TWO DOSAS | Omeleto

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  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2017
  • A geek takes his date to the most authentic Indian restaurant in the city.
    TWO DOSAS is used with permission from Sarmad Masud. Learn more at / constantprods .
    Pavan -- a teacher in London who grew up in England -- takes fellow educator Chloe on a date. Pavan aims to impress "English rose" Chloe by taking her to the most authentic Indian restaurant in the city and eventually winning her over with a confident "heart on the sleeve, sleeve in her face" approach to romance.
    But then Chloe upend Pavan's expectations, ordering an "authentic" Indian dish off-menu, demonstrating a rapport with the restaurant staff by speaking Hindi and eventually revealing to Pavan her past romance with another Indian man, who she backpacked with through India.
    Pavan -- who ordered the somewhat cliched dosas at the restaurant -- becomes insecure, questioning his own authenticity as an Indian when faced with Chloe's obvious fluency with his supposedly "native" culture. As the night's misadventures continue, Pavan realizes he must either accept himself as he is, or spend the evening trying to keep up in a race he may not win.
    Directed by Sarmad Masud, and written by Masud and Nikesh Shukla, this charming, nimble British short is both a romantic and social comedy that upturns notions about cultural authenticity while entertaining with a deft cocktail of witty writing, fluid camerawork and endearing performances.
    What works so well in the script is how it takes questions about ethnicity, authenticity and even post-colonialism and integrates them beautifully into the emotional fabric of the short.
    Pavan assumes his "otherness" as a British-born South Asian man gives him an advantage with Chloe, but the storytelling delightfully unravels this assumption about Pavan, and about Chloe as well. The film plays her enthusiasm for Indian culture as both genuine, and perhaps gently questioning the idea of the "cultural tourist." But despite the potential weightiness of topics like race and colonialism, there's no heavy-handedness in the wonderfully jazz-like dialogue or the effervescent comic timing of the film and actors.
    Actor Himish Patel -- now appearing in feature film YESTERDAY -- anchors the film with a great turn as Pavan, who balances awkwardness, charm, and bashful flickers of both vulnerability and confidence in such a way to make Hugh Grant jealous. With each specific beat, he adroitly steers the femotional arc of TWO DOSAS into its final movement towards realization and acceptance. It's not that he's not Indian enough, he realizes -- it's that he and Chloe aren't a good fit. And in the end, he just needs a girl who loves dosas as much as he does.
  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 4K

  • @BadLeoG
    @BadLeoG Před 6 lety +8616

    For those of you saying that she didnt speak "perfect" Hindi. That's because the guy has no idea what perfect hindi sounds like. He can't speak it!

    • @qattah
      @qattah Před 4 lety +189

      Excellent point...

    • @derpatron4732
      @derpatron4732 Před 4 lety +64

      Big brain

    • @chris_louis
      @chris_louis Před 4 lety +15

      😂😅,

    • @manaqbhanjanbarpanda272
      @manaqbhanjanbarpanda272 Před 4 lety +19

      Sounds like Google translate.

    • @janami-dharmam
      @janami-dharmam Před 4 lety +143

      There is nothing like perfect Hindi. It varies every 10 km east or west, north or south. And when I speak, people do not even suspect that I am speaking the national language!!

  • @madd9820
    @madd9820 Před 4 lety +5902

    Guys, it's not necessarily that he's ashamed of his Indian heritage, he probably just hasn't been taught it by his family.
    Notice he keeps going back to the idea of table manners. It's one of them post - colonial things. He's never gonna be fully accepted as English coz he's brown but he's never gonna be fully accepted as Indian coz he's a coconut.

    • @tchoythao1730
      @tchoythao1730 Před 4 lety +206

      But like carlton said, being Indian isn't who he's trying to be, it's who he is

    • @priyambajpai1794
      @priyambajpai1794 Před 4 lety +114

      To your last line about the guy, in India there is a Hindi proverb to describe this guy.
      "dhobhi ka ghadha, na ghar ka- na ghaat ka"
      😊

    • @rightlibertarian8355
      @rightlibertarian8355 Před 4 lety +33

      India isn't a race.

    • @mouthpiece200
      @mouthpiece200 Před 4 lety +49

      @@rightlibertarian8355 Indian is very closely associated with race. Race and nationality are often closely intertwined.

    • @stock2896
      @stock2896 Před 4 lety +51

      @@mouthpiece200 Have you ever been to India? You speak like if you have only seen brown Indians.

  • @value8035
    @value8035 Před 3 lety +858

    "A coconut. - skin is brown and everything else is white "
    -Romesh Ranganathan

    • @Ahmed-ii7up
      @Ahmed-ii7up Před 3 lety +12

      Hahahahahahha that is great! I am going to use that one.

    • @kashishjainwriter7539
      @kashishjainwriter7539 Před 3 lety +4

      true !!!

    • @iamisaid2295
      @iamisaid2295 Před 3 lety +28

      they use the same slur for Asians, only with 'banana'.

    • @Alsatiagent
      @Alsatiagent Před 3 lety +6

      @@iamisaid2295 Apples and Oreo cookies.

    • @CrxyLinda
      @CrxyLinda Před 3 lety +1

      @@iamisaid2295 really a banana? My best yet is a twinkie... conveniently also one of my fav snacks... >_> 😆🤣😂😹😆

  • @jayabhaskardadi6836
    @jayabhaskardadi6836 Před 3 lety +426

    When she is explaining the old indian men sitting style, I was in that exact style by then. took me by surprise. And when the indian music started, i started tapping my fingers to the beat only to find the restaurant owner tapping the exact same way.
    Are we all Indians just the same? Existential crisis.

  • @canterlevi
    @canterlevi Před 4 lety +4881

    I like how the friends were ‘on the date with him’ as he explained what happened.

    • @cassandraharris442
      @cassandraharris442 Před 4 lety +63

      Yeah, that was adorable

    • @miguellowe2407
      @miguellowe2407 Před 4 lety +42

      Best part of the whole thing.

    • @HaleyMary
      @HaleyMary Před 4 lety +69

      I agree. Their commentary really brought a lot of humor to the skit.

    • @moonykash
      @moonykash Před 4 lety +15

      It's a sort of style I've noticed more in British vids... It's nice 👍

    • @grovergoffstein3056
      @grovergoffstein3056 Před 3 lety +5

      I want to like it but your at 666 likes sooo

  • @thephilosopher4719
    @thephilosopher4719 Před 6 lety +3867

    It would be HILARIOUS if you can simply go sit down, watch your friend having his / her first date and simply enjoy your drink and comment like his two friends! LOL

    • @dominik2079
      @dominik2079 Před 6 lety +3

      Ha

    • @ashton1138
      @ashton1138 Před 6 lety +31

      Im pretty sure those guys were actually in his head

    • @DexiduousRose
      @DexiduousRose Před 6 lety +3

      The Philosopher
      It'd be weird, uncomfortable and unnecessary

    • @Vee_Macdonald84
      @Vee_Macdonald84 Před 6 lety +12

      The Philosopher I much prefer to watch people than interact with them, lol

    • @Vee_Macdonald84
      @Vee_Macdonald84 Před 6 lety +2

      Mandar Powale oh is that what a wallflower is? 🤔

  • @anoushkaprashanth2063
    @anoushkaprashanth2063 Před 4 lety +1200

    oof. this addresses some of the issues that the Indian diaspora faces really well. what was especially relatable at least for me is how he views india--sense of wanting to reject colonialism + return to motherland kinda thing but also being fundamentally separated from india and indian culture because of his upbringing. i love how they portray this as a valid conflict + identity

    • @DS_M
      @DS_M Před 3 lety +12

      If you enjoy this, try giving A house for Mr. Biswas a read!

    • @TigerPrawn_
      @TigerPrawn_ Před 3 lety +9

      I saw at the end it was written by Nikesh Shukla, and I went "ahhh", he writes a lot about this kind of stuff. Love him ♥

    • @ravenestrella2310
      @ravenestrella2310 Před 3 lety +19

      I wondered about this! I'm a quarter Mexican (my grandmother's full blooded), living in a family in which our Mexican culture is sadly very much dying out, in large part due to the intense racism my grandmother and her children (my mom included) faced during a time of intense racism and segregation in 1960s California. I've been trying to reclaim my own Mexican heritage, and could very much relate to the protagonist's struggle, with trying to embrace a culture that's such a deep part of my heritage, while being so far removed from it due to my upbringing. It's really interesting seeing just how relatable the struggle is, even when our two cultures are so different from one another's!

    • @anoushkaprashanth2063
      @anoushkaprashanth2063 Před 3 lety +5

      @@ravenestrella2310 your story is so interesting! it saddens me to hear that your family had to go through so much, and has lost some of their heritage because of racism :(( it's so inspiring that you are trying to reclaim your identity again

    • @tomgreene7942
      @tomgreene7942 Před 3 lety +6

      @@ravenestrella2310 I too am 1/4 Hispanic, and my children 5/8th. I don't know if my grandparents felt it like yours, but I asked my mother if she ever felt racism against her. She said no. Perhaps she was shielded because she was incredibly beautiful. My Father said yes, once. When he was engaged to her, a relative said, "well you know she's not like us" and he answered "so?" That was it. But I do know that my grandparents never taught my mother Spanish. They just spoke it amongst themselves and their siblings, kind of a secret language, my wife too, when with her cousins. Study as I might, I can't get to fluent understanding.

  • @katdareshruti
    @katdareshruti Před 3 lety +683

    Vinay must have really impressed her with his ways. He has practically converted her to Indian, LOL.

    • @yoonji1369
      @yoonji1369 Před 3 lety

      😂

    • @VinayGill
      @VinayGill Před 3 lety +41

      What can I say…

    • @taha7538
      @taha7538 Před 3 lety +16

      @lisa gaye this comment makes no sense it has nothing to do with “being influenced” and I don’t get why your saying it as something bad yo ur missing the whole point of this video

    • @vinodxxx1581
      @vinodxxx1581 Před 2 lety +4

      Yeah!! 8 inches long impression. 🤣

    • @vishaka2921
      @vishaka2921 Před 2 lety

      😂 correct

  • @distortilla
    @distortilla Před 6 lety +4044

    She outbrowned him

    • @harrymlondobozi8605
      @harrymlondobozi8605 Před 6 lety +66

      More like he beat her at being a white snob, no?

    • @M1710100
      @M1710100 Před 6 lety +26

      I was actually quite annoyed by the girl, she was too flipped

    • @korrythatsme1356
      @korrythatsme1356 Před 5 lety

      Kiran Ghodke funny

    • @FrostSoul-qs6kq
      @FrostSoul-qs6kq Před 4 lety +12

      @@harrymlondobozi8605 nah XD gotta agree with Kiran XD she definitly out browned the dude XD he was more like the timid white girl in this shot movie XD

    • @drsamarpitadhar4982
      @drsamarpitadhar4982 Před 4 lety +6

      Well you don't need to be brown to be an Indian. I am very fair and Indian too

  • @nikkitytom
    @nikkitytom Před 6 lety +1745

    Had to have a bit of a chuckle. My dear husband was a Punjabi ... very well educated and cosmopolitan. I'm a Canadian with a British background. But I loved Indian culture which endeared me to his family but did cause the occasional bit of concern from him. I had my nose pierced while he was on a business trip. When he came home and saw it he said ..."If I would have wanted a villager, I would have chosen one ...". There was a moment of silence before we both exploded with laughter. Forty years later and now widowed, the nose ring is still in situ. 🙏

    • @annabelgrace1267
      @annabelgrace1267 Před 6 lety +88

      I am sorry for your loss. I hope that everything is okay for you and that the years that you have on this earth will be blessed. Always remember Jesus loves you. If ever you fear, go to HIM. Even if you are lonely, HE will comfort you. Take care, GOD bless.

    • @nimblehuman
      @nimblehuman Před 5 lety +110

      My dad is Punjabi too, I can see him calling a nose ring "paindoo". My mom (from Alabama) wore one once in an old picture I saw, but I think it was a clip-on. She wore it with a sari. I thought it looked beautiful.
      Your hubby is no doubt somewhere smiling at you still wearing that nose ring. Excuse me now while I dry my eyes.

    • @ThatControlUser
      @ThatControlUser Před 5 lety +73

      @@annabelgrace1267 damn people can bring religion every frickin where

    • @annabelgrace1267
      @annabelgrace1267 Před 5 lety +17

      @@ThatControlUser
      So? If I was promoting Hinduism or Sikhism, I am sure you would not mind. Bottom line is, youtube is not restricted to non believers.

    • @annabelgrace1267
      @annabelgrace1267 Před 5 lety +14

      @@ThatControlUser
      Besides, she lost her husband after 40 years. Jesus brings comfort.

  • @BangMaster96
    @BangMaster96 Před 4 lety +1217

    I've met several white girls who know way more about India than I've ever heard of. Some of them talk about their travels to India, visiting some ancient voodoo places, going out on ferries in Kerala, meeting some gurus and doing yoga in their ashram, then they talk about Indian food, and I'm just sitting their thinking "wtf is going on"

  • @taleswithtrisha5939
    @taleswithtrisha5939 Před 3 lety +1761

    The weirdest thing about this was that he used a FORK to eat DOSA.

    • @maximondu2582
      @maximondu2582 Před 3 lety +47

      I know people who eat pav bhaji with a fork and spoon :-/

    • @KKJ11111
      @KKJ11111 Před 3 lety +20

      @@maximondu2582 😳

    • @wei8680
      @wei8680 Před 3 lety +28

      I have indian friends who use fork to eat dosa...not all, but some of them.

    • @treatoplease3479
      @treatoplease3479 Před 3 lety +8

      Eh you technically can. I use it, just fold over, cut and eat! Its clean.
      But yeah most of else I eat with hands.

    • @lew8943
      @lew8943 Před 3 lety +7

      @devaprabha Ganguly the point was that the main character doesn’t speak it, it’s a joke.

  • @RatherPratty
    @RatherPratty Před 5 lety +4835

    “I speak two languages, my coloniser’s better than my mother’s.” - Unknown

    • @Dog.soldier1950
      @Dog.soldier1950 Před 5 lety +60

      Pratyaksha Singh keep in mind that India was only a geographical term until the British arrived with the idea of a nation-State, railroads, telegraph, civic administration etc

    • @tulikasarkar1588
      @tulikasarkar1588 Před 4 lety +156

      @@Dog.soldier1950 what are you smoking?

    • @Lemuria1993
      @Lemuria1993 Před 4 lety +6

      AH! COLONISED!

    • @domino6434
      @domino6434 Před 4 lety +50

      @@thesocialmisfit he never said they brought progress to india he said that india wasnt a nation till the british came. Like you said it yourself it was a bunch of small kingdoms fighting against each other you literally confirmed what he said you two literally agree on the statement yall just gotta learn how to read

    • @colinmurphy2214
      @colinmurphy2214 Před 4 lety +5

      Ireland

  • @johankaruyan5536
    @johankaruyan5536 Před 4 lety +2918

    OMG he's the guy who wrote 'hey dude'
    He's a musical genius
    I didn't know he acted in a movie

  • @vinodkumarakula6807
    @vinodkumarakula6807 Před 3 lety +444

    Boy : I am gonna show her some nice indian taste
    Girl : *UNO reverse card

  • @MichaelIZKOOL
    @MichaelIZKOOL Před rokem +115

    I think this is a nice example about how race doesn't really define you. You are just who you are, and that's that. Don't judge anyone by how they look, just get to know them and see if your personalities mesh.

    • @wylser
      @wylser Před 9 měsíci +7

      Well said. Just wish more people had your mindset.

    • @mikochild2
      @mikochild2 Před 7 měsíci +3

      But his race absolutely plays a part in his identity and interactions with others. We just saw an example of that in the video. And it's shoved in your face most when you are the only person of your race within a group.
      You're absolutely right in that you should get to know people because people are all different. You can't always make assumptions based on race, although it's not entirely a bad thing to do so. Except when people come from melting pots, you can generally safely assume a lot about their culture and upbringing based on race. That's not prejudice or bias or any other ugly word. Culture is generally passed by family. Family is generally made up mostly of one race.
      You are not fully correct to say race doesn't define you. Or maybe correct but didn't mention the part that I think is relevant here which is:
      Race doesn't completely define you, but it is absolutely part of the definition just as a myriad of other elements are part of the definition as well. And until we end up like in some sci-fi novels as one mixed race or interact regularly with aliens or something, that will likely continue to be the case.
      That's my thought anyway.

    • @girldocode8408
      @girldocode8408 Před 7 měsíci

      well said

    • @AK-sm6tv
      @AK-sm6tv Před 5 měsíci

      I also think it is important as humans (social beings) to be open minded to different cultures and experiences. You’ll never know if something is your favourite thing if you haven’t tried it.

  • @nishantaadi
    @nishantaadi Před 6 lety +2274

    He is more British than British.
    She is more Indian than Indian...

    • @joshyman221
      @joshyman221 Před 4 lety +52

      He is british...

    • @joshyman221
      @joshyman221 Před 4 lety +45

      @Jerusrealm He isn't white, but how is that relevant?

    • @joshyman221
      @joshyman221 Před 4 lety +86

      @Jerusrealm That's not how nationalities work. Sorry to inform you :) have a nice day

    • @anoushkahook2745
      @anoushkahook2745 Před 4 lety +27

      @Jerusrealm being British is your nationality not your ethnicity!

    • @anoushkahook2745
      @anoushkahook2745 Před 4 lety +37

      Jerusrealm yes they can, if you are born and raised in Britain and/or hold a British citizenship then you are British

  • @indy200
    @indy200 Před 6 lety +2168

    I think a lot of people are not getting the story behind this movie (especially the blonde girl and the Indians in the comments section).
    This guy has lived all his life in England and may be has never seen India. That is also why at the beginning no faces are shown, but only the voices. When you hear them, you could not make out who is Indian or who is English. From the voices everyone is an English man.
    A lot of people are expecting him to be Indian, even though his parents (like many parents who raise their children abroad) try to bring the children up according to the best local manners. So they won't teach them Hindi or the respective other language from India, not show them any cultural things from India, etc. In the end the children are more English sometimes than the English people themselves, eating Dosas with fork and knife for example.
    So this girl, like the people in the comment section, think that this guy needs to be somehow Indian, which does not need to be be, as he is a citizen of England and has not much connection to India, apart from the fact that his parents are Indian.
    This video is somehow showing the difficulty, especially second generation Indians abroad are facing. On the one side, their parents have not thought them anything about India (as a lot of people did not really like India when they left it, because of all the hardships they went through), on the other side the local population cannot look around the skin colour/ ethnicity of the second generation person, even though he/ she might not even know India. And therefore the local English Person might think that this "Indian" guy is an expert on India, when they themselves (the English, like in this video) know more about India then the so called "Indian" guy.

    • @DeeEfSea
      @DeeEfSea Před 6 lety +104

      indy200 yeh this simple premise has gone over a lot of the viewers heads to be honest. I'm a 3rd generation British Indian and can relate very much to this story.

    • @rebeccaramirez563
      @rebeccaramirez563 Před 6 lety +89

      This is what happened in my family. My grandparents are from Mexico but never taught their children the culture or the language. So I am the second generation of American Ramirez that feels left out of a culture that should have been passed down. But I know my grandparents meant best intention so their kids could have a life without discrimination. I am currently learning Spanish, Banda, songs, cuisine, anything I can get my hands on to feel like part of the Mexican heritage I have.

    • @anonymousgamerfifa12
      @anonymousgamerfifa12 Před 6 lety +38

      Exactly! Stop expecting us to be India experts just because we "look" indian.

    • @christianleiva3584
      @christianleiva3584 Před 5 lety +7

      @@rebeccaramirez563 Linda reflexión, Rebecca, creo que asi fue, tus abuelitos quisieron lo mejor para ti, que bueno que por cuenta propia ahora busques la cultura de tus abuelos. Mas adente, porfa cuenta como te va con eso. suerte.

    • @user-br3bo2ez5q
      @user-br3bo2ez5q Před 5 lety +27

      its weird how this also happens in here within india or so i feel because as the english always preached their culture to be superior.. some people here accept it now, not their fault entirely much to do with the inferiority complex, but that is what i kind of feel is happening.
      Children here are fluent in english with an american accent(7 year olds??!), ive seen people avoiding local places, traditions, customs, even religion i mean be an atheist i am no one to tell im stuck trying to comprehend the religion stuff myself i got no clue as well. that is not what makes me sad though. times changes and people evolve for better. i got no problem with children communicating in an american accent already that makes me happy honestly i just wish they were as motivated and encourage to talk and read hindi literature too. i do not condemn people who dont keep up with the old customs or tradition, religion or practices of sorts, they have got to be left behind sooner or later, i just wish for them to not replace them with english practices with the conscious/unconscious thought process that they are being forward and avoid what entangled in them. that just puts them in an uncomfortable position where they live like a slave in their own country, where its painful and hard for them to connect to fellowmen.. they dont have to.. and India's so huge and diverse anyway there's ALWAYS going to be people you just can't communicate with and people who would genuinely disgust you.. but y'know you dont have to run away from yourself to feel dignified
      i could go on but i feel ive typed enough woah yeah good day!

  • @veggiesaremurder
    @veggiesaremurder Před 3 lety +250

    I love this insight into the secret dating world of men. There's a definite push and pull between "just be yourself" and "do whatever you can to impress her". It must be really hard. I liked how the protagonist learned that he's a mix of two cultures and that trying to be something he's not isn't the way to happiness, but rather accepting his whole self is.

    • @Kevin-jz9bg
      @Kevin-jz9bg Před 3 lety +12

      omg 10000% true
      he gets painfully self-aware around her, like he can't totally be himself, but he keeps trying (and failing) to cover up for his not knowing good Hindi.

    • @xcoder1122
      @xcoder1122 Před 11 měsíci +3

      "Do whatever you can to impress her" is usually he door opener but unless you can "just be yourself", this door won't stay open for long.

    • @amandatyler4324
      @amandatyler4324 Před 5 měsíci

      Same for women! At least below average looking ones, like me

  • @sandeepchoudhury189
    @sandeepchoudhury189 Před 3 lety +194

    Just after he kissed her, is the moment she realizes that she needs a paan! Subtle humor!

    • @ChrisM-qo1jc
      @ChrisM-qo1jc Před 3 lety +2

      Can u explain the joke? I dont know what a paan is

    • @minjeonglee3953
      @minjeonglee3953 Před 3 lety +7

      @@ChrisM-qo1jc paan is a type of chewable leaf eaten throughout Southeast Asia. I’m half desi but I’ve never tried it before.

    • @singhkamaldeep90
      @singhkamaldeep90 Před 3 lety +37

      @@ChrisM-qo1jc its a flavor full leaves and spices. Used as mouth freshener

    • @The-Celestial
      @The-Celestial Před 3 lety +7

      @@singhkamaldeep90 oh my lord now I get the reference!

    • @KKJ11111
      @KKJ11111 Před 3 lety +1

      @@minjeonglee3953 bro it's eaten everywhere in India...

  • @GabijaS18
    @GabijaS18 Před 4 lety +1481

    This is the most awkward date I’ve ever witnessed

  • @kanishk2643
    @kanishk2643 Před 4 lety +1854

    She not only outbrowned him, but also me.
    And I was born, raised and still live in India.

    • @mr.nobody4994
      @mr.nobody4994 Před 4 lety +5

      :))

    • @watchthemtilt8927
      @watchthemtilt8927 Před 4 lety +104

      Born raised in India, live the USA, and she didn't even come close. If she really did out brown you then, well you're lying. If you haven't had pan, if you've never eaten dosa with your hands, idk man where do you live and do you ever go out? Do you have friends? Unless you're holed up in your house or are like ten years old this woman couldn't have "out browned" you.

    • @noname13years62
      @noname13years62 Před 4 lety +55

      @@watchthemtilt8927 I have never had pan before, it's not for teenagers like me but I have had dosas with my hands of course , I will never eat a dosa with knife and forks , even the idea seems hilarious! .

    • @saxenachetan1989
      @saxenachetan1989 Před 4 lety +61

      South Delhi mein rehta hai kya Bhai?

    • @48677
      @48677 Před 4 lety +7

      @@saxenachetan1989 Lol 😂

  • @popatkapopat
    @popatkapopat Před 3 lety +59

    The most accurate thing about this is the restaurant manager.

  • @FirstWifeStarterPack
    @FirstWifeStarterPack Před 4 lety +183

    "I'm not awkward, I'm a social chameleon. I can adapt and fit in anywhere, with anyone."
    I'm pretty sure I've said this before too.
    And yes, I am awkward.

  • @EtceteraTrademark
    @EtceteraTrademark Před 6 lety +759

    I absolutely love the way they included the two friends into the conversation.

  • @victorcabanelas
    @victorcabanelas Před 5 lety +682

    Loved the waiter! When I was a kid, one of my grandads used to take me to a restaurant and the waiter'd throw everything at the table with that same desdain. Ohh, nostalgia...
    Great film!!

  • @pjesf
    @pjesf Před 4 lety +57

    This was such a clever storyline to begin with but then to have his office mates on the "sidelines" of the date was a marvelous touch. Loved it‼️

  • @lakeishameriez2061
    @lakeishameriez2061 Před 4 lety +43

    "She knocked the brown right outta me" I felt for him lmao

  • @vaibhav3946
    @vaibhav3946 Před 4 lety +824

    only 43% indians speak hindi 90% indians never eat curry or naan everyday. what you get in indian restaurant is different food.

    • @teja7976
      @teja7976 Před 3 lety +65

      90% Indians don't eat naan everyday, agreed. But curry? I wonder if there are any Indian dishes that don't involve curries.

    • @sushruthkashyap
      @sushruthkashyap Před 3 lety +57

      @@teja7976 in india curry is gravy. And no one eats gravy everyday!

    • @teja7976
      @teja7976 Před 3 lety +70

      @@sushruthkashyap Most Indians have chaval and/or rotis at least once a day. And they do have curries coz no one has rotis or chaval alone. So what part of India doesn't have curries everyday?

    • @sushruthkashyap
      @sushruthkashyap Před 3 lety +30

      @@teja7976 south and northeast. Wt do u define a curry wt should it be like to call it curry. Currai is tamil word thts added in english dictionary as curry for everything that has spices.

    • @teja7976
      @teja7976 Před 3 lety +28

      @@sushruthkashyap I don't know about the northeast because I've never been there. But I am from the south(Andhra) and I've studied in Chennai and had homemade food or hostel food for most of my life. Not a single day went by without rice or roti. And every single meal had an accompanying curry(or koora as we call it in telugu). The only exceptions being Biryani and lemon rice. In fact, the standard reply to 'what did you have for lunch' is the curry that you had that day.

  • @CuriousGoodsJessica
    @CuriousGoodsJessica Před 5 lety +266

    This was filmed in a cool way, with his buddies commenting like they were there part of the time, very entertaining! And makes me so glad I'm not single, dating looks really rough

    • @jondunmore4268
      @jondunmore4268 Před 3 lety +7

      I know. I kept thinking that was cool too. The way the director kept them around, to remind us that all this was a tale told to his two bros. And of course, if he's talking to them, they're going to talk back, and keeping them in the frame meant it didn't get confusing if we just heard voiceover. Very cool device.

    • @Cougelly1999
      @Cougelly1999 Před rokem +1

      Reminds me of the buddies in "Shaun of the Dead"!

  • @gutspraygore
    @gutspraygore Před 11 měsíci +9

    This was really well done.
    From a story perspective it's so on point. I am half Korean and half white, but I grew up in Korea. When I came to the US, all of the Korean people I met would ask me if I can use chopsticks or recommended that I not eat certain foods that I particularly liked. It never mattered that I told them I'm literally FROM Korea.
    I am talking about a time back in the early 90's, though. Things have changed.
    However, to this day, many Koreans treat me as if I have never stepped foot outside of the US... but when they do that, I know it's because it's the opposite that is true. They live in a bubble.

  • @RAZR_Channel
    @RAZR_Channel Před 3 lety +29

    5:55 : I love the way she hangs her head as she remembers... Well Done!

  • @willclose2311
    @willclose2311 Před 4 lety +589

    Nobody realizes he was in that new beatles movie?

    • @CorrosiveColin
      @CorrosiveColin Před 4 lety +39

      In all fairness most of the comment are 2 years old.

    • @yannominno
      @yannominno Před 4 lety +1

      @Johannes then why are you asking the question?

    • @DarkDoughnutsVids
      @DarkDoughnutsVids Před 4 lety +22

      Beatles? Who're they?

    • @GirishKumarBhat
      @GirishKumarBhat Před 4 lety +4

      Now he is in the next Christopher Nolan film :|

    • @swftwlly
      @swftwlly Před 4 lety +10

      @@DarkDoughnutsVids Relax, have a Coke and a cigarette.

  • @KAMU13
    @KAMU13 Před 4 lety +35

    Reminds me of my wife, who is an American. She once challenged an Indian restaurant manager in Washington D.C. for messing up her Chicken Handi with Chicken Kadai.
    The look on the manager's face after she explained the difference between Handi and Kadai was spellbinding. Needless to say the restaurant was really apologetic and made her a fresh Chicken Handi after inviting her in the kitchen. :D

  • @AH-tu3km
    @AH-tu3km Před 3 lety +240

    Y'all, we have an unreliable narrator. This whole thing is the story from his perspective, not necessarily what happened. Depending on what he's feeling, remembering, or leaving out because he doesn't want to tell his buddies, we get a skewed image of the girl, the unfamiliar places she took him, people she introduced him to, and food she had him try. (Sorry for that last run on sentence). I'm not the writer or anything but that's what I'm seeing through the cinematography and I think it's a nice layer to the story that people are missing.

    • @shonshon247
      @shonshon247 Před 2 lety +5

      Nice point.

    • @Ingrid922
      @Ingrid922 Před 2 lety +12

      That's how it is when anyone tells a story, from their perspective. The narrarator is not unreliable.

    • @zoezzzarko1117
      @zoezzzarko1117 Před 2 lety +2

      Brilliant, yessss

    • @carolferrao5538
      @carolferrao5538 Před rokem +3

      This is the kind of insight I am here for in the comments section!

  • @kristenjones7733
    @kristenjones7733 Před 4 lety +40

    If made into a film, I would watch this a hundred times. Loved the color, elements, representation, mostly everything.

  • @words007
    @words007 Před 4 lety +662

    Shes that white girl which my parents will allow to bring home as my wife. Lmao

  • @sanjanatanga
    @sanjanatanga Před 4 lety +572

    White guy looking at paan
    "Is this weed." Lmaooo😂😂

  • @isabelle6129
    @isabelle6129 Před 3 lety +50

    That’s the difference between race and culture.

  • @elizabethpeters6890
    @elizabethpeters6890 Před 3 lety +25

    "brown Gosling" that cracked me up. I love this! So glad I've found this channel.

  • @amulyaarun6617
    @amulyaarun6617 Před 6 lety +670

    The girl was more Indian than me as an 'Indian' 😁😁

    • @Rockyroad321
      @Rockyroad321 Před 6 lety +1

      Amulya Arun ye same india is hell but on the surface it's so disgusting

    • @amulyaarun6617
      @amulyaarun6617 Před 6 lety +15

      Rk King well then maybe you're just not aware of the core

    • @nightsultana7227
      @nightsultana7227 Před 6 lety

      Amulya Arun there is no core like even look at the capital ffs

    • @ttastyadyisttasty5398
      @ttastyadyisttasty5398 Před 6 lety +1

      Amulya Arun so true it hurts..

    • @dontjudgemebymyname.4282
      @dontjudgemebymyname.4282 Před 6 lety +1

      +That Reckless Monster caste system??? Ja be lavde pehle polio hata.

  • @jyotid6754
    @jyotid6754 Před 6 lety +2735

    Inside white outside brown guy went to date with a inside brown outside white girl....😆😆

    • @SoumendraBagh
      @SoumendraBagh Před 6 lety +5

      JYOTI DAS Dopely Said...👌👌👌

    • @indianmilitary
      @indianmilitary Před 6 lety +49

      Indians love to talk, walk and behave like their white masters.

    • @ervinzhou8251
      @ervinzhou8251 Před 6 lety +120

      kashsoldier nah man he just grew up in Britain so thats his cultural upbringing.

    • @zainabgoderya3275
      @zainabgoderya3275 Před 6 lety +2

      That's why he likes dosas!

    • @rajeshrj3867
      @rajeshrj3867 Před 6 lety +3

      rachels cat was inside out...

  • @onepunchman1953
    @onepunchman1953 Před 3 lety +37

    Ah yes Omeleto,the channel with the weirdly intriguing short films.

  • @RAZR_Channel
    @RAZR_Channel Před 3 lety +82

    3:52 " Dark and Mysterious is all I've got." hahahhaha....

  • @shubhamrai7538
    @shubhamrai7538 Před 4 lety +243

    "Is this...is this WEED?"
    OMG that line😂

  • @MosaicDay
    @MosaicDay Před 6 lety +113

    Brilliant. "I could see her smiling to herself. The smile was pretty vague. It either meant she was recalling a beautiful memory or he was such an important of her life that talking about it would ruin the atmosphere."

  • @darkhorse1185
    @darkhorse1185 Před 3 lety +11

    Being an Indian, I rate this video absolutely amazing... Very entertaining and funny!!

  • @shauntreadwell8029
    @shauntreadwell8029 Před 3 lety +10

    LOVED THIS!! I loved the concept of his friends on the couch being integrated and viewing his date.. the insecurity the guy felt while on his date, the realisation he came to everything.. I want a follow up movie to this.. brilliant 👏

  • @chloepekel
    @chloepekel Před 4 lety +738

    I just want to know how she kept that red lip on throughout her meal?

  • @ayuabdullah5257
    @ayuabdullah5257 Před 6 lety +443

    Sometimes we feel awkward with our own culture but some Westerner see it as beautiful. Sometimes we are more Western than the Western people. Haha. Me Malay Asian. Feeling this short vid deep. 😁

    • @wreslinglovers4244
      @wreslinglovers4244 Před 4 lety +1

      Right

    • @ohemaapka811
      @ohemaapka811 Před 4 lety +1

      Righttt as a ghana 🇬🇭 I feel the same way

    • @tchoythao1730
      @tchoythao1730 Před 4 lety +2

      Probs because they only see the positives. Being Asian, Asian culture has many sickening flaws that are accepted and championed.

    • @Greek2Me64
      @Greek2Me64 Před 4 lety +3

      Went to college with an American Indian (Navajo, I think...) He was often confused by the fact that eastern girls found the "full blooded indian" exotic and desirable. He thought they were putting him on, and wary that some white boy was going to beat him up for talking to white girls. He told me that back home (western US) many whites would very obviously cross the street, "So they weren't walking on the same sidewalk as an Indian".
      Hard to believe that we so easily find another race or culture so objectionable. Seems like we ALL have a lot to learn from one another, but we spend time "circling the wagons" around our own group and traditions. (sigh)

    • @hilaryc3203
      @hilaryc3203 Před 4 lety +4

      @@tchoythao1730 No culture is without its flaws. My father grew up on a huge cattle ranch in Western Canada, went into the airforce when he was 18 and was shipped to India and Burma for the war. He loved the people, (yes, had a few difficult moments as there will be in a war), but he learned the language, would go spend time with the poorest in little villages, simply adored the food, and all his life he never forgot that in a time of war, down to earth, regular, kind and welcoming people are everywhere. It's not about seeing only the positives, but opening yourself to the world and not seeing only the negatives.

  • @davewilson4058
    @davewilson4058 Před 3 lety +19

    I loved the reverse culture shock premise. Very amusing.

  • @AnjaliSingh-kk1nl
    @AnjaliSingh-kk1nl Před 3 lety +132

    Moral: Don't lose your own heritage while trying to learn from others.

    • @melaniekeeling7462
      @melaniekeeling7462 Před 3 lety

      Difficult

    • @venusianblivet9518
      @venusianblivet9518 Před 3 lety +34

      I feel like the moral is don’t try to use your culture to impress people when you no nothing about it

    • @Hic_Rhodus
      @Hic_Rhodus Před 3 lety +8

      Ehhh... not sure that's the moral the story is unfolding Anjali.

    • @malishagavali9906
      @malishagavali9906 Před 2 lety +10

      Culture and race are two very separate things Anjali.
      The moral is don't lose yourself while trying to impress others.!

    • @humanbng7123
      @humanbng7123 Před 2 lety +1

      You mean the white girl shouldn't have changed herself too much?

  • @user-sd8sl8fj9b
    @user-sd8sl8fj9b Před 6 lety +419

    She is what he was pretending to be.

  • @jayyy8740
    @jayyy8740 Před 4 lety +128

    This guy is a pretty good actor, no wonder he's in the new Beatles movie!

  • @ryanmoultesz
    @ryanmoultesz Před 3 lety +17

    I’m Filipino raised in the UK and I’ve felt that scene at 11:00 so many times haha hit me

  • @canica99
    @canica99 Před 3 lety +28

    This was so cleverly done. I loved the metaphor into the friends on the couch as part of the narrative illustration of his date and adventure with Chloe. It was very entertaining and one of the best Omeleto's that I have seen. Cheers.

  • @pillai9786
    @pillai9786 Před 6 lety +58

    Being an Indian,I never thought of getting to see such a beautiful but ironic story.

  • @eat_ze_bugs
    @eat_ze_bugs Před 6 lety +122

    I want to be that friend that just sits there on the couch while watching my friend on a date.

  • @Nurse_Hana_
    @Nurse_Hana_ Před 3 lety +4

    His pink socks @13:14 killed me. Wasn't expecting that but couldn't expect less from this character. Loved it. Great movie

  • @SuperLikku
    @SuperLikku Před 3 lety +10

    Those who fall in love they know, our culture is beautiful and we are proud of it. Thanks for this. I loved it.

  • @anomalunadota2
    @anomalunadota2 Před 6 lety +383

    This is brilliant. I've often thought, what a person becomes depends on where, how and by who they were raised, not simply on what nationality they are, or their parents were or what language you expect them to speak based on how they look. The guy was disgusted by the Indian place because he was probably born and raised in India (and it is like that in many places in India) but found everything new and clean and amazing when he came to the UK. The girl found all those quirks refreshing and exciting about the place, and it's what many people think when they decide to come to India and really are tourists to the place, not citizens. I don't think that means a person of Indian or any other descent born in the UK or US is expected to know that language, behave that way or have those thoughts unless really forced upon by conservative families. As an adult, you shape yourself and take what you like from whatever culture you admire.

    • @Rockyroad321
      @Rockyroad321 Před 6 lety +5

      Hitanshu Budhwani india is disgusting and everytime I tell my mom that she tries to kill me

    • @suchitrawalke4499
      @suchitrawalke4499 Před 6 lety +3

      Rk King chup be ungrej ki aulad...kabhi dikhna mat idher.

    • @anomalunadota2
      @anomalunadota2 Před 6 lety +1

      Sad.

    • @nightsultana7227
      @nightsultana7227 Před 6 lety

      Mohyal for humanity SURE BUDDY JUST BLAME EVERYTHING ON PAKISTANIS!

    • @nzungu7773
      @nzungu7773 Před 6 lety +1

      well said Hitanshu

  • @ReubenQg
    @ReubenQg Před 6 lety +626

    the blonde was so enthusiastic, while the other dude didn't really care, she deserved better. (my opinion)

    • @bigmike664
      @bigmike664 Před 6 lety +48

      Reuben Qg in my opinion better is not the right word but I do think the were not right for eachother

    • @Ken_sky
      @Ken_sky Před 6 lety +64

      She seemed much more into his culture than the man himself though...

    • @ReubenQg
      @ReubenQg Před 6 lety

      you understand what i mean though...

    • @ReubenQg
      @ReubenQg Před 6 lety

      agreed

    • @JustNatax3
      @JustNatax3 Před 6 lety +29

      Reuben Qg I don't know nothing was wrong with him but they didn't fit. She also had some serious yellow fever. I'd prefer his presence over her any day. She got on my nerves haha

  • @alansamuel2454
    @alansamuel2454 Před 4 lety +16

    A foreigner who speaks hindi- impressive. A foreigner who eats with her hands- more Indian than this guy!

  • @Josh-bf6ht
    @Josh-bf6ht Před 3 lety +10

    I definitely relate to this guy, I'm chinese but 3rd generation canadian, I know the food but I've never been to China

  • @hirrafa
    @hirrafa Před 4 lety +87

    The best thing about this short film is the two friends chilling and watching their other friend have his date..btw do their coffee ever run out

  • @swampingawesomeness5793
    @swampingawesomeness5793 Před 6 lety +752

    Dresses like stereotypical indian but dosent know anything about india. seems legit 🙈

    • @sarakamnani6328
      @sarakamnani6328 Před 6 lety +1

      XD

    • @respekmaauthoritah9089
      @respekmaauthoritah9089 Před 6 lety +13

      SwampingAwesomeness what about his dressing is stereotypical or even typical for that matter ?

    • @respekmaauthoritah9089
      @respekmaauthoritah9089 Před 6 lety +9

      Kya Bidu bas kya he probably has no idea how millennials dress in the us..his buttoned up shirt and ankle length pants seemed to him like the typical 90's Indian nerd

    • @sarakamnani6328
      @sarakamnani6328 Před 6 lety

      respek yeah he does look that hahahaha

    • @feraldo76
      @feraldo76 Před 6 lety

      That's what fashion is though

  • @hitokage4
    @hitokage4 Před 3 lety +5

    This was just really a fantastic film. I loved all four of the characters - the commentary of the coworkers, the energy of her, the calm yet awkwardness of him. It was played funny, yet I understood his train of thought through it all and loved her attempts to keep it from staying awkward even when you could tell she was feeling it.

  • @BadBoy-wy1il
    @BadBoy-wy1il Před 3 lety +8

    He is the type of guy british wanted to create. Indian looking but british thinking

  • @rikumajumder1558
    @rikumajumder1558 Před 4 lety +644

    This is why I laugh when a Indian abroad gains success in Hollywood and our media and some people praise them like one of ours made it big when in reality it's just a American who made it big. That guy/girl has nothing to do with India except maybe the exterior...

    • @Habeel13
      @Habeel13 Před 4 lety +7

      So true

    • @c4crafts286
      @c4crafts286 Před 4 lety +43

      We are Indian ..just because we live in other country or born there doesn't change that

    • @nomankhan-mc8fv
      @nomankhan-mc8fv Před 4 lety +29

      @@c4crafts286 watch the video again

    • @c4crafts286
      @c4crafts286 Před 4 lety +4

      @@nomankhan-mc8fv am i suppose to gain something extra from that?

    • @nomankhan-mc8fv
      @nomankhan-mc8fv Před 4 lety +38

      Little Unicorn 🦄 yes the main idea

  • @gappuda
    @gappuda Před 6 lety +368

    That table turn was maddening and lovely! Find a women who wants to learn and adopt different cultures.🙌

    • @special-a6536
      @special-a6536 Před 6 lety +1

      your conscience same here :)

    • @robertmitchell8630
      @robertmitchell8630 Před 6 lety +3

      Devanjan Mukherjee here is an idea if you live in the west you try and adapt how about that

    • @sonnyj2k
      @sonnyj2k Před 6 lety +1

      your conscience American men would be more than happy to assist with your transition.

    • @ttastyadyisttasty5398
      @ttastyadyisttasty5398 Před 6 lety +1

      Robert Mitchell just asking, but is that an insult?

    • @gappuda
      @gappuda Před 6 lety +12

      We all must try atleast to adopt the good bits of different cultures, no matter where its from!

  • @chrismathew2295
    @chrismathew2295 Před 3 lety +9

    The '90s BBC show, "Goodness Gracious Me", is similar to this short film in that it comedically illustrates the identity predicament of British Indians - stuck in the cultural dynamic of unfulfilled Indian expectations.

  • @nayandutta168
    @nayandutta168 Před 3 lety +37

    We Indians always become
    "tech support" or "IT guys "😂😂
    Loved it though ❤️

    • @The-Celestial
      @The-Celestial Před 3 lety +2

      That's why it is ridiculous. It's like why can't we pursue something else?!

    • @underground_americana
      @underground_americana Před 3 lety +3

      @@The-Celestial Amen brother. I was raised in rural America, got about as much culture as a can of beans, and I'm still just seen as "that Indian guy". Pisses me off, other races aren't stereotyped as bad as this. When I got a problem with my phone, it's one of my white friends that bails me out everytime.

    • @ani589
      @ani589 Před 3 lety

      @@underground_americana raise your bar kolya, learn some python and become a data scientist.

    • @underground_americana
      @underground_americana Před 3 lety

      @@ani589 people out here don't become much of nothing, but that's fine by me. I'm not looking to change the world, figure I'll be a park ranger.

    • @ani589
      @ani589 Před 3 lety

      @@underground_americana damn lucky you. Park ranger sounds interesting but can you do the same work for entire life which doesn’t provide you high income?

  • @SuperSara909
    @SuperSara909 Před 6 lety +50

    Some of you guys are not understanding. Growing up in england or some other country, being born there gives you a different experience than someone raised in India. Some people's parents don't even teach them English, they grow up around kids\peolle that aren't Indian sometimes, they might even be second generation so at some point the most Indian thing about them is their brown skin not their culture because their culture was built in the country they were born and raised in.

  • @AYESHA-ud6nw
    @AYESHA-ud6nw Před 4 lety +139

    When your foreign girlfriend is more desi then you😂😂😂

  • @stephaniedouglasaviewfroma9596

    Lots of different messages in this one. Dating. How many new immigrants with Black or Brown skin who move to western countries and colonize themselves and the first generation (American, Canadian, English and so on) are brought up not learning their language or their customs. I've worked in Immigrant Settlement organizations and with the immigrants and first-generation Canadians from many countries and this isn't an uncommon thing to happen. On the other side, a lovely white girl who has a fascination with the exotic and has had enough privilege to travel and learn another culture. The young man fits and doesn't fit into either culture while the girl, through historical colonization and privilege assumes she can and does. Then there is his best "mates" both rooting for him and commenting on his deficiencies on the date. It was a fun movie with layers of subtexts.

    • @katarinasmith4351
      @katarinasmith4351 Před 3 lety +2

      I;m a white Canadian girl and I traveled- I didn't have privilege. All this white privilege is bull sh*t.

  • @jennyconnatty7635
    @jennyconnatty7635 Před 3 lety +7

    WOW!!! So clever, funny, great acting from everyone, and cutting all the stereotypes to pieces... LOVE IT!

  • @AnjellycaMarie
    @AnjellycaMarie Před 4 lety +333

    my old roommate was like that blonde girl
    tbh, most people found it obnoxious she acted like that
    you dated one indian man and now you know the entire culture
    it didnt feel genuine, it just felt like she rubbed it everyones face all the time to make it seem like she knew something you didnt
    she passively used it as a way to put other indian boys down almost
    it was kind of degrading
    this woman in the movie should have seen right away he was brought up differently

    • @stevendalloesingh1214
      @stevendalloesingh1214 Před 4 lety +5

      Hey, if your roommate liked the culture then so be it. She prolly smelled like herbs and spices through sweat, huh?

    • @sangat4315
      @sangat4315 Před 4 lety +3

      @@stevendalloesingh1214 damn

    • @DNPinthePP
      @DNPinthePP Před 3 lety +39

      To be fair he took her to the super secret underground Indian restaurant on their first date to impress her so she is justified in assuming he wants her to enjoy the culture.

    • @ekanshgupta2421
      @ekanshgupta2421 Před 3 lety +10

      @@stevendalloesingh1214 is that supposed to mean indians smell? Is that what you are trying to indirectly imply?

    • @samrudhik8757
      @samrudhik8757 Před 3 lety +7

      @@stevendalloesingh1214 aww... who hurt you, sweetie?

  • @vishalramesh2307
    @vishalramesh2307 Před 6 lety +171

    the paan which he had was meetha or sweet paan. It tastes good even for first-timers, nobody will give u the reaction this guy gave when u have a sweet paan btw.

    • @melodicnostalgic3823
      @melodicnostalgic3823 Před 6 lety +15

      Eww I'm Indian and find it disgusting..I once tried it and spit it out too at a function !!!

    • @annabelgrace1267
      @annabelgrace1267 Před 6 lety

      vishal ramesh
      I thought it was Betel leaves? Never tried it.

    • @vishalramesh2307
      @vishalramesh2307 Před 6 lety +4

      ur right, its betel leaves but in sweet paan the stuffing inside is mostly sweets, main thing being gulkhand which is a sweet preserve of rose petals. This "meetha" paan is not to be mistaken with "sada paan" which doesn't have any sweet inside and sada is what people have in marriages and which makes some people nauseous the first time

    • @HarshRajAlwaysfree
      @HarshRajAlwaysfree Před 6 lety +2

      Pakistani Dragon , I had my first pan 6 yrs ago ,and that was my last one , cuz I was afraid I'm splitting blood , and it tastes fine , but I don't wanna get addicted

    • @frantiskaali5031
      @frantiskaali5031 Před 6 lety +5

      I had completely same reaction eating sweet paan first time :)

  • @pandagal9805
    @pandagal9805 Před 3 lety +6

    "She knocked the brown out of me!" That line got me haha

  • @ryheisha2796
    @ryheisha2796 Před 3 lety +4

    I love how this ended. She wasn’t his cup of dosa and he accepted that and went to find his “dosa girl.” 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾 my kind of film.

  • @Shihid282
    @Shihid282 Před 6 lety +82

    Max respect to any one who tries to accept others culture

  • @youtuberxyz3510
    @youtuberxyz3510 Před 4 lety +119

    4:02 the typical indian waiter.

    • @hardeepbabhauri7379
      @hardeepbabhauri7379 Před 3 lety +2

      Yup they do these all the time
      . 😂😂

    • @shutupidiot16yearsago79
      @shutupidiot16yearsago79 Před 3 lety +4

      Not really I've seen such waiters in Indian restaurants, you're exaggerating it or you probably go to some small sized cheap restaurants

    • @beastmaster6960
      @beastmaster6960 Před 3 lety +1

      Absolutely 😂😂😂

  • @jodicelesteee
    @jodicelesteee Před 2 lety +5

    “You were gonna…. punch her?”
    “Metaphorically yes”
    “Nice”

  • @minake5632
    @minake5632 Před 3 lety +8

    I know the leading guy. He was in a movie shown here in Taiwan where he sung Beatles songs.
    He was funny. He looks funny.
    I am now a fan of Himish Patel.

  • @ghostghost9561
    @ghostghost9561 Před 6 lety +32

    The point of this video is that you cannot judge someone based on their race or appearance. He is a british man, not indian culturally.

    • @Jupiterseason
      @Jupiterseason Před 5 měsíci

      Same goes both ways.. he assumed that because she's white, she would be impressed with just being AROUND a brown man.. turns out, she out-brown'd him and he learned something about himself 😂👌🏼

  • @madaroad0311
    @madaroad0311 Před 5 lety +186

    "A people without knowledge of their past history, origin or culture is like a tree without roots" the Most Honourable Marcus Garvey. One Love

    • @pravinrao3669
      @pravinrao3669 Před 4 lety +29

      That is not true.
      Just because a seemingly smart guy said something that looks smart does not make it right.
      I can also say
      "Most people underestimate what they can do in a day and overestimate what they can do in a year"
      and
      "Most people underestimate what they can do in a year and overestimate what they can do in a day"
      Can you tell me which one is right.

    • @ScuffedLife
      @ScuffedLife Před 4 lety +5

      "History is written by the victors."

    • @wellyesbutactuallyno9776
      @wellyesbutactuallyno9776 Před 4 lety +13

      @@pravinrao3669 *every 60 seconds in africa a minute passes*

    • @phdwho9656
      @phdwho9656 Před 4 lety +4

      @@pravinrao3669 Actually, it's very true. And the first one is more right, because in a year you have more time than in a day, therefore you think you have time to achieve more, while s day it's not enough to do much🙃

    • @tagorewithlyric4394
      @tagorewithlyric4394 Před 3 lety +1

      The whole point is that the dude is British Asian. That's what he is.

  • @DivyaJyotiArya
    @DivyaJyotiArya Před 3 lety +18

    Well, the coconut got out browned! 😂😂😂

  • @poopydoggy
    @poopydoggy Před 3 lety

    This was my favorite of the short films I've seen on this channel so far. Great pick!

  • @hahalollol2424
    @hahalollol2424 Před 6 lety +1188

    Im a indian guy and im cringing so hard idk why....

  • @fuffofox
    @fuffofox Před 6 lety +42

    I'm a Filipino. I eat mostly with my hands. Depends on the food. We sit down differently in different places.
    Also this short video reminds me of The Three Idiots

    • @canceronthebookss4975
      @canceronthebookss4975 Před 4 lety +5

      It is an amazing movie , one of my favourite

    • @mel-lt9or
      @mel-lt9or Před 4 lety +2

      Yeah, although tbh we eat with our hands at home most of the time and we use spoon and fork outside or in malls and such.

    • @shahedjoudeh8017
      @shahedjoudeh8017 Před 4 lety

      I like this movie too 😂😂❤️

  • @noorgill5158
    @noorgill5158 Před 3 lety +12

    That boi got whitewashed and the lady ironically realised the beauty of his inherited culture.

    • @Sagha4
      @Sagha4 Před 3 lety +4

      My ex is Indian and was sooooo ashamed of being Indian. Im not Indian but I love Bollywood movies. He boasted about his grandfather being close with British people. Also he never used his Indian name, he made me call him by his Christian name lol... only bc he didn’t like the Indian culture. Well he’s screwed bc he looks way too Indian to look like anything else.

  • @JasmineApple
    @JasmineApple Před 3 lety +1

    LOVED THIS!! Well written, well acted, well directed, I loved the 2 guys in every scene - great film!!

  • @kirtywright1974
    @kirtywright1974 Před 6 lety +25

    This was actually the best recall of a date! I wasn’t expecting them two slide by in the couch everywhere.
    Hilariously made! Love!

  • @Bigtasty28
    @Bigtasty28 Před 6 lety +142

    I love this because it can be applied to any culture.

    • @harrymlondobozi8605
      @harrymlondobozi8605 Před 6 lety

      Even Western culture? I doubt.

    • @vincentmackinnon3601
      @vincentmackinnon3601 Před 6 lety +2

      youv'e never seen mean girls have you?

    • @wishwewere1256
      @wishwewere1256 Před 9 měsíci

      Oh yeah? How many cultures are notorious for tech support?

    • @JaneNewAuthor
      @JaneNewAuthor Před 9 měsíci +2

      I'm Australian, my parents were English. In Australia I have an English accent. You wouldn't think there'd be much cultural difference - I didn't until I went to UK. Found out I'm definitely Australian. (And got told - twice! - to go back where I came from when people heard my accent.) Being part of the first generation in a new country is an interesting experience.

  • @deanfukawa3260
    @deanfukawa3260 Před 4 lety

    Man, I love these Omeleto shorts. Always creative, some hopeful, some sad. Just all around good short film making.

  • @philschuler9674
    @philschuler9674 Před 3 lety +5

    Very interesting concept, with the action happening as he narrates to his two work mates. I have never seen this technique in movie production. Great movie, thanks for posting.

  • @existencedefieslogic9658
    @existencedefieslogic9658 Před 6 lety +387

    I'm not even a South Indian and I'm taking offence at her for finding dosa bland lol and I'm only a Mumbaikar. Dosas are pretty tasty. And btw am I the only one who prefers to eat dosa directly with hands than cutlery?

    • @NaughtyBwoi
      @NaughtyBwoi Před 6 lety +3

      RELAX MAN, FFS! - JEEZ - TAKING EVERYTHING SO LITERALLY. PEOPLE ARE TOO AFRAID TO BREATHE THESE DAYS WITHOUT CAUSING OFFENCE.

    • @existencedefieslogic9658
      @existencedefieslogic9658 Před 6 lety +6

      Bored Engineer Operating Near Groom Lake Detachment 3 Lol. Dude chill. I was simply joking. I do realise that this is a fictional story too. You don't have to resort to use UPPERCASE to emphasise your point either LoL

    • @tristan-hc9fs
      @tristan-hc9fs Před 6 lety +5

      Existence Defies Logic I am of east indian decent and nothing is to be eaten by cutlery. Roti and rice alone!

    • @existencedefieslogic9658
      @existencedefieslogic9658 Před 6 lety +1

      _tristan axb I mean in the restaurants the cutlery is provided along with the dosa and I was just wondering if people eat dosa with their hands or with cutlery.

    • @SahithReddy.
      @SahithReddy. Před 6 lety +19

      How do you even eat a dosa with cutlery ? Haha

  • @VinayGill
    @VinayGill Před 6 lety +400

    Vinay....

  • @siddheshkhandalkar4498
    @siddheshkhandalkar4498 Před 3 lety +12

    The guy looks like a distant cousin of Rajesh Koothrapalli.

    • @Chehan17
      @Chehan17 Před 3 lety

      He straight up looks like his younger brother