Brits React to How America Makes Britain Look Like a Tiny Village | OFFICE BLOKES REACT!!

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  • čas přidán 26. 02. 2022
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Komentáře • 883

  • @sgtpickles1319
    @sgtpickles1319 Před 2 lety +1486

    Due to traffic and population density differences across the US, I often explain how far something is away in terms of hours rather than miles.

    • @lavenderllamamusic
      @lavenderllamamusic Před 2 lety +159

      that's a good observation. by default, we're just used to measuring distances in time rather than miles. The only time i can think i might use miles is if someone specifically asks "how many miles away is that from here?" rather than "how far is it from here?" to which i reply using time

    • @Razorslash312
      @Razorslash312 Před 2 lety +76

      It’s also a part of American culture valuing time a commodity second to only money. Time off, time to relax, time away, and time to yourself are all things people aspire to without recognizing the value they put on time. Thus leading to the hurried pace of life especially in densely populated areas.

    • @kevinexline5392
      @kevinexline5392 Před 2 lety +41

      I 100% agree with this, however, even my own mind got a little blown once I started traveling for work and realized that when I drove from Charlotte, NC to El Paso, TX, it took as long for me to get from Charlotte to the Louisiana/Texas border as it did from that same border to El Paso within the same state lol

    • @ryanhampson673
      @ryanhampson673 Před 2 lety +29

      If you are driving to LA from Texarkana, TX when you hit El Paso you are halfway.

    • @christophercattie
      @christophercattie Před 2 lety +8

      Distance is always measured by time when driving

  • @justinweckwerth8261
    @justinweckwerth8261 Před 2 lety +332

    As a mailman in the United States I regularly drive between 150-200 miles a day six days a week, and that is just a relatively small part of a county.

    • @goldenhate6649
      @goldenhate6649 Před 2 lety +2

      Put into perspective, the US is about 2900 miles across (give or take) to drive. (Actually straight globe distance is ~2550)

    • @justinweckwerth8261
      @justinweckwerth8261 Před 2 lety +17

      @Green Warrior Monke Are you a mailman? Because first of all route sizes are incredibly varying in size. I've done routes as small as 46 miles and as large as 192 miles and there are routes much larger than that. Also the main point of my first response was to tell the guys the amount of ground you could cover in a relatively small (by American standards) county.

    • @aniquinstark4347
      @aniquinstark4347 Před 2 lety +5

      Those trucks must have an insane number of miles on them.

    • @justinweckwerth8261
      @justinweckwerth8261 Před 2 lety +3

      @@aniquinstark4347 well yes they can but for the most part the mail trucks are only used on the smaller routes. I use my own vehicle to deliver mail in as do most rural carriers.

    • @shannonhamlin4938
      @shannonhamlin4938 Před rokem

      Thanks for what you do!!

  • @NotSoFast71
    @NotSoFast71 Před 2 lety +405

    In order to become a state, an area needed a certain number of citizens. Since the western regions were less populated, they needed to incorporate larger tracts of land to reach that number of people. That’s why those states are larger than the eastern ones.

    • @citrusblast4372
      @citrusblast4372 Před 2 lety +4

      Damn so thats how they took the land... Who came up with that rule anyway?

    • @west3979
      @west3979 Před 2 lety +28

      @@citrusblast4372 Well, it was already part of the Constitution, but the Land Ordinance and Northwest Ordinance which came just a bit before it set the precedent. Jefferson was the one who principally wrote the Land Ordinance, if I recall correctly.

    • @majoroz4876
      @majoroz4876 Před 2 lety +1

      Not true.

    • @erik6162
      @erik6162 Před 2 lety

      In other terms they were illegally trusted into the Union and not paid for in their first ever proxy war against Mexico

    • @demonwolf8024
      @demonwolf8024 Před 2 lety +12

      @@majoroz4876 Not an argument. You've literally wasted your time and mine by saying nothing. How about you explain what isn't true and why it isn't instead of being asinine?

  • @katiemcteague
    @katiemcteague Před 2 lety +78

    I live in New England and when someone ask you how far away a place is, you answer in time, not miles. So if I want to go to from Boston to New York and someone asks how far it is, then you would say, “It’s about 4-4.5 hour drive. More meaningful to you know how long it’ll take you to get there rather than to know how many miles you’ll travel.

    • @SuperDrLisa
      @SuperDrLisa Před 2 lety +4

      Absolutely! 🖐 from Rhode Island

    • @pyrioncelendil
      @pyrioncelendil Před 2 lety +5

      Not just a New England thing. Did this in southern California and it's a behavior I brought with me to northern Idaho.
      I suspect it boils down to budgets in fuel vs time. In places where they pay out the nose for fuel, they'd rate everything in distance rather than time because distance driven directly correlates to fuel consumed. If/when you don't care as much about how much fuel you're gonna burn to get there, only how long it takes you to get there, then time driven is how you'll rate the trip.
      It's also why you'll generally see the polar opposite when doing such drives in electric vehicles. We'll only get back to our usual mode of thinking on this when ubiquitous five minute full recharges become a Thing, and that's probably 30-50 years out.

    • @Fermion.
      @Fermion. Před rokem +1

      Pretty sure that's true for most of the US. We do the same in VA. Even as a child when we went to Six Flags in GA, a guy at the gas station told us, "you guys must have missed an exit, it's about 20 minutes back the way you just came."

  • @crashje99
    @crashje99 Před 2 lety +501

    Cruise control is a great invention, specifically when driving through states like Kansas. You can pretty much take a nap through Kansas on I-70 with cruise control and good alignment.

    • @luischacon8869
      @luischacon8869 Před 2 lety +13

      This is so true lol

    • @cpepper5702
      @cpepper5702 Před 2 lety +30

      I’m from Kansas and can confirm… lol

    • @amazonmuhkah
      @amazonmuhkah Před 2 lety +7

      😂 except for the winter time

    • @cpepper5702
      @cpepper5702 Před 2 lety +4

      @@amazonmuhkah lol true because you’re not getting through lol

    • @jeffrichards1537
      @jeffrichards1537 Před 2 lety +12

      I live in west Virginia. All our roads are like snakes lol. No long straights. I went to Kentucky and close to Louisville I said you could fall asleep hold wheel straight and wake up still in your lane. Lol

  • @bus6292
    @bus6292 Před 2 lety +294

    Here in America you can often guess which region of the continent a person is from by their accent, but not always. The impression I get of England by contrast is they can tell which street of which town you were born in by how you pronounce words.

    • @richardhaas39
      @richardhaas39 Před 2 lety +23

      It used to be that American regional accents were accounted for by where in England the settlers emigrated from. The book is "American Pronunciation" by John Kenyon.

    • @brandonvasser5902
      @brandonvasser5902 Před 2 lety +3

      Theres a basic city accent that alot of people acquire. I am from New Orleans and I’ve gotten people asking here all my life where I am from. It only really comes out in certain words and maybe to someone from a very different part of the country.

    • @mikelarsen5836
      @mikelarsen5836 Před rokem

      If they are from Manchester they speak shit 😂🤣😂

    • @marcom6089
      @marcom6089 Před rokem +5

      I’m going to assume you meant country and not continent because the United States of America isn’t a continent.

    • @bus6292
      @bus6292 Před rokem +3

      @@marcom6089 Autocorrect continues to not be my friend. 🤣🤣

  • @CosmosJack
    @CosmosJack Před 2 lety +303

    When you cross the Mississippi river there is a sign that says "speed limits will be strictly enforced" and they are all the way to California. You can drive on cruise control for hours, often 75 - 85 miles an hour. My GPS once went over 400 miles without an instruction to turn

    • @oldgranite6467
      @oldgranite6467 Před 2 lety +20

      not too long ago, i got on I-90 in Massachusetts and didn't stop except for fuel and one over nighter for like 2,200 miles. there was still a whole other time zone to drive across

    • @pride2184
      @pride2184 Před 2 lety +9

      @@oldgranite6467 yea i travel for work. I do conservation yea sometimes you never gotta turn. Drove thousand miles in a day without a single turn.

    • @adamlewellen5081
      @adamlewellen5081 Před 2 lety +4

      I made a trip from San Francisco ca to Galveston tx in 3 days

    • @majoroz4876
      @majoroz4876 Před 2 lety +5

      @@oldgranite6467 Until about 15 years ago, an old story/joke was TRUE.......
      A guy asks, in a Boston bar, where to get THE BEST banana cream pie. He is told to get on I-90 west, turn left at the stoplight, go one block, turn left again, and the restaurant on the right side, in the middle of the block is THE PLACE.
      It was (still is) in Kellogg Idaho......but they finally put the interstate through town in the mid zips.

    • @cnlbenmc
      @cnlbenmc Před 2 lety +1

      Well if you go much more than 75 mph on the 101 and a Highway Patrol officer sees you (assuming you're not in the fast lane either); expect to get ticketed.

  • @EastWind123
    @EastWind123 Před 2 lety +99

    I'm an American from the eastern side, where things are appropriately-sized, and I made the EXACT same mistake in Las Vegas. I thought I'd just go for a little walk. By the end, I was sure I was hearing a foghorn in the distance, but it was my nose whistling because of the incredible dry heat. It was miserable. 🤣🌵

    • @danielboatright8887
      @danielboatright8887 Před 2 lety +20

      GA native here Ive spent time in the desert and I gota say its way better than dealin with humidity.

    • @Blondie42
      @Blondie42 Před 2 lety +14

      I had a professor who grew up in Japan (roughly the size of CA) and years ago when her mother came here to WA for a visit her mom wanted to do a day trip: lunch in LA and dinner in NY.

    • @joebungus3447
      @joebungus3447 Před rokem +2

      @@Blondie42 she better have a private jet

    • @Blondie42
      @Blondie42 Před rokem +4

      @@joebungus3447 And a very, very fast one. 🛩
      Or a Star Trek teleporter 😉

    • @carolynclaire5241
      @carolynclaire5241 Před rokem

      🤣🤣🤣🤣 yup.
      Bus pass!!!!!

  • @axiswolfstar
    @axiswolfstar Před 2 lety +84

    As an American - I also thought New England was a bit bigger... But as an Expat, I've heard too many people plan a week trip and want to visit places across the states. They are always confused when I ask if they planned for traveling time.

    • @slamdancer1720
      @slamdancer1720 Před 2 lety

      one would think, new york and new jersey would be a part....

  • @Kjetilstorm
    @Kjetilstorm Před 2 lety +95

    Alaska is my state, it takes FOREVER to cross this mfer, and you can't even go full speed this time of year because ice + cliffs. Edit: For those curious, I'm from Anchorage.

    • @kev792
      @kev792 Před 2 lety

      Is it nice up there? I've always wanted to visit

    • @Kjetilstorm
      @Kjetilstorm Před 2 lety +3

      @@kev792 It's very white lol

    • @kev792
      @kev792 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Kjetilstorm 😂

    • @Tar-Numendil
      @Tar-Numendil Před 2 lety +1

      I heard something about the capital being moved from Juneau to Anchorage. I wonder if there was any truth to it.

    • @Kjetilstorm
      @Kjetilstorm Před 2 lety +1

      @@Tar-Numendil oh no, not this again... Right so a quick rundown. Do you know how some Texans always make a lot of fuss about leaving the union? It's kind of like that. It will be forever debated but never executed (though it should be). It's a common-sense move since everything is here, but after 50 years people are tired of hearing about it to the point we don't even care anymore.

  • @bracejuice7955
    @bracejuice7955 Před 2 lety +229

    Part of the reason the eastern states are smaller is because the were explored on foot and horseback. When the west was being settled they had rail and better surveying equipment, so they drew the border lines on latitude and longitude lines, resulting in those big rectangular states

    • @2nite782
      @2nite782 Před 2 lety +5

      Damn I live in Rhode Island the smallest state and just learned this hahahah

    • @imme6954
      @imme6954 Před 2 lety +12

      They wished they had rail to explore it!🤣

    • @definitelynotobama6851
      @definitelynotobama6851 Před 2 lety

      The eastern states were also incentivized to make the western states as large as possible so they could maintain power over the western states in the Senate.

    • @rnman99
      @rnman99 Před 2 lety +11

      A lot of it has to do with terrain as well. West of the Mississippi is flat flat flat

    • @katlynklassen809
      @katlynklassen809 Před 2 lety +3

      I always thought that they started eager and with lots of passion but started running out of names energy and ideas so they just phoned it in the rest of the way.

  • @johncarolina4950
    @johncarolina4950 Před 2 lety +93

    Houston is absolutely massive, it's one of the 5 biggest cities in the US population wise. They gained a ton of population following Hurricane Katrina as well.

    • @randymotter51
      @randymotter51 Před 2 lety +2

      It is also number 3 by metropolitan area at 21,395 km^2 the two larger metro areas being Dallas and Atlanta. Those three are also the largest metro areas on the planet, though there are a few cities not defined as part of a metro area that are larger still. Quite the accomplishment anyway, crossing Houston repeatedly as a rideshare driver was stressful as hell because of the long distances.

    • @goldenhate6649
      @goldenhate6649 Před 2 lety +4

      That actually explains alot about why the city is no longer texan culture and is slowly turning into another LA.

    • @Alvin-xs7db
      @Alvin-xs7db Před 2 lety +2

      @@goldenhate6649 as a Houstonian I can agree with that but I'd say much moreso Austin

    • @austntexan
      @austntexan Před rokem +1

      @@Alvin-xs7db They showed up here in Austin for a bit, but they cannot compete with imported Manuel labor, lower wages, and high housing. . . so many have already migrated back East. I imagine they'll eventually leave Houston as well. Imported labor from Mx is one of the only things that keeps S.Texas "Texan" in culture. There's a reason why no one from Texas moves into the SE. Austin has a bigger prob with Lefties from CA moving here. I'm not sure which is worse.

    • @austntexan
      @austntexan Před rokem

      @@goldenhate6649 Imported labor from Mex will drive all those people back east. They simply cannot compete. Houston just needs to get more conservatives in office and reduce gov't handouts. If that happens, those people will haul 4ss back to Louisiana.

  • @masamune2984
    @masamune2984 Před 2 lety +155

    Great video, as always! Also, just a weird trivia fact: “Tri-State” in the US is a relative term. For instance, it also popularly refers to Ohio, Kentucky, and Indiana, or any region where three states are culturally, geographically, and economically inter-linked. 🙂

    • @coyoteblue9605
      @coyoteblue9605 Před 2 lety +9

      Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana - all tied together by the greater Chicagoland area.

    • @TrueThanny
      @TrueThanny Před 2 lety +15

      It's also regional within a state. In central and eastern NJ, it means NJ, NY, and CT. In the northwest parts, it means NJ, NY, and PA.

    • @Zaburino
      @Zaburino Před 2 lety +12

      in South Jersey it means NJ, PA, and DE

    • @TrueThanny
      @TrueThanny Před 2 lety +1

      @@Zaburino Never knew that, but I guess it should be expected.

    • @scottl9660
      @scottl9660 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Zaburino they say Pa is the keystone state, looking at it it’s really Jersey.

  • @clarissathompson
    @clarissathompson Před 2 lety +27

    One of my favourite stories from my grandparents was about a couple that came to visit them here in Canada from England (before flights were common), they were transferring from their ship to the train traveling from Montreal to Vancouver when the wife said, "We should probably get a sandwich before we board the train in case it takes awhile!"
    A train trip from Montreal to Vancouver takes about 5 days. LOL!
    This is a massive continent.

  • @matthewhall1062
    @matthewhall1062 Před 2 lety +39

    The distance from Seattle to Miami is the same as the distance from London to Tehran, the capital of Iran.

  • @SilvanaDil
    @SilvanaDil Před 2 lety +86

    Although, as you say, populations tend to cluster, this is less true thing in the U.S. compared to other large countries. Russia -- mostly west; China -- mostly east; Brazil -- mostly along the east; Canada -- mostly along the border w/the U.S.; Australia -- a ring around the island/continent.

    • @R.B.90
      @R.B.90 Před 2 lety +4

      Ya China's population is even more crazy when you realize like 95% of the people live on like 40% of the land to the east. It's like 1 giant mega metropolitan area of over a billion people.

    • @Skyl3t0n
      @Skyl3t0n Před 2 lety +3

      Did you ever see a map of population density in the US? The coasts are packing people.

    • @nathanberrigan9839
      @nathanberrigan9839 Před 2 lety +7

      @@Skyl3t0n Yeah, if you include the Great Lakes, 2/3 of the US lives within 100 miles of the coast.

    • @Fermion.
      @Fermion. Před rokem +1

      @@Skyl3t0n That's true for the entire world. Access to ocean navigation, coastal fisheries, tourism and recreation are the main reasons.
      And, over 50% of the world's population lives closer than 2 miles to a surface freshwater body, and only 10% of the population lives further than 6 miles away.
      Basically, wherever you find large bodies of water, you'll also find lots of people.

  • @RavenSoulcatcher
    @RavenSoulcatcher Před 2 lety +23

    Never really thought about how it might seem odd to other countries that we consider anything less than 5 hours or less...a day trip. It takes us about 2.5 hrs to get to my mom's and more often than not we just stay a few hours and then drive 2.5 hrs back home.

  • @NikkiCox81
    @NikkiCox81 Před 2 lety +136

    Being of Welsh ancestry I almost get offended that y’all keep ripping on Wales until I remember my great great grandfather sailed all the way across the Atlantic Ocean to America to leave it. 😂😂 It does seem beautiful there though.

    • @emilywhitfield2780
      @emilywhitfield2780 Před 2 lety +6

      I've never been to Wales but it looks so beautiful!!

    • @justlooking1087
      @justlooking1087 Před 2 lety +7

      @@emilywhitfield2780 I’ve been to Wales and it’s regular lol

    • @DMWolFGurL
      @DMWolFGurL Před 2 lety +1

      @@justlooking1087 WTH is regular? Like regular unleaded gas? Regular loaf of white bread? WTH is regular?

    • @justlooking1087
      @justlooking1087 Před 2 lety +13

      @@DMWolFGurL I mean that it isn't particularly beautiful. I'm just being silly though, I'm sure that there are beautiful areas. I'm right next door in Manchester.

    • @thedarcbird
      @thedarcbird Před 2 lety +1

      It is. I'm not Welsh but I lived fairly close to it, Bristol.

  • @kevinprzy4539
    @kevinprzy4539 Před 2 lety +22

    Yea Alaska only has around 730,000 people due to it being mostly uninhabitable, Jacksonville has around 890,000 people while San Bernadino county has around 2.18 million. And if somebody is on their 5th dui they’ve definitely gone through the system, they’ve more than likely done time in jail and paid some heavy fines but it does depend on the individual state.

  • @MrSirwolf2001
    @MrSirwolf2001 Před 2 lety +46

    The United States has such a varied topography that even within the lower 48 states you can find almost all of a geology textbook without once leaving. Mountains, canyons (one in particular we feel is rather Grand), swamps, marshes, prairies, deserts, beaches (from Tropical up to Brighton in winter), (excluding the Caspian Sea) the largest inland lake in the world (bordered with Canada) and it's 4 smaller brothers (also bordering with Canada), Volcanos, glaciers,...etc. New Orleans is below seal level and Denver is a mile above sea level. As far as distance to work, I have had several jobs in which my daily drive was 45-50 miles or one hour drive time. I have known people with twice as long though.

    • @grigori7834
      @grigori7834 Před 2 lety +6

      Also both the wettest and dryest parts of the world are allocated in the US. Mindfully noting though that the rainforest biome is not found within the continental US.

    • @lamer5799
      @lamer5799 Před 2 lety +8

      @@grigori7834 We've got a temperate rainforest here in Washington on the Olympic peninsula.

    • @grigori7834
      @grigori7834 Před 2 lety +2

      @@lamer5799
      Thanks for learning me something new chief

    • @SeattlePioneer
      @SeattlePioneer Před 2 lety +1

      You are talking about the Grand Canyon of the Snake River, I presume?

    • @cnlbenmc
      @cnlbenmc Před 2 lety +4

      There are no jungles in the US but the Louisiana Bayou comes close.

  • @EmmaChihuahua81
    @EmmaChihuahua81 Před 2 lety +47

    We rarely flew anywhere when I was a kid. Our trips and vacations were road trips. It took 12+ hours to drive from the northern border of Texas down to Galveston (the southern border just past Houston). I saw that stretch of road many a time from the back of a station wagon. It still wasn't as boring as driving across Kansas to Colorado. We made that trip a few times as well. It definitely seemed longer because aside from fields of various grains there wasn't anything to see or to look forward to seeing.

    • @ashleydixon4613
      @ashleydixon4613 Před 2 lety +1

      Geez when you say northern Texas are you talking about in the panhandle? From where I live in central Arkansas just outside Little Rock to Houston/Galveston isn’t even 12 hours! It’s still a long-ass drive though.

    • @avidrdr5640
      @avidrdr5640 Před 2 lety +3

      I've driven a couple of round trips across Interstate10 from Tallahassee, Florida to the Pacific Coast Highway. Going west from San Antonio, Texas all the way to Palm Springs, California can best be described as miles and miles of nothing but miles and miles. But, the colors of the sunset can make the long, straight, boring, empty miles worth it every day of the days' long trip.

    • @austntexan
      @austntexan Před rokem

      Kansas is rough

    • @wangchung2157
      @wangchung2157 Před rokem

      Yea I live in El Paso so any other major city like Tuscon, Albuquerque or San Antonio are at least 4 hours away. Trips during my youth were always driven so I got used to the 10+ hours to go to places like Dallas or Denver

  • @tombystander
    @tombystander Před rokem +6

    Love to see them react to the Louisiana purchase and how absolutely INSANE of a deal that was by the US to get that from France

  • @mike94560
    @mike94560 Před 2 lety +12

    When you are on a US highway and can look ahead of you and see the road going straight to the horizon you think I have a long way to go. And you check your fuel gauge. LOL

    • @holl0918
      @holl0918 Před rokem

      Yep! Especially when you can look in the rearview and see the same thing!

  • @Sandman60077
    @Sandman60077 Před 2 lety +15

    There are a lot of pictures online where they overlay the US onto Europe and it pretty much covers the whole thing.

  • @ryanbunce5150
    @ryanbunce5150 Před 2 lety +11

    BRITAIN: HAS INVADED EVERYONE AT SOME POINT IN HISTORY
    BRITAIN NOW: size of a US state

    • @RussellDale6019
      @RussellDale6019 Před 2 lety

      The blonde dude says they found the small states first then moved westword. No they conquered stole and Slaughter the natives. Then they brought Africans over to do all the work. When the Europeans got here they didn't even know how to farm the natives taught them that and then they slaughtered them purposely gave them smallpox systematically slaughtered the American buffalo to starve out the Indians. Oh yeah and the name Indians was given to them the audacity of these people

  • @soylentg6270
    @soylentg6270 Před 2 lety +8

    I'm a Utah native and have lived here almost all my life. I moved briefly to the east coast, Delaware to be specific- for about 6 years. It was REALLY difficult to describe to people what remote places were like in my State, it was almost surreal to them. Great video.

  • @ashleyt7280
    @ashleyt7280 Před 2 lety +11

    Don’t quote me on this, but I think the reason states started out so small on the east coast was because the large Appalachian Mountains prevented many people from reaching the other parts of the unexplored land so they settled in those first territories

    • @copo2835
      @copo2835 Před 2 lety

      I'm from upstate New York, in the Appalachian mountains. They're barely mountains at all, due to how old they are. There's even a walking trail that runs through them from Georgia in the south to Maine in the north, so they're not that difficult to navigate through. Maybe you're thinking of the Rocky Mountains?

    • @gristen
      @gristen Před rokem

      @@copo2835 you havent been to the lower parts of appalachia then. sure theyre not the rockies but with how things are in my area im completely certain that the many many hills and dense forests were definitely more than enough to slow early travel back when they had only horse and buggies and no roads. theyre also why theres not a lot of big cities in appalachia, cities tend to crop up in areas with flat land and you can drive for miles and miles out here and feel like youre on a rollercoaster with all the ups and downs and curves there are.

  • @help8help
    @help8help Před 2 lety +2

    I drive a truck (freightliner usually) 500 - 600 miles per day in the western US. There are really long stretches where almost nobody lives. Most of it is beautiful . . . right up until you have to put snow chains on six tires.

  • @benjensen4102
    @benjensen4102 Před 2 lety +14

    I am an American who has done half country road trips (Dallas to Orlando), and I NEVER use cruise control for anything but road trips. I could use it sometimes for highways in Dallas, but I never think to. By the way, did Dallas to Orlando (1090 mi, 1750 km) in about 18 hours, from early morning to arriving at about 2am in Orlando.

    • @ZerOtheGeek
      @ZerOtheGeek Před 2 lety

      Was that only stopping for fuel? I am about to do Tampa to Austin in July. Am going to just split it into two 9 hour drives. Due to my stamina.

  • @somersetcace1
    @somersetcace1 Před 2 lety +14

    I can remember *many* a time, just in the last 2 years, that if I only had to go 100 miles, I'd of been thrilled. I've never driven the entire length of the US, but Massachusetts to Colorado was enough 1,930 miles. Connecticut to south Florida was no quick little romp either. 1400 miles. That trip really sucks because you're driving the eastern seaboard. Not to mention, you get to Florida thinking "I'm in Florida!!!" 6 hours later.....

  • @user-lf7nf3kl7t
    @user-lf7nf3kl7t Před 2 lety +33

    I always hated cruise control myself until I drove from Boston to Ocala, FL.
    1,250 miles in 25 hours...it sure came in handy then haha

  • @gutspraygore
    @gutspraygore Před 2 lety +8

    I went to visit a friend in Stockholm and, coming from LA, I didn't realize how compact the city was. The central station was easy enough to find, but going to a particular location in the city posed a couple of problems for me. The first was that how ever I thought the street names are pronounced, I was always waaaay off. So asking directions was useless. The second was that even though I knew I was walking in the right direction, I would sometimes pass my desired location by almost 3/4 miles before I realized it because my brain was working in LA dimensions.

  • @danbaker300
    @danbaker300 Před 2 lety +18

    My go-to stat for comparing the size of the US and UK: a round trip covering the full length of A1 (410 miles each way, from London to Edinburgh and back) is shorter than the trip from El Paso to Beaumont on I-10 just in Texas (about 830 miles). And that's only 1/3 of the full length of I-10 (2,460 miles between Los Angeles and Jacksonville), and I-10 is only the fourth-longest interstate highway (I-90, from Seattle to Boston, runs a bit over 3,000 miles).
    The areas of some of the cities and metro areas he mentioned are a bit misleading - the city limits of Juneau extend about 100 miles along the coast and 30 miles inland, but the vast majority of the population is in a few square miles between Auke Bay and Mendenhall Lake plus maybe a square mile or so around downtown, and what little else there is is almost all on the middle half of the coast. Similarly, the San Bernadino metro is huge in area because metro areas are generally denoted by counties, and San Bernadino and Riverside Counties both include a huge area of desert. The vast majority of the population is in the southwest corner of San Bernadino and northwest corner of Riverside, with about a half million in the Coachella Valley (central Riverside County) and not much in the east.

  • @brittnianime
    @brittnianime Před 2 lety +7

    My family and I made bi-yearly trips from Arizona to Michigan. If we trade drivers and don't stop at a hotel/motel/rest stop then we can make it in a little less than 36 hours this is including bathroom/meal/gas(petrol) breaks :) we stayed for max 3 weeks each trip.

  • @northofknowhere130
    @northofknowhere130 Před 2 lety +12

    One of the best trips I've taken is a family road trip from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania to Los Angeles, California. The trip took 3 1/2 days covering 2,650+ miles and the best part was to see just how the country changes from the east, to the mid-west, to the west. It was well worth it.

    • @kev792
      @kev792 Před 2 lety +1

      Questions because that sounds really cool to do:
      1. Did you ride through the states nonstop?
      2. Rough cost estimate?
      3. Is there a difference between the terrain of the midwest and west? I 've always thought they were similar?

    • @northofknowhere130
      @northofknowhere130 Před 2 lety +1

      @@kev792
      The trip lasted a total of 10 days from June 22nd to July 1st in 2018.
      1. It took 3 and a half days to drive from Pennsylvania to Southern California and just as long to drive back. The first night, we stopped in Le Claire, Iowa, the second night was in Brighton, Colorado, and the third night was in Las Vegas, Nevada. I drove the same route back, but stopped at Grand Junction, Colorado for the first night, Lincoln, Nebraska the second night, and South Bend, Indiana the third night.
      2. The total trip? I budgeted $3,000 for the entire trip with $1,100 in hotels (three and a half days in California), $600 in fuel, and $600 in food. I always like to have more than I anticipate and prepared for the trip for a few years.
      3. We stayed on I-80 until we reached the end of Nebraska were it split and took I-76. The eastern part of the mid-west, Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio, seemed to be very similar to Pennsylvania. Some rolling hills, a few small mountains, greenery, and more trees. Once we hit western Iowa and into Nebraska, it started to flatten out and had green prairies. Colorado has nearly every type of terrain from rolling prairies in the east, the Rockies in the middle, and the start of the desert in the southwest. We took I-70 in Denver to I-15 in Utah and that's were the terrain changed a lot. Southwestern Colorado was much more humid and had more and more desert, except for some sparse green areas. For the most part, it stayed this was until we got closer the the western part of southern California.
      One thing that was surprising to my kids was in the early morning at the hotel in Brighton, Colorado, it was about 60 degrees. We stopped at the Vail Pass rest area just off of I-70 (about 30 minutes from the hotel, in the mountains) at it dipped to 39 degrees and by the time we arrived in Las Vegas that evening, it was 109 degrees.
      It might not be too different, but for me and not being out there in 30 years, it was pretty different.

    • @kev792
      @kev792 Před 2 lety

      @@northofknowhere130 Sounds awesome! I might try to do a trip in the future when I get to save some extra cash. And Colorado sounds really interesting! Thanks for sharing!

  • @bewilderedtuuk6338
    @bewilderedtuuk6338 Před rokem +1

    City Blocks are normally one mile by one mile, with smaller blocks inside, and it makes it so you can calculate how far something is away easier

  • @stephenbaker1362
    @stephenbaker1362 Před 2 lety +5

    Being a New Englander, I find it interesting that we are bigger than England. Connecticut originally spread to the Pacific Ocean, but no one knew how far away it was. Cleveland, Ohio was first settled by Connecticut migrants who were exploring the Northwest Territories (Ohio at the time).

  • @Allaiya.
    @Allaiya. Před 2 lety +6

    Last time I was in Vegas, the people I was with wanted to walk the full strip to the Stratosphere. Bad idea. Was almost there, but they chickened out & my feet ached so much, I demanded we take a taxi back. Lesson learned.

  • @PrebleStreetRecords
    @PrebleStreetRecords Před 2 lety +2

    About a year ago I took a road trip with a friend from Durango Colorado, to Sedona AZ, then Big Bend in TX, and finally drove for 18 hours from southwest Texas to Nashville stopping for only gas. The whole trip was a hair over 2,600 miles, about the same as driving from Paris to Moscow. And that was only a small part of the US.

  • @noahmaas1670
    @noahmaas1670 Před 2 lety +3

    My brother asked me for help moving and I decided to drive out and make a road trip of it. Miami to Yuma Arizona, primarily, utilizes two interstate highways (I-75 and I-10). Those two roads will take you most of the 2500 mile trip. Two roads, 2500 miles.

  • @MrThankman360
    @MrThankman360 Před 2 lety +2

    The size of America is one of the reasons politics is so different over here. For example. Guns. When citizens are spread out and so many live in gigantic rural areas where it takes police 30 plus minutes to respond, having a self defense weapon can be the difference between life and death. America’s size and federalist state structure also explains why we use the electoral college. There are many things like this that I’ve noticed folks over in the UK have a hard time understanding.

  • @jcortese3300
    @jcortese3300 Před 2 lety +2

    As someone who lived in San Bernardino county for years and years, I can assure you that it's pretty much a frying pan with some dirt in it and freeway congestion.

    • @slamdancer1720
      @slamdancer1720 Před 2 lety

      When the Santa Anna's come down the Cajon pass...feels like your roof is gonna blow off...and sometimes trucks are tipped over.

  • @johanna0131
    @johanna0131 Před 2 lety +9

    A three hour road trip is pretty easy and standard for our family. We’ll drive over to family on the coast and it’s just under three hours. 7 hours is when I start to lose it. We used to have to drive from Central California to Las Vegas pretty regularly, and it could get pretty brutal. 7 hours in a car is my max these days. More than that and I’m finding a motel for the night.

  • @anthonyross3495
    @anthonyross3495 Před 2 lety +1

    I live in Las Vegas and I tell visitors hotels are farther than they appear. The shear size of them gives the illusion of closeness. The good news is there are bars every 20 feet to freshen up! (Ok, I made that one up, but not by much)

  • @mrssanfl
    @mrssanfl Před 2 lety +11

    I remember living in Atlanta area and my commute to work was about 65 miles one way. It took 1 1/2 hours to get to work each day. I hated it. I did move to the Jacksonville area and although there is not much traffic, everything is so spread out that it take about 30 to 45 minutes to get some places.

    • @johnglue1744
      @johnglue1744 Před 2 lety +3

      Atlanta traffic is so bad. There are no days off for that crap lol. I’ve lived here my entire life.

  • @Zippidyzay
    @Zippidyzay Před 2 lety +2

    I live in California. I one made a 650 mile round trip from Merced to San Diego and back in one day. These two cities are both in California. Took about 12 -13 hours. The strangest thing is, I remember taking the journey, but I don’t remember why I did it, or why I needed to turn around and go back on the same day.

  • @eponine1966
    @eponine1966 Před 2 lety +3

    We just went to Vegas again, last September, for my niece's 21st birthday. We did that walk twice, and that includes my eighty year old Mama.😂

  • @x-rayvision3802
    @x-rayvision3802 Před 2 lety +1

    I Commute from Arizona to California on a biweekly basis And it's over 229 miles to hear you guys talking about 26 miles is wild lol. Love you guys though

  • @jillconner5062
    @jillconner5062 Před 2 lety +2

    You guys even had me laughing with the little jabs intended at Wales. And I don't even get the jokes.

  • @jimmiegiboney2473
    @jimmiegiboney2473 Před 2 lety +2

    Mark 3:34. I must be the exception! Not being into Math, for it depresses me for one thing, "100 Miles", would discourage me. Especially now that I'm not supposed to drive long distances because of my sleeping disorder.
    Well, fairly recently, I needed to take a poor, blind baby mouse, that I rescued from my, Chihuahuas, to a wildlife sanctuary. When trying to make arrangements for getting it from here to there, the distance sounded like a difficult risk. But then he mentioned it in relation to time, and how it was only forty minutes away! My perspective changed!
    I used to commute to work on a nightly basis, and going there at night, always seemed quick and easy, compared to driving home in sunlight, when it felt like it was taking an Eternity, what with Relativity and all of that.
    Well, driving to the shelter, didn't take as long as driving back. The place even turned out to be the same place that I took a rescued baby beaver, back in the 1990s. Driving back, I kept making wrong turns, because it all looked familiar to me, because I had been there before, so I didn't feel lost. But making adjustments for course corrections, it was still a relatively short time. It was seeing the miles accumulate that made it seem like an ordeal. Especially if I might need to refuel sooner, because of the course corrections. But yeah, depending on a driver's personal perceptions and preference, saying how far in distance versus how much time, can make a big difference! 😁

  • @goosebump801
    @goosebump801 Před 2 lety +8

    Block size is usually pretty uniform within a given city, but can vary widely from one city to another.
    A common size is gauged at 10 blocks/mile. However, some (e.g. Salt Lake City, Utah) have 8 blocks/mile…and some (like Seattle, Washington I think?) have 20 blocks/mile 💐

    • @tolfan4438
      @tolfan4438 Před 2 lety

      I'm Philly most blocks are 100 houses per block. 50 on each side of the street. It makes the addresses come out even.

  • @TheWabbitSeason
    @TheWabbitSeason Před 2 lety +1

    I was born in CA (San Bernardino county). I lived in East Anglia (RAF Mildenhall). I used to drive to London and thought nothing of it. Driving to Arizona took longer.

  • @bobdobb9017
    @bobdobb9017 Před 2 lety +3

    “I thought New England came down further too.” say most Americans watching this.

  • @funnyusername8635
    @funnyusername8635 Před 2 lety +1

    Walking in Las Vegas: Oh god I made the same mistake. Thank you staff at the off Strip casino bar for not letting us walk anymore when we came in for water! Everything is Las Vegas is huge so it doesn't look that far. Just ride the Deuce and stay on the Strip unless you specifically want to go to Fremont Street/outlet shopping/to a gun range/whatever. Your hotel will have shuttles for most of that. Really, please don't walk. It is hot enough there to put you in the hospital or worse if you're foolish about it at the wrong time of year. On the day it happened to me it was 45C (114F).

  • @gewgulkansuhckitt9086
    @gewgulkansuhckitt9086 Před 2 lety +3

    The sheer size of the U.S. and our economic and military power makes it much less likely for a U.S. citizen to travel internationally, speak a foreign language, or have the same degree of concern for world events and international opinion about the U.S. that most people in the world would have.
    If you live in Europe, you can easily get to several other countries quickly and relatively cheaply. It might be worth your while to learn a language to get a better job or go to university in a country only a few hours away by car from where your family currently lives. This is much less likely in the U.S. Unlike in the U.S., relations with these nearby countries could have a vast effect on your own country's economy. In much of the world (though probably not so much in Europe), military situations involving nearby countries is a huge concern. These things are just not really as much of an issue for U.S. citizens.
    I've even encountered fellow American citizens bemoaning how the average American is so ignorant of world events/geography compared to Europeans, but they don't stop to ask themselves why or even whether or not we should care as much as the rest of the world does about such things.

  • @robertherring9277
    @robertherring9277 Před 2 lety +3

    We consider 200 miles to be "local" lol! Live in Roswell, New Mexico USA! Drove 100 miles to college and the 100 miles back home 5 days a week for 4 years!

  • @urk5204
    @urk5204 Před 2 lety +1

    I live in the Inland Empire, and he left out a fun fact about the area: for that massive size, there are only 4.5 million people here

  • @seansimms8503
    @seansimms8503 Před 2 lety +8

    One of my favorite songs from Great Britain back in the days was Big Country by a band with the same name...we thought it weird they sung a song called big country coming from such a small country..In a Big country dreams stay with you, like a lovers voice on a mountain side...

  • @reaperthemad8731
    @reaperthemad8731 Před rokem +1

    Live in the MidWest. Many years ago, my dad's office had a Brit over on a special project for 2 weeks. He was telling my dad he planned to rent a car for the weekend and go see Disney. When my dad and another coworker explained it was over 20 hours to drive one way, he was rather heartbroken.

  • @majorpayne608
    @majorpayne608 Před 2 lety +3

    One of major reasons for size difference in East was the survey system and methods used early on that relied on geographical boundaries such as rivers, lakes etc. As the movement progressed the survey methods and equipment improved and a rectangular system of survey, or township and range, became more expedient.
    East of Mississippi, county size for several states was set by transportation available during those times. Horse and wagon. The county seat where the county courthouse was located, had to be on average no more than a day's wagon ride. People could conduct their business in the county records office like birth and death records, record deeds etc.

  • @billyw8186
    @billyw8186 Před 2 lety +1

    It's videos like Lawrence's (Lost in the Pond) and this that I wish Europeans and Americans would watch before they comment, "what would you know, you've probably never left your state, let alone visited another country!"

  • @jimmiegiboney2473
    @jimmiegiboney2473 Před 2 lety +2

    Mark 5:55. I once saw a school video of math problems, that had a funny one about a man's commute to work being longer than to home, because of so many, one way streets. 😳

  • @emilianosintarias7337
    @emilianosintarias7337 Před 2 lety +3

    This is how I felt as an American when I moved to China, and worked in a city of 30 million people that few Non-Chinese have even heard of. (That city is Chongqing, that number is the metro area, not the downtown core).

  • @jlpack62
    @jlpack62 Před 2 lety +1

    I drive an 800 mile trip 4 times a year, and it would be a nightmare without cruise control.

  • @dumbcow1
    @dumbcow1 Před 2 lety +1

    If you want to see a perfect metropolitan grid, check out Phoenix, AZ metro area. As its population explosion was in early 90s, it was planned in 1mile by 1mile superblocks.

  • @LilFireFox
    @LilFireFox Před rokem

    Connecticut here! Born and raised in the 3rd smallest State in the country. And sinde we are so small, a 40-60 minute drive is a Day Trip for us. And anything less then 30 minutes is a 'Zip in the Car.'

  • @RexFuturi
    @RexFuturi Před 2 lety +4

    My family moved to Virginia from California a couple years ago. It's closer to where I came from, so we can visit my mom and siblings in Ohio far more easily. We just have to cross Virginia, West Virginia, and part of Ohio to get there. But the trip takes us 10 hours. Better than the 5 days it used to take, I guess.

  • @neshobanakni
    @neshobanakni Před rokem

    I used to commute 100 miles each morning to work, and of course the same to get home. I traveled from my home in central Mississippi, to my job in ... central Mississippi. Luckily, I drove a Cadillac Fleetwood. It was a basically a one and one half hour ride on a magic carpet - with a radio. After a few months, I started a new job that was only seventy miles away. It still took the same time, since it was on backroads. If you ever come across a '93 Fleetwood - buy it!

  • @music79075
    @music79075 Před rokem +1

    Wyoming is wild because it is 3 percent larger than the UK and yet the UK has 67.33 *million people*!
    *Meanwhile* Wyoming has, as of the most recent census, only 578,803. That's 0.0085965097282044% the population size.
    And most of that is spread about as only Cheyenne and Casper have a population north of 50k and that next 2, Gillete and Laramie, are roughly 31-33k respectively.
    Theres liiterally a town called Lost Springs and its population peaked in 1910 with a population of 207 and is now *6*

  • @davidterry6155
    @davidterry6155 Před rokem +1

    It is closer from the California - Arizona border to El Paso (530 miles) than from El Paso to San Antonio (565 miles) which is the next closest major city.

  • @hitmixhyepock9405
    @hitmixhyepock9405 Před rokem

    I live at the top of Indiana, and a couple of summers ago I drove 9 hours at about 70mph one way to pick up a cat for transport to my city. I drove straight there got a hotel, slept, woke up got the cat and immediately left to drive back 9 hours home lol.
    When we go on vacation to Florida, It takes us about 28 hours to get there driving non-stop. It take about 5 hours to get halfway through Florida once we cross the state line..........

  • @CadoonTube
    @CadoonTube Před 2 lety +8

    As someone was born in and lived in San Bernardino county for 25 years, it's truly hard to explain just how dense yet widespread of an area it is. You can drive for well over two hours and see nothing but city and suburbia, and you'd have no clue you were travelling between different cities unless you were looking at freeway signs. it's like a Judge Dredd megacity but mostly horizontal.

    • @slamdancer1720
      @slamdancer1720 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes, it would be a part of the Los Angeles Megalopolis. including L.A. County, Riverside, Orange and Ventura counties as well. truly massive. and the county itself...is unbelievably large.

    • @Maktumekal_Ilzrei
      @Maktumekal_Ilzrei Před rokem

      As someone from Maine... Dear god I'd go mad if I went there. That's just nuts. Cities just ain't it, mate.

    • @sarahwolfe1154
      @sarahwolfe1154 Před rokem

      Urban sprawl isn't a good thing

  • @tomemig7465
    @tomemig7465 Před rokem +1

    A hundred miles is nothing. I've driven that, one way, just to eat lunch, or grocery shop, or even just to see a movie.

  • @derrickowen8162
    @derrickowen8162 Před 2 lety +1

    Fun fact about Alaska: there are approximately only 21 people to every single bear.

  • @erikaronska1096
    @erikaronska1096 Před 2 lety +2

    Three is the number thou shalt count,
    And the number of the counting shall be three.

  • @AJ-ut8cz
    @AJ-ut8cz Před 2 lety +1

    San Bernardino is known colloquially as San Bernaghetto

  • @marcanthony8873
    @marcanthony8873 Před rokem

    Genuinely, we tend to think of something being within 100 miles to be “close” or “nearby” 😅

  • @crashstitches79
    @crashstitches79 Před rokem

    Entering Texas in El Paso still leaves about 12 hours of highway driving before getting to Dallas. It's brutal mentally.

  • @TheLandon8806
    @TheLandon8806 Před rokem +1

    really cool to see my home county and metro area represented San Bernardino county is indeed huge and riverside county is nothing to sneeze at either. great part of the state of California.

  • @gschadalavada8980
    @gschadalavada8980 Před rokem

    I live in Dallas, Texas. To drive to L.A. from here, it would take 20 hours and 29 minutes to get there, or roughly 1395 miles. To get to New York City from here, it would take 23 hours and 36 minutes or 1584 miles. And one final example could be from New York, to L.A., which would take 1 day 17 hours (41 hours) or 2,778 miles. This is why a lot of people who were born here have never even left their own state.

  • @drtidrow
    @drtidrow Před 2 lety

    Last fall, I drove from Detroit to Yuma, AZ, a three-day trip of about 2200 miles... essentially the same distance as driving from Glasgow, Scotland, through London, and on to Moscow, Russia.

  • @ncktbs
    @ncktbs Před 2 lety +1

    block size is a difference per town and village for example the grandmas town one block was 1/16 of a mile while the town i went to college in was 10 per mile

  • @danbrit9848
    @danbrit9848 Před rokem

    you explains something i wounded for years...the small states thing...thank you that makes perfect sense

  • @HemlockRidge
    @HemlockRidge Před rokem

    Up until November 2020, Rhode Island was the smallest state (still is), but had the largest name. It was The State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations.

  • @lazersly
    @lazersly Před 2 lety

    I'm so glad you noticed the slides thing, too! I was watching that on my own like "wtf order is this"

  • @TomGorham
    @TomGorham Před 2 lety +1

    For 15 years, I drove 25 miles each way to work. Never thought anything of it except when the roads were nearly impassible in the winter and it might take 2 hours to get to work.

  • @TheLochs
    @TheLochs Před 2 lety

    I live in New England. Massachusetts to be exact. I've travelled and lived all over the US. I drove from Chicago to Orlando non stop in 27 hours, lol. I arrived on Friday at 7pm ready to go out and party.

  • @michaelcole8196
    @michaelcole8196 Před rokem

    "I feel like I'm on hold as well...." lmao!!

  • @sj4iy
    @sj4iy Před 2 lety

    I live 500 miles away from all of my family. We make the trip 2-4 times a year there and back. It's about 13 hours.

  • @blitztim6416
    @blitztim6416 Před rokem

    San Bernardino County is huge. Blows my mind that I can drive for hours and still be in the same county. Although most of the population lives in the south west portion.

  • @garyevans3421
    @garyevans3421 Před 2 lety +1

    Lol, when they found out he was from Grimsby, they’ve been pouring it on!

  • @abrafo1891
    @abrafo1891 Před rokem

    5:40 it’s amazing how close your work is, as an American I thought my commute wasn’t bad (14 miles/22 kilometers), I’ve biked it

  • @loridavidson9465
    @loridavidson9465 Před rokem

    My husband drives 97 miles round trip to work each night. Then drives from Pittsburgh to Philly (300 miles) and back in his tractor-trailer each night.

  • @james35124
    @james35124 Před rokem

    When i lived in rural Louisiana the grocery store was 30 miles away, i drove 80 miles round trip everyday to work

  • @Alexp36500
    @Alexp36500 Před rokem

    As a Texan, it takes 12-14hrs just to drive through my state... soooooooo yea we used to take 3hr trips to the country every weekend.... or 45min trips to downtown 🤷🏼‍♀️🤷🏼‍♀️. And we judge distance in time not miles 🤣

  • @ThunderPants13
    @ThunderPants13 Před 2 lety

    Surprisingly enough, the two largest "cities" in terms of area in the contiguous U.S. after Jacksonville, are both in my home state of Montana. They are Anaconda and Butte. Anaconda is a mere 10.6 square miles smaller than Jacksonville in land area (747.3 to 736.7), while Butte is about 31.5 square miles smaller (747.3 to 715.8). Just for reference, the city of Los Angeles has a land area of 469.5 square miles and NYC checks in at 300.5 square miles.

  • @mattban4136
    @mattban4136 Před 2 lety

    I've woken up in Odessa Texas, a couple of miles from the I-20, and headed west, and other than the point where the I-20 merges into the I-10, I drove over a thousand miles by sundown to Palm Springs Ca without turning a single time.

  • @Sporkchoping
    @Sporkchoping Před 2 lety +1

    Impressed this isnt copyright claimed

  • @fyre9123
    @fyre9123 Před rokem

    (former - still FL) Jacksonville FL resident... yes. It's a pain in the ass to drive "across town" - don't even bother hitting one area when the Navy base lets out ~4pm... good lord.

  • @vandermitch5146
    @vandermitch5146 Před rokem +1

    Canadian smiling, looking at the 2 tiny country 🙂