety +3

      Kenuvi De Zoysa Literally how small talk actually goes in the US.

    • @debtansey89
      @debtansey89 Před 7 lety +32

      I'm American and I do the same.

    • @lordelliott42
      @lordelliott42 Před 7 lety +21

      Yep, I'm American, and I just say "I'm good."

    • @keyboard-commentator
      @keyboard-commentator Před 7 lety +15

      yeah, i can't imagine how saying "thank you" to a question could possibly be considered normal.

  • @eeveewoltzyoung4824
    @eeveewoltzyoung4824 Před 6 lety +218

    Wait till he descovers chicken and waffles

    • @captainabigail
      @captainabigail Před 6 lety +6

      He was in Georgia. I'm surprised he didn't discover it!

    • @shebvixen
      @shebvixen Před 6 lety +2

      Lol, did anybody else see the Red Lobster ads advertising Lobster and waffles?

    • @oxysz
      @oxysz Před 6 lety +1

      shebvixen bruh.. no I didn’t see that lol. That sounds not good to me. But I’m almost weird and don’t like lobster . I only like fish . Like how the Hell people like crab?? It’s underwater spiders :|

    • @thacloviskidd575
      @thacloviskidd575 Před 6 lety

      mmm.chicken and waffles sounds good

    • @wackadoodles7549
      @wackadoodles7549 Před 6 lety

      we have to keep some things a secret man jeez, at least you didn't tell him about privatized healthca-
      i've said too much

  • @annakunken7270
    @annakunken7270 Před 5 lety +1

    When someone says “how are you?” generally you just say “I’m fine” and usually you just continue the conversation

  • @brettlarch8050
    @brettlarch8050 Před 3 lety +4

    In regards to 24 hr stores,
    That part is true. I had a friend from Russia and me and two other Americans said we wanted to just go to Walmart and buy some stuff to make a bonfire. It was 3 am. Our Russian friend was surprised how early we could do this.

    • @beecrispy
      @beecrispy Před rokem

      In Russia you always will find 24/7 stores even some big like Auchan, the size depends on a city. Your friend probably was surprised by smth else or arrived from the middle of nowhere (a village, definitely not a city)

  • @Shadeadder
    @Shadeadder Před 7 lety +115

    I would like to point out a big difference: Americans love to take leftovers from restaurants home for later. Europeans don't usually do that. Thus, it probably seems weird to y'all to have such massive portion sizes, but the truth is they're kinda made that way so that you can eat your fill AND take some home for later.

    • @Xelacreations1337
      @Xelacreations1337 Před 7 lety +6

      Shadeadder im here in Paris and I've just seen 3 American girls taking home their leftovers. strange thing to do in Europe.

    • @spydergs07
      @spydergs07 Před 7 lety +8

      Yeah, most meals in America tend to be 2 or 3 meals for the price of one.

    • @AFCA-vn9bl
      @AFCA-vn9bl Před 7 lety +1

      Shadeadder no, it's also the soda. I believe the large soda at mc donald's in usa is almost a fucking liter!!!!

    • @devynjohst2138
      @devynjohst2138 Před 7 lety +2

      Shadeadder From my experience in Canada, it's a mixture of both. We take the leftovers but we don't eat it later.

    • @DMASTERCRAFTER
      @DMASTERCRAFTER Před 7 lety

      AFCA 1900 you know why we have huge sodas? supply and demand. Americans love soda, thus will pay for more.

  • @DaBearz-wt7xp
    @DaBearz-wt7xp Před 7 lety +370

    In America when someone says "hey how are you?" You really just say "good and you?" And they say good. Just to be nice they don't really care about your issues lol

    • @deadbrian9247
      @deadbrian9247 Před 7 lety +12

      Sound like Minnesota. No one actually cares.

    • @someguy9345
      @someguy9345 Před 6 lety +7

      DaBearz1027 I dare someone to say "Actually, not so great.."
      It'll just be, "lol wot?"

    • @kenziesellmyer5830
      @kenziesellmyer5830 Před 6 lety +8

      Idk about y'all but in texas most of the Tim people generally care about your day - southern hospitality

    • @squirmtastic
      @squirmtastic Před 6 lety +4

      kenzie Sellmyer Point me to the direction of southern hospitality. Where I live in Texas everyone is fucking rude.

    • @SixOThree
      @SixOThree Před 6 lety +6

      New Orleans here. "How are you you?" really can be treated as an open invitation for discussion. It sets the tone of the upcoming conversation or transaction.

  • @wales2k4747
    @wales2k4747 Před 5 lety +2

    Not all American restaurants offer free refills. In fact, quite a few restaurants in my area (I live in California) require quite a fee for refills on sodas.

  • @SirKnasher
    @SirKnasher Před 5 lety +15

    Aussies conversations start as;
    Howyagarn?
    Yeah nah good mate yasself?
    Aw yeah can't complain ay.

    • @lephilosopheinconnu3952
      @lephilosopheinconnu3952 Před 5 lety

      really?? lol. Well, it sounds familiar comming from aussies

    • @davidpacholski7144
      @davidpacholski7144 Před 5 lety

      Lol...love it

    • @Drew-in-NoDak
      @Drew-in-NoDak Před 4 lety

      Northern American / Canadian rural greetings go along the lines of "how are you now" "oh good and you" "not so bad"

  • @skrubey
    @skrubey Před 7 lety +712

    Bro in the US we like our air conditioning cold

    • @lonestars1158
      @lonestars1158 Před 7 lety +4

      i hate it...... my feet are always on the crinke of falling off due to frost bite.... then again i do live in phx meaning that im use to 120 and dry........ so i have a less cold tollereance

    • @jake-zi4px
      @jake-zi4px Před 7 lety +2

      Skrubii_ as fuck

    • @stevenberglund3576
      @stevenberglund3576 Před 7 lety +8

      Skrubii_ Living in western Oregon I prefer 73 f not 67f.

    • @bjornharder9789
      @bjornharder9789 Před 7 lety +1

      Steven Berglund now in Celsius

    • @austingreen7769
      @austingreen7769 Před 7 lety +2

      Bjorn Harder 73° F is about 22° or 23° C and 67° F is about 19.5° C

  • @JoHnAnDjAnEdOe81
    @JoHnAnDjAnEdOe81 Před 6 lety +246

    Try coming to Arizona when it's 118 with no AC. You will appreciate it then.

    • @stevenbryant4718
      @stevenbryant4718 Před 6 lety +10

      Try the Gulf Coast and it will send you packing back to Arizona.

    • @blurayen313
      @blurayen313 Před 6 lety +4

      Try Michigan between Dec and Feb (can get as cold as -15 with a wind chill of -40) and those 118 temps will be appreciated!

    • @funch357
      @funch357 Před 6 lety +12

      +Mike Remuzzi & non-Americans: Arizona's is a dry, desert heat while in Atlanta, Georgia (where the CZcamsr was) has *humid* heat. Humid heat is worse because one's body can't cool down by sweating -- the sweat won't evaporate. I've known of desert southwest folks who said the central Midwest and the southeast U.S.'s humid heat felt far worse than Arizona. And in Arizona it cools down at night. Not so in central Midwest and the southeast.

    • @funch357
      @funch357 Před 6 lety +1

      Or Duluth, Minnesota Dec-Feb. Sometimes down to -25 (Fahrenheit).

    • @clairekim2525
      @clairekim2525 Před 6 lety +2

      Mike Remuzzi California isn't so bad in comparison, but these past few years weather has been getting weird. A couple weeks ago, it was triple digit weather all week, AND it was slightly humid, which is basically unheard of considering we're technically a desert. And yeah, it definitely didn't cool down at night. AC is a lifesaver.

  • @acabblm64
    @acabblm64 Před 5 lety

    Tax only applies on certain items though. For example: regular groceries don't get taxed, only food that is already prepared for you gets taxed. The only things at the grocery store you would pay tax on are non-food items like toiletries and cleaning products, pre-made food from the deli, and alcohol/tobacco products.

  • @antaine1916
    @antaine1916 Před 5 lety

    It is absolutely true that we don't often take our vacation days. We get them, but we tend to use them only rarely or let them roll over to the next year to take a longer vacation.
    Sick days and vacation days are two different things, and make up two different pools.

  • @kylecrary963
    @kylecrary963 Před 6 lety +628

    In America if someone asks "how are you?" You just say good. You don't really have to answer the question. If you actually answer other than "good". The person asking is caught off-guard and it will get awkward because it's not really a question it's like an introduction.

    • @itzame2127
      @itzame2127 Před 6 lety +32

      Kyle Crary I don't get why anyone would ask a question they don't want the answer for, like people don't really care how you are?

    • @kylecrary963
      @kylecrary963 Před 6 lety +40

      No...they don't...lol

    • @goober7535
      @goober7535 Před 6 lety +21

      thats not really correct, Crary
      strangers dont typically ask "how are you?" (unless its a waiter, waitress or someone else in the service industry). friends & acquaintances say it as a conversation starter and generally will care. ive *never* seen anyone "get awkward" if someone responds with something other than "good" unless the answer itself was outside cultural norms (ie: "my butt itches")

    • @technicasualty19
      @technicasualty19 Před 6 lety +19

      Where I live, people constantly say "how ya doing" "what's up? and other such things as a greeting. And even when someone has said something awkward, like "my butt itches," the other person usually just laughs it off and keeps walking.
      It is kind of funny to see someone respond to "how you doing" with another "how you doing" and that's it. Both parties walk off without the other knowing they were doing.

    • @wessmall7957
      @wessmall7957 Před 6 lety +22

      Here in America, we act polite, but we are impatient. That's why we ask "How are you?" when we don't care, and answer "Good" when we aren't. If you answer anything other than "Good" you'd better have something interesting to say.

  • @dankicemann
    @dankicemann Před 6 lety +447

    We are a magical land of free refills damnit

    • @Outcast115
      @Outcast115 Před 6 lety +21

      Europe isn't much thinner, chummer.

    • @Midnight.Creepypastas
      @Midnight.Creepypastas Před 6 lety +3

      Actually, the restaurant looses money on every refill. That's probably why we don't have it in Germany.

    • @tncorgi92
      @tncorgi92 Před 6 lety +4

      Midnight soda costs next to nothing. I know a restaurant owner and he told me on a 2 dollar Coke they could give a customer 3 refills and still make plenty of profit. Their only real cost is the labor involved in the server pouring your drinks.

    • @AETraveles
      @AETraveles Před 6 lety +1

      America is freedom. Including freedom of ridiculous requests like paying for each refill. I didn't drink much when I was in Europe just because they don't have Dr Pepper in most of it and that's what I like the most and I sure wasn't about to pour money into just water. Lots of money on wine and beer though, had to make it count!

    • @williamquinn2097
      @williamquinn2097 Před 6 lety +3

      We have free refills because because you high fructose corn syrup more than sugar. The rest of the world doesn't really care touch the H.F.C.S. and uses real sugar for theirbsoda. H.F.C.S. is terrrrrrible for you compared to sugar.

  • @jacb2997
    @jacb2997 Před 5 lety

    In Australia “how are you?” Seves half as a conversation starter and half as a pleasantry

  • @markholtz8142
    @markholtz8142 Před 5 lety

    I'm sure it's been mentioned, but employees of full-service restaurants (i.e., sit-down and someone takes your order and brings you food--not walk up to the counter and order and take your food to a table like at McDonald's) are often paid a VERY low hourly wage (it's been years since I was a server, but we were paid like $2.13 per hour when minimum wage was like $6 per hour or so). Restaurants somehow got exempt from being subject to wage laws and so it's actually expected that patrons pay something like 15-20% of the check. It'd be so much simpler if restaurants were just forced to pay servers at least the required hourly minimum wage and just raised the prices of the food they sold by that amount. Sometimes, (usually with parties of some number of people like 8 or more) they will automatically add 18% or something to the check for gratuity. In those cases, you would NOT tip additionally unless you received exceptional service.

  • @twitchypaper1391
    @twitchypaper1391 Před 7 lety +59

    In the south when someone says how are you, you say "good, how are you" rarely does someone say they are bad.

    • @DevilleQueen
      @DevilleQueen Před 7 lety

      They don't reply like that up North?

    • @justabitofjunkie2595
      @justabitofjunkie2595 Před 7 lety +2

      Reply that way everywhere in US and Canada...

    • @monkeyboy4746
      @monkeyboy4746 Před 7 lety

      My head hurts and my big toe itches, like Monty Python's Complaints Dept.

    • @twitchypaper1391
      @twitchypaper1391 Před 7 lety +2

      Ashley Miller i said the south because I dont know about the north

    • @gideonroos1188
      @gideonroos1188 Před 7 lety

      huh. Here in South Africa (at least the Afrikaans communities) we also ask how our counterpart is, and expect a full response if it's a family member or friend, or an at length response if it's a stranger. We typically use it to start the conversation, so something a little more than just ''good, and you?" is expected.

  • @samk3193
    @samk3193 Před 7 lety +79

    I'm American and in school we learn the metric and the customary system.

    • @aglassofmilk3300
      @aglassofmilk3300 Před 7 lety

      Same

    • @larrsenclark7766
      @larrsenclark7766 Před 7 lety

      Sam K no we dont😂😂😂

    • @martyc909
      @martyc909 Před 7 lety +1

      Sam K yeah, I've always learn the metric system and noticed it taught in California and Minnesota. But since you don't use it, I don't know anyone who actually knows it unless they moved to another country. It's like how no one soaks another language but everyone took Spanish or French in high school and every college required at least some foreign language credits. But no one here soaks another language.

    • @samk3193
      @samk3193 Před 7 lety +2

      martyc909 I live in Michigan and it's taught only in science at school here.

    • @martyc909
      @martyc909 Před 7 lety +1

      Sam K. Yeah, I'm old so we learned it in the 80's in elementary school and in high school in the 90's for math and science. I was actually pretty good at in up until college, and I dated a couple of international students so it was really helpful explaining the weather and distance and other things when talk to each of my GF's. (never dated them at the same time, just saying.) But after college, I just stopped using it and now I couldn't do metric in my head without first refreshening my memory with at least a week's worth of studying.

  • @DraculaSWBF2
    @DraculaSWBF2 Před 5 lety

    The free soda refill is relatively new since the early 1990s. In the 80s and before, it was only for coffee and tea.

  • @CyraStar
    @CyraStar Před 5 lety

    Yes on the days of leave. At my work we have no sick days, we get points for calling out even sick and we earn vacation days and it takes so long just to get 30-40 hours. Its earned really slowly.

  • @DanielleHamlin
    @DanielleHamlin Před 6 lety +66

    "Hey! How are you?"
    "Good! You?"
    "Great! Thanks"
    Moving right along.
    👋😁

  • @JackDecker63
    @JackDecker63 Před 7 lety +139

    Nice video. Thanks for making it. Just one correction. Here in American, you can drink any kind of alcohol if you're parents are present.
    When I was 12 years old and my father and I were visiting Washington DC, I ordered a mint sundae at a restaurant. I was shocked when the waitress then turned to my father and my father said it was alright. Never before in my life did I ever need parental permission to have a sundae and my father saw my confusion. He then told me that although on the menu the sundae was listed as a "Mint Sundae" and underneath in the description, it explained that the mint was actually creme de menthe. A hard liquor. That's when I learned what creme de menthe was. Oh, and it was mind-blowing fantastic as a mint sundae. Regular mint sundaes were never the same after that.
    Also, when my family traveled during the summer (my father was a professor and my mother was a teacher), we commonly took tours of breweries and wineries. At the end of the tours, the place always had a free taste sampling of all their stuff. Basically small shot glasses of their stuff so you don't get drunk by sampling it all. Every single time, the waiters deferred to my father and he would nod and us kids would get our own shot glasses of the stuff. Honestly, most of the stuff was horrible. I'd take a sip and pass the rest back to my father who would then finish it. Sadly, we never visited a pop factory. LOL
    And at family parties and dinners, it is up to the parents whether or not the kids can drink. When I was a kid, I had been at parties where the chief of police was attending and kids were drinking. Having said that, we were NEVER allowed to get drunk. The adults almost always heavily watered down the drink but for us kids, it was cool to be drinking with the adults without having to handle the harshness of what they were drinking. In fact, one of the fun things that adults did was allow their kids to taste their alcoholic drinks and when the kids reacted negatively to the taste, the adults would laugh.

    • @GetGermanized
      @GetGermanized  Před 7 lety +10

      +Jack Decker Thank you, I didn't know! So interesting! ☺

    • @joshbray5036
      @joshbray5036 Před 7 lety +21

      Pretty interesting Jack. I thought you would have to be over 21 to drink in America and I'm an American! My parents would truthfully probably never allow me to drink because I'm in a Christian family but I didn't know you could drink if given your parents approval. Thanks for enlightening me on that subject.

    • @JackDecker63
      @JackDecker63 Před 7 lety +2

      You're welcomed. Oh, and I was raised in a Christian family myself and one of our best family friends was our minister, as in him hanging out and drinking with my dad. Now we were in the Lutheran denomination and not in an anti-alcohol Christian denomination, such as Southern Baptists, so alcohol consumption wasn't a big deal to us.

    • @amandatucker1712
      @amandatucker1712 Před 7 lety +58

      Josh Bray it's still illegal to drink until your 21 does not matter if parents aprove or not. at least in utah anyway.

    • @amandatucker1712
      @amandatucker1712 Před 7 lety +27

      Jack Decker it's still illegal until your 21 at least in utah even if parents aprove

  • @meacadwell
    @meacadwell Před 5 lety +1

    When someone asks me, "How are you?" I answer, "Hangin' in there. You?"

  • @MrSober4now
    @MrSober4now Před 5 lety +1

    Brian: Hey how are you?
    Jim: Good.
    Or
    Jim: Hey (smile).
    That’s it!

  • @noface6413
    @noface6413 Před 7 lety +75

    If someone says "how are you?" you basically always say "good, thanks" even if you are not feeling well

    • @noface6413
      @noface6413 Před 7 lety

      also why would you visit one of the worst states in the US?

    • @ralife11379
      @ralife11379 Před 7 lety +3

      I've been to Georgia it's awesome. it's poorer than a lot of other states sure but the people are far nicer then in most states.

    • @pyroparagon8945
      @pyroparagon8945 Před 7 lety +1

      frosted memes Georgia is a great state

    • @mindlesswav
      @mindlesswav Před 7 lety +1

      i live in georgia but it is a great place

    • @rrai1999
      @rrai1999 Před 7 lety +1

      What's this Georgia is bad meme?

  • @daltonwillis9758
    @daltonwillis9758 Před 7 lety +84

    Person 1: hey how are u
    Person 2: good what about you (only tells how he actually feels if he is close to the person)
    Person 1: good

    • @a-drewg1716
      @a-drewg1716 Před 7 lety +3

      if you are close it is mainly terrible, good, or still something vague that causes the friend or person close to ask you why you day was like that.

    • @aidenjackson4872
      @aidenjackson4872 Před 7 lety +2

      Hi Byw NO not matter what you say I'm fine doesn't matter who it is ESPECIALLY if you're dying inside lol

    • @charlotteeolsen8397
      @charlotteeolsen8397 Před 7 lety +2

      Hi Byw true

    • @Kman31ca
      @Kman31ca Před 7 lety

      Hi Byw Same in Canada.

  • @racincectnc
    @racincectnc Před 5 lety

    Tax here isn't on each thing you buy, it's on each dollar spent and that tax varies from state to state. For example, in Maryland the sales tax is six cents on the dollar. Tax is also only on non-perishable or non food items, with the exception of restaurants.