@@rinrin4711 America has been independent for almost 250 years, n Australia has been independent for only about 100 years. Not only that but America has English as its primary language bc of Britain and was created as a place meant to welcome immigrants, so they take influence of a lot of different cultures. Australia has less time to develop and didn’t build upon a bunch of other cultures, just Britains.
When Joey asked if the the off camera aussies also called chicken shops 'chookies' they failed in their duty to immediately corroberate any outlandish thing another aussie says to non-aussies. For shame.
If he wants a UK countryside scenery experience, he should come to Tasmania and drive through the bass Highway between Devonport and Launceston. Lots of old colonial farmland through there.
@@kpp28 Umm... completely different experiences... best way I can describe it is you're suggesting a picture that's grey whilst Australia's is green. The UK always has this 'dull' kind of vibe with it's scenery
It isnt common to call them chooks or chookies, but its something I definitely heard growing up. Its a generational thing. Something you would hear more commonly 20-30 years ago.
Milk bar, fish & chip shop, chookies. I've heard a few names growing up for those sorts of places. Always the same thing, iconic hot chips with chicken salt and good burgers. Sometimes fish, scallops and prawns are there too. It was the place everyone got lunch whilst now it's HSP's.
@@clowkey1747 Kinda is. Given that Texas was formed nearly identically to a lot of places in Australia, but just earlier. It's like saying British Southern British to describe somewhere that is clearly not Britain
@@sambros2 haha yep. I was talking more about dangerous wildlife, climate, and some historical parallels. The cultural differences/similarities conversation is fun over beers, but hardly ever fun online.
“Chookies” and “chooky” are real things. Not as common as better known versions of the same slang like bricky, sparky, chippy and the more general “tradie”.
@Paradoxical enigma In Aussie slang, "chippy" is slang for a carpenter (cause wood chips). Translation Guide: * bricky: bricklayer * sparky: electrcian * tradie: a general term for all kinds of tradesmen
Not an Aussie, I've never been and I've lived in the UK all my life, however, I have got dual nationality and from what I've seen and heard. You are right!
Its kinda beautiful, uk sends their "worst" ones out to some distant prison colony and then they proceed to build a better version of their old homeland 😂
@@ItsAweeb Make no mistake though, if it were just brits we'd be not as well off. Big credit to the other free settlers and people immigrating from Germany, Ireland, Scotland, Italy, Greece, later Asian countries such as Vietnam, and of course the traditional owners of the land.
Now I’m remembering an franchise which died out- Chooks fresh n tasty Not sure if it was a different brand or it was owned by Red Rooster but I know the one which use to be in my home town was changed to Red
Irish, British and Aussies all share similar culture. It's obvious why, but it means you can have someone from each and have good craic. Whenever I speak to any, I feel like we're long lost brothers and sisters. It's nice. I gel with Irish the most, because of course, but I have nothing but a good time with any and all.
Connor isn't exactly wrong. When the first settlers first came, they thought they could set up another New England, but they seriously underestimated the dry Australia weather.
Out of 12, my mom is the only American immigrant. 4 stayed on the island, and the other 7 went west and laid down roots in Australia. So trust me when I tell you, Aussies are the most seamless at making up bullshyte about their Country- that you end up looking like such a moron (because you trust your Aussie cousins aren't liars as a kid) when you grow up and tell a random Aussie coworker, "Oh yea, don't you guys call Hot Dogs 'Hotties'?".....Guess what everyone calls hot dogs at my work now just to make fun of me??????
Sausages have many names. Battered sav, cheerio, banger, snag, democracy dish, frankie. And I'm missing a bunch I'm sure. As for the others, I'd suggest starting the phrase and having them finish it.
@@blackjacktrial Only one of those are used to refer to sausages. A sav, a cheerio, and a frank are all specific types of sausage and you wouldn't use them to refer to any sausage, banger is English slang that only really gets used by first generation British immigrants, and a democracy sausage is a sausage sizzle consumed specifically on election day. A sausage is a snag.
Damn the other Aussie dude in the back left Joey out to dry on that one man your supposed to just go along with random shit if it’s being told to non aussies man come on
Australia is like if UK went abit more ahead on the skill tree. Especially in like the wildlife section (how the fuck do you people live with like constant risk of having your ribcage shattered by a kangaroo or something)
Eh Kangaroos don't hit you unless you *really* annoy them. There are a few wildlife parks around (Nowra has one iirc) where you can actually hang out with and pat a group of kangaroos. They're extremely placid and friendly (especially if you have pellets). I did get boxed by one once when i was a toddler, but that's because the people who were interacting with it before me were really riling it up. I was okay.
I mean, they're not bloodthirsty monsters, but they do have a habit of blocking the roads, or just jumping out in front of your car at the last moment.
The stereotype that we get annoyed at being reminded we're descendant from convicts... which is kinda true... because it's all Brits bring up when they talk to an Aussie... and only 20% of the population is actually descendant from convicts...
It's almost like they used to be a British colony
*Prison camp, but I repeat myself.
But contrast that with the US.
...which actually doesn't work because the US actually changed when it used to like immigrants.
😂
US and India look nothing like UK tho
@@rinrin4711 America has been independent for almost 250 years, n Australia has been independent for only about 100 years. Not only that but America has English as its primary language bc of Britain and was created as a place meant to welcome immigrants, so they take influence of a lot of different cultures. Australia has less time to develop and didn’t build upon a bunch of other cultures, just Britains.
After Garnt got married he can no longer complain about Sidney
He LOVES Sydney, both of them
What are you talking about? Marriage is the best time to complain about each other and take it in stride.
When Joey asked if the the off camera aussies also called chicken shops 'chookies' they failed in their duty to immediately corroberate any outlandish thing another aussie says to non-aussies. For shame.
At this point, I think Austslian animals aren't actually that dangerous at and you're all just messing with us.
Could have joined the ranks of "There are no trains in Australia" and "We're not here to fuck spiders."
Drop bears
Also I've heard people call them chookies lol
Yep, was just “chook(s)” for us 😂
If he wants a UK countryside scenery experience, he should come to Tasmania and drive through the bass Highway between Devonport and Launceston. Lots of old colonial farmland through there.
Or he can save himself a flight and the trauma of seeing cousins getting it on in Tasmania...
Enjoy the scenery whilst the queue of cars gets increasingly longer behind a truck until you can hit an overtaking lane
If we brits wanted an English countryside scenery we could just drive a couple of hours to the Cotwolds you know....
@@kpp28 Umm... completely different experiences... best way I can describe it is you're suggesting a picture that's grey whilst Australia's is green.
The UK always has this 'dull' kind of vibe with it's scenery
@@JamesMerlaut That's mighty coming from a barren desert prison colony. Search up Scottish Highlands and you'll see which of us is the dull one.
It isnt common to call them chooks or chookies, but its something I definitely heard growing up. Its a generational thing. Something you would hear more commonly 20-30 years ago.
Milk bar, fish & chip shop, chookies. I've heard a few names growing up for those sorts of places. Always the same thing, iconic hot chips with chicken salt and good burgers. Sometimes fish, scallops and prawns are there too. It was the place everyone got lunch whilst now it's HSP's.
@@Marth667 Pretty sure we had "Charcoal" growing up. Also, if anyone from Adelaide is reading, can you confirm a HSP is actually an AB for you guys
@@NickkChann Wtf is the AB supposed t stand for...
@@JamesMerlaut arab box?? idk never been to adelaide seems like a dead state
we call chickens chooks, but honestly ive never seen those chook shops, like do they just sell chicken or is it like chicken treat
Aussies are just chilled out Brits
I mean if Connor really wanted to annoy them he'd just call it British Texas.
I mean, that’s not a COMPLETELY incorrect comparison
@@clowkey1747 Kinda is. Given that Texas was formed nearly identically to a lot of places in Australia, but just earlier. It's like saying British Southern British to describe somewhere that is clearly not Britain
It's more British South. QLD and WA are your Texorida surrogates, whilst NSW/VIC are British Cali.
@@clowkey1747 we don't like religion or guns here
@@sambros2 haha yep. I was talking more about dangerous wildlife, climate, and some historical parallels.
The cultural differences/similarities conversation is fun over beers, but hardly ever fun online.
0:21 go into Sydney. *insert joke here
Lol
“Chookies” and “chooky” are real things. Not as common as better known versions of the same slang like bricky, sparky, chippy and the more general “tradie”.
Australian English is wild
@Paradoxical enigma In Aussie slang, "chippy" is slang for a carpenter (cause wood chips).
Translation Guide:
* bricky: bricklayer
* sparky: electrcian
* tradie: a general term for all kinds of tradesmen
Australia is to UK like Austria is to Germany.
A lot of things are different but the culture has a lot of similarities.
I wonder why connor, I wonder why...
Conner describing a country flowchart:
Is it like the UK---------- Yes ------- Good country
\ no------- its USA
We are the better UK >:((
Convicts, rise up!
Not an Aussie, I've never been and I've lived in the UK all my life, however, I have got dual nationality and from what I've seen and heard. You are right!
hahaha
Most successful convict country ever*
Don't think we will see that accolade be usurped for awhile.
Its kinda beautiful, uk sends their "worst" ones out to some distant prison colony and then they proceed to build a better version of their old homeland 😂
@@ItsAweeb Make no mistake though, if it were just brits we'd be not as well off. Big credit to the other free settlers and people immigrating from Germany, Ireland, Scotland, Italy, Greece, later Asian countries such as Vietnam, and of course the traditional owners of the land.
Only a British person would complain about not having anything to complain about lol.
This is the last thing I remember before falling asleep
Similar experience with a lotta those streams
Trash taste be doing the old imperial tour, I wonder if they actually work for the queen and it's all a plan to revive the empire
What Connor is saying to Aussies is almost exactly like what Americans say to Canadians
But fundamentally Canada is really different from America in so many ways.
@@ddvsgd9508 ya but comparatively not really, compared to other countries Canada is so incredibly similar
Thanks for adding the source. Couldn't find it in previous clip :P
Man, Joey and Garnt looks so drippy in this video. Then there's Connor with the same Trash Taste shirt he always wears.
mouse did say he owns like 1 shirt
@@Shauny7488 True XD
let's gooo we love some UK AUS unity moments
France wants to know your location
@@ErikPT unexpected geopolitics joke
Connor canceled any% speedrun
I've never called them chookies but I will now 😂
Dunno about chookies, but they're definitely chooks
Now I’m remembering an franchise which died out- Chooks fresh n tasty
Not sure if it was a different brand or it was owned by Red Rooster but I know the one which use to be in my home town was changed to Red
Bloody hell Connor stop giving the internet more reasons to meme on us XD
and then the Australian among them listed Ireland when Connor was talking about places in the UK.
Should come to Darwin and see how barren and boring it looks lmao.
If they do Conner and Garnt need to be warned to pack only winter clothes and just throw out any summer clothes... right?...
@@JamesMerlaut that's right it's absolutely freezing up here. Getting colder just thinking about it brr
Connor thinks stores in Australia looks sketchy af lol
Connor is correct about Sydney at least. And the weather in Sydney has been just as bad as the UK for the past few months.
Where can you view this in full ?
They're SO HD. OMG. LOL
"Looks like the UK." On GeoGuessr the streets and houses look much more like America (if they would drive on the left and use kilometers).
Can someone please tell me this whole vod is being uploaded to CZcams
It'll HAVE to be; I guess we just wait a week for it to appear on After Dark
Australia is what happens when Brits experience hot weather
Irish, British and Aussies all share similar culture. It's obvious why, but it means you can have someone from each and have good craic. Whenever I speak to any, I feel like we're long lost brothers and sisters. It's nice. I gel with Irish the most, because of course, but I have nothing but a good time with any and all.
Connor isn't exactly wrong. When the first settlers first came, they thought they could set up another New England, but they seriously underestimated the dry Australia weather.
So... Garnt lives Sydney.
Go figure.
Did they get new cameras? The video looks smoother now
They are using someone else's studio, the TT CAMERAS and stuff were? /are? still lost by Air Lingus when they traveled to LA.
Annoyed
hehe
where can i watch this?
The vod is still on the twitch channel. I assume it'll be there until it's been edited and released on CZcams.
Out of 12, my mom is the only American immigrant. 4 stayed on the island, and the other 7 went west and laid down roots in Australia.
So trust me when I tell you, Aussies are the most seamless at making up bullshyte about their Country- that you end up looking like such a moron (because you trust your Aussie cousins aren't liars as a kid) when you grow up and tell a random Aussie coworker, "Oh yea, don't you guys call Hot Dogs 'Hotties'?".....Guess what everyone calls hot dogs at my work now just to make fun of me??????
Here's a quick quiz for ya then; what are the Aussie names for these things
- Sausage
- Driftwood in a river
- A tough situation
Sausages have many names. Battered sav, cheerio, banger, snag, democracy dish, frankie. And I'm missing a bunch I'm sure.
As for the others, I'd suggest starting the phrase and having them finish it.
@@JamesMerlaut A Snag, Shit in a creek, and up shit Creek.
@@blackjacktrial ... *sigh*... the answer is snag... all 3 of them... you failed...
"Want a snag?"
"I just hit a snag"
"I'm in a bit of a snag"
@@blackjacktrial Only one of those are used to refer to sausages. A sav, a cheerio, and a frank are all specific types of sausage and you wouldn't use them to refer to any sausage, banger is English slang that only really gets used by first generation British immigrants, and a democracy sausage is a sausage sizzle consumed specifically on election day. A sausage is a snag.
Damn the other Aussie dude in the back left Joey out to dry on that one man your supposed to just go along with random shit if it’s being told to non aussies man come on
*sigh* They don't have something to complain about and it bothers them.
Where is this from
Look at the description
Aussies are just British texans.
Is this an after dark stream?
Aussie edition, yes.
it's a twitch only stream
@@djunior874 actually, it's on CZcams now, on the After Dark channel.
Engrish
Annoy*
Australia is like if UK went abit more ahead on the skill tree. Especially in like the wildlife section (how the fuck do you people live with like constant risk of having your ribcage shattered by a kangaroo or something)
I mean its kinda like expecting to see a Bear in LA. Its depends where you live lmao
@@invertedcrayon There aren't giant spiders in LA homie ima take my chances with the homeless crack addicts
Eh Kangaroos don't hit you unless you *really* annoy them. There are a few wildlife parks around (Nowra has one iirc) where you can actually hang out with and pat a group of kangaroos. They're extremely placid and friendly (especially if you have pellets).
I did get boxed by one once when i was a toddler, but that's because the people who were interacting with it before me were really riling it up. I was okay.
I mean, they're not bloodthirsty monsters, but they do have a habit of blocking the roads, or just jumping out in front of your car at the last moment.
@@invertedcrayon Plus unlike LA, there's a lot less chance of someone open carrying
Why would this compliment annoy them?
The stereotype that we get annoyed at being reminded we're descendant from convicts... which is kinda true... because it's all Brits bring up when they talk to an Aussie... and only 20% of the population is actually descendant from convicts...
Plus it's less a compliment and more patronising. The entire sentence runs on the premise of 'wow you guys should be proud you're like us'.
@@hermansnazzledorf2950 Why is that a bad thing.
I think it looks more like the US than the UK
In many ways
It's often said that Australia's halfway between plus a bit of local flavour. We get all the best of both worlds and none of the worst.
@@201bio truth.
Melbourne maybe. Sydney feels very British. That’s my perspective as an American tho
Next time they should come down to Melbourne, Sydney's great and has a few Landmarks, but Melbourne is just all-rounder
Agreed and more importantly... we can go see them am I right? 😂😂😂