How to Have a British Christmas - Anglophenia Ep 20

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  • čas přidán 10. 05. 2024
  • From explosives at the dinner table to burning letters to Santa, Siobhan Thompson looks at 10 ways Christmas differs in Britain. (Notably, they don't call them the holidays.)
    Visit the Anglophenia blog: www.bbcamerica.com/anglophenia
    Follow Anglophenia on Twitter: / anglophenia
    Follow Anglophenia on Facebook: / anglophenia
    Follow Anglophenia on Tumblr: / anglophenia
    Follow Siobhan Thompson on Twitter: / vornietom

Komentáře • 2,2K

  • @kojkurac1
    @kojkurac1 Před 3 lety +647

    pov: your teacher told you to watch it during quarantine

  • @karybradley8821
    @karybradley8821 Před 7 lety +141

    2:54 'It's then soaked in alcohol, aged for several months, boiled again, soaked in alcohol again, and then set on fire'. Possibly the best description of Christmas pudding I've ever heard.

  • @Trysmiling
    @Trysmiling Před 8 lety +56

    "Because he is a grownup." I don't know why but that made me laugh really loud. :)

  • @laurabentley2397
    @laurabentley2397 Před 8 lety +54

    "Come to a British Christmas, we soak everything in alcohol, and then light it on fire!"
    I love this video. XD

    • @oliviagomez815
      @oliviagomez815 Před 6 lety +1

      laura Bentley i made goose instead of turkey once.won't do that again. I also bought a mold for christmas pudding.bought many expensive in gredients.but I ultimately threw most of it out. It was so awful. You poor brits!

  • @wolfsbane1991
    @wolfsbane1991 Před 8 lety +86

    I'm Danish but my dad lives in England. Some of my best memories are of spending Christmas at his house, because I LOVE British Christmas! In Denmark we have our Christmas meal on the 24th, and afterwards we dance around the Christmass tree and then open presents. Often we were too tired as children to play with our presents afterwards. But when I had Christmas at my dad's, we opened the presents in the morning on the 25th in our pyjamas, and it was SO cozy and 'hygge'! We had mince pies and the whole day to play with our presents. We would also go for a long walk around noon with the dogs, and say hi to the neighbours who were also walking (my dad lives out in the country and everyone would go for a walk around the same time, it was magical!) I also love the cheesy Christmas TV shows! All in all I adore British Christmas!

    • @RosinaEmilyW
      @RosinaEmilyW Před 8 lety +3

      Don't forget the Christmas specials of tv shows like Doctor Who in the evening! That is something a huge number watch.

    • @stuvs830
      @stuvs830 Před 8 lety

      You could start a Danish channel and teach us about "hygge." Garrison Keillor's second wife was Danish, and he wrote about their holiday, as you also did. It sounded so tender and joyous I teared up.

    • @wolfsbane1991
      @wolfsbane1991 Před 8 lety +1

      Thanks! And not a bad idea actually. I love how Christmas is always magical no matter how or where you celebrate.

    • @tipsycat27
      @tipsycat27 Před 8 lety

      I remember my Austrian friend telling me they do the same thing where he's from, eat and open presents on the evening before xmas. There's nothing left to do on christmas!

    • @jessicaable5095
      @jessicaable5095 Před 7 lety

      love u 4 that

  • @Lredfloss1
    @Lredfloss1 Před 7 lety +726

    Our family tradition is to "accidentally" miss the Queens speech them pretend to regret it

  • @mittfh
    @mittfh Před 8 lety +45

    #9: "Pretty much every theatre in the country puts on a pantomime."
    Oh no they don't!
    _Audience: Oh yes they do!_
    Oh, and has anyone seen the villain around here?
    _Audience: He's behind you!_

    • @janetgallacher7552
      @janetgallacher7552 Před 3 lety +1

      Also the kids get up so early like 5 in the morning to open xmas presents the best part.

    • @spicedhazel
      @spicedhazel Před 3 lety

      Pantos were my favorite part of Christmas when I lived in England 😆

  • @ScaryWombat
    @ScaryWombat Před 8 lety +15

    Also, side note on Scottish traditions -
    The Christmas pudding is called a "Clottie Dumplin" in some parts of the country.
    Because it's a dumpling (fruit cake) that was traditionally boiled in a rag, or a clottie. Originally these were two different deserts, made in different ways, but in some places the name stuck while the desert itself changed slightly.

  • @umairusman
    @umairusman Před 7 lety +64

    I am from Pakistan and for me Christmas was always about watching Christmas specials on Cartoon Network. That is my childhood Christmas memory :D

  • @kennethkdj
    @kennethkdj Před 7 lety +39

    This girl should have her own television show, funny, lovely and her narration does not irritate at all. Wonderful.

  • @deadtoselfShema
    @deadtoselfShema Před 7 lety +217

    I have seen Dr Who, there is no way I will visit London during Christmas

  • @popcultureempire3124
    @popcultureempire3124 Před 7 lety

    Absolutely love this channel! I love the personalities and the info on everything UK! My grandmother was from Birmingham, and I've always wanted to visit. Thank you for putting out such awesome content! Plus, the ladies are a totally lush! Seriously! Keep up the great work!

  • @themaintenancedude
    @themaintenancedude Před 9 lety +3

    How is there so much animosity in some of the posts on one of the most light hearted channels I watch?!?!?

  • @catherinelabdon316
    @catherinelabdon316 Před 9 lety +10

    I know it's probably no longer a strictly British tradition, but the Doctor Who Christmas special is also a staple of British television viewing on Christmas day.

    • @razmataz13drums
      @razmataz13drums Před 9 lety

      Catherine Labdon and watching the Eastenders xmas special. There's always someone that watches it in the house. Whilst annoying, it is fun to have a good laugh at what ridiculousness is going to happen next!

  • @ozianpunkat
    @ozianpunkat Před 8 lety +3

    watching the Queen's Christmas message has become our new favorite tradition in my house, Thanks BBC America ^.^

  • @tomlynch8114
    @tomlynch8114 Před 8 lety +23

    Bread sauce is a southern English thing. In the North Redcurrant or Cranberry sauce with the Turkey is more usual.
    Some shops are open on Boxing Day, but not all by any means, so it's not the best day for shopping. I'd say the biggest thing about Boxing Day is watching Football, eating leftovers or spending the day with family or friends you didn't see on Christmas Day.

    • @KH571
      @KH571 Před 8 lety +2

      +Tom Lynch I'm from Scotland and we have redcurrant, cranberry and bread sauce to choose from at our Christmas dinner :P

    • @bunnyboonumba1
      @bunnyboonumba1 Před 8 lety

      By shopping she would have been referring to the Boxing Day sales, lots of high retail shops do this...

    • @stuvs830
      @stuvs830 Před 8 lety +1

      +Massive Sigh lol Bridget Jones

    • @purpleyoux2475
      @purpleyoux2475 Před 6 lety +1

      I'm from the south and my family has cranberry sauce with our turkey. Never even tried bread sauce.

    • @dimitribaillat8464
      @dimitribaillat8464 Před 6 lety

      chus daccord.

  • @ursie1986
    @ursie1986 Před 9 lety +384

    Wait, you told them what Pigs in Blankets were and you DIDN'T tell them they're called Pigs in Blankets?!

    • @simonpowell9975
      @simonpowell9975 Před 9 lety +5

      cx1735 Not everyone calls them that though- ever noticed they're not called that on the pre-made ones in the supermarket? They're little-sausages-wrapped-in-bacon in my house. Which, I admit, is less fun to say.

    • @ursie1986
      @ursie1986 Před 9 lety +1

      In that case, you're welcome :)

    • @LumRummy
      @LumRummy Před 9 lety +6

      cx1735 we have pigs in blankets in the states - it's usually hot dogs, or mini sausages - in dough... not bacon...

    • @kinnison41
      @kinnison41 Před 8 lety +8

      LumRummy We call it Toad in the Hole in the UK - err, don't ask me why!

    • @lizibethjansen3044
      @lizibethjansen3044 Před 8 lety

      +Chris Longbone and beef wellington lol

  • @TotallyTanja
    @TotallyTanja Před 9 lety +8

    This was so interesting! Always love learning about other cultures and traditions! :D

  • @shannont7461
    @shannont7461 Před 7 lety +175

    whattt im english and ive never heard of burning the letters, we actually sent them.

    • @TheGiantKillers
      @TheGiantKillers Před 7 lety +10

      It dies out in the 90s when the post office saw an opportunity to make money.

    • @endelvelt7650
      @endelvelt7650 Před 7 lety +6

      Shanon Thompson really I've always burnt letters, never sent them. My parents used to stay the ash would be sent up to Santa through smoke and flame!

    • @jaycarberry-white6730
      @jaycarberry-white6730 Před 7 lety +4

      we pretend to send them off.

    • @shannont7461
      @shannont7461 Před 7 lety +1

      Jade Carberry-White nah, we always put them in the post box, guess thats another thing we have took from america recently

    • @TheGiantKillers
      @TheGiantKillers Před 7 lety

      Shanon Thompson When you think about it today the postal service only deal with a tiny fraction of the volume of letters they would have in the 70s so have the scope to send letters to 'santa' so to speak. Back in the 70s it would have got in the way of what back then was a vital service,

  • @KelseyCate
    @KelseyCate Před 7 lety +43

    I laughed at the brandy and minced pie comment 😂 one year we forgot milk and my dad ate all the cookies, so we ended up leaving beer and nachos for Santa. Easily one of my favorite memories.

  • @SillyWomanDiaryBlogspot
    @SillyWomanDiaryBlogspot Před 9 lety +67

    Happy Crimbo to you! Love all of your videos!

  • @darknight2909
    @darknight2909 Před 8 lety +20

    Also to make the Queen's Christmas message more interesting, what we do choose words or events that you think she will say i.e Family, Commonweath etc, and each time she says it you have to drink.

    • @ghostnr9
      @ghostnr9 Před 8 lety +1

      +Carl Hylton Finally I see some good use for that old bat.

    • @AmyMemory
      @AmyMemory Před 8 lety +1

      And you all bet a pound on what colour she will be wearing

    • @holleysdotcom
      @holleysdotcom Před 8 lety +1

      +Carl Hylton Now that sounds fun!

  • @jessicaable5095
    @jessicaable5095 Před 7 lety +128

    we give him alcohol because he is a grown up. Love it. we do leave carrots for the raindeer as well tho

    • @microorganismnarancia_lol
      @microorganismnarancia_lol Před 7 lety

      Yep true

    • @lebroy1196
      @lebroy1196 Před 7 lety +1

      I was about to leave a comment about the lack of carrots for Rudolf.

    • @tristanlau1213
      @tristanlau1213 Před 7 lety +7

      I'd like to see Santa shows up in the AA meetings lol

    • @maiasitter677
      @maiasitter677 Před 7 lety +5

      We left "magic oats" for the reindeer for a few years when I was younger to help the reindeer fly. It was really just oats with sparkles in it or something. lol (Im from the USA)

    • @ardisfaire
      @ardisfaire Před 7 lety +1

      Maia Sitter us too!

  • @marigeobrien
    @marigeobrien Před 8 lety +5

    Love this series. I just found it. And it helps demystify many English traditions.
    Just wondering... do you think the "Leaving stockings by the bed" tradition stems from the original St. Nicholas putting gifts in shoes? Originally the shoes were put outside the front door but then moved to outside the bedroom door. So... you see where I'm going with this?
    Anyway. Very good. Glad to have found your channel. I look forward to seeing all your videos and to any you add in the future.

  • @MegaMichael42
    @MegaMichael42 Před 8 lety +3

    As a American with English and German ancestors.I try to combine as many Christmas traditions from the U.S,U.K and Germany every year in my house as much as possible.It's so much fun.Christmas will always be my favorite holiday and favorite time of the year.

  • @zuzukris4952
    @zuzukris4952 Před 7 lety +4

    Everything you said was spot on but, one more thing I look forward to every year: The Doctor Who Christmas Special!

  • @bigboredthing
    @bigboredthing Před 8 lety +32

    On Boxing day one family member puts on a buffet for the rest of us (it varies every year). It normally consists of ham, prawns, little party foods, sandwiches, biscuits and such. Anyone else do this or is my family even weirder than I thought?

    • @tottenhammad1234
      @tottenhammad1234 Před 8 lety +1

      Thought I was the only 1

    • @brontewcat
      @brontewcat Před 8 lety

      Sounds like a pretty great tradition to me.

    • @abbier6020
      @abbier6020 Před 8 lety

      +Massive Sigh I'm from the north (just about) and every year our cousins come over and we have basically all the leftovers from both houses meals in a buffet type thing so yeah, maybe...

    • @juliettelaidin224
      @juliettelaidin224 Před 8 lety +1

      Our Boxing Day consists on eating the remains of the turkey , stuffing and so on for lunch (cold of course)

    • @MercyTheDestroyer
      @MercyTheDestroyer Před 8 lety

      +bigboredthing That's how the Christmas eve party works in my family.

  • @sandyeden2816
    @sandyeden2816 Před 2 lety

    Thank you so much for making us laugh so much. Merry Christmas

  • @ibosquez5238
    @ibosquez5238 Před 7 lety +178

    She said that they leave brandy for Santa because he's a grownup. We leave milk and cookies because he's driving.

    • @simhedges
      @simhedges Před 7 lety +13

      If he can survive drinking all those gazillion gallons of milk, then whisky or brandy won't cause him problems either.

    • @lewismurphy3499
      @lewismurphy3499 Před 5 lety +4

      simhedges we gave him liver failure

    • @TheGeographyWatch
      @TheGeographyWatch Před 5 lety +11

      Well, once he’s in international airspace, there are technically no drink-drive laws.

    • @stellaro1775
      @stellaro1775 Před 4 lety +1

      Hahaha. But seriously Don't drink and drive.

    • @redline6419
      @redline6419 Před 3 lety

      Santa isn't a lightweight

  • @rukie9325
    @rukie9325 Před 7 lety +21

    when I was younger I thought boxing day was to remember all the boxers who fought

    • @goodjobeli
      @goodjobeli Před 7 lety +5

      hi bye I thought it was when everyone watched boxing

    • @jaycarberry-white6730
      @jaycarberry-white6730 Před 7 lety +2

      when half of your room gets boxed up and stored in a cupboard to make way for the new stuff you get the previous day.

  • @FilipKadlec1
    @FilipKadlec1 Před 3 lety +1

    This 5- minute video gave me more insight into what British Christmas is like than any school textbook. Thanks a lot!

  • @cetteheurebleue
    @cetteheurebleue Před 7 lety

    Alcohol -as much as possible- with and in your dessert pudding sounds right to me, bedside pressies in stockings and paper crowns all round. Christmas dinner with brussel sprouts has been a family favourite for ages, along with any roasted bird you can think of ... Siobhan, you're a gem ! Please carry on ...

  • @brookebanister6653
    @brookebanister6653 Před 9 lety +4

    I live in America and at my local theatre we have a British director and this year we put on a pantomime! We did Aladdin and it was one of the most fun productions that I have ever been a part of. Next year we are doing Sleeping Beauty and I'm so excited! I'd love to go to England and see one there.

  • @chrishansen724
    @chrishansen724 Před 8 lety +22

    I'm an American who's lived in London for nearly 22 years, which means 21 British Christmases. You forgot #11: No Public Transport. If you can't drive you're stuck, and the taxi drivers are quids in, as they charge 3 times the normal fare on Christmas Day. I always look forward to the first day back at work after New Year's, where everything returns to nearly normal. This series is hilarious, BTW.

    • @susie2251
      @susie2251 Před 5 lety

      Chris Hansen I was a tourist in London without a car on Christmas Day and this was so true. I don’t understand how people manage if they are going to relatives or friends for dinner.

  • @gzp7971
    @gzp7971 Před 2 lety

    This just got me hyped up for christmas

  • @joshggibson
    @joshggibson Před 6 lety +5

    Here in Canada we do a lot of these traditions as well! Merry Christmas!

  • @Murph_gaming
    @Murph_gaming Před 9 lety +79

    So the Brits load Santa up on alcohol before he crosses the pond? Lucky the guy hasn't crashed in the Atlantic or been pulled over for FUI(Flying Under the Influence)

  • @leannsmarie
    @leannsmarie Před 8 lety +3

    When I was a child and lived in Bicester, I recall that decorations consisted of spraying fake snow on the windows. We stenciled Happy Xmas and a number of snowflakes like our neighbors. A gent dressed as Father Christmas drove though the neighborhood in a sled pulled by a horse or two and handed out a present a piece to all the children whose parents had the presence of mind to dress them quick enough to meet him in the street before he traveled to the next area. I wonder if they still do that though it was 40 years ago. It was a fond memory of my time there in the UK.

  • @stayclassy8479
    @stayclassy8479 Před 7 lety

    Thank you so much for the video!
    It helped me to write my project on British Christmas.

  • @nunyabiznez6381
    @nunyabiznez6381 Před 7 lety +25

    In our family Christmas was highly scheduled. Thanksgiving segued into the Christmas season. While Thanksgiving Day and the Friday afterwards we had Thanksgiving dinner and leftovers, on Saturday after Thanksgiving we would have turkey sandwiches and that Sunday we had Turkey stew which was created from what was left of the left overs. It was actually quite good. But food was only part of the schedule. Friday was the day we cleaned up after Thanksgiving and put the Thanksgiving decorations away which usually meant throwing them away since most of those were disposable. On Saturday we would go out and search for our Christmas tree. Usually we wandered out into the town woods and picked out a tree and cut it down and brought it back. Then Saturday night my father would put it on the stand and string the lights. We then would decorate it. From then until Christmas Eve we would put up some decoration each day. My parents would ration the decorations so that no day would be without a decoration from each child going up. The first weekend of December, unless that happened to be the weekend right after Thanksgiving in which case it would be the next one, we would go see Santa Claus. Today that is done at a mall or some store where you pay a fee and then get your photo taken with Santa. No fee no sitting on Santa's lap. That's the way it works today. But when I was a kid the town hired a Santa who would sit on a great throne in the town square every weekend between Thanksgiving and Christmas. The line would wrap all the way around the square and sometimes down the road towards the fire station. Sometimes it was cold. The rest of the time it was very cold. We didn't care. The various fraternal organizations from the Rotary to the Masons to the Kiwanis and Lions etc. would go around handing out free coffee, donuts and treats for the kids, usually candy canes, hot chocolate and cookies.
    In our extended family we had 11 birthdays in December. So on the weekend before Christmas we always had a big birthday party with a giant birthday cake with the names of everyone who had a December birthday and candles for all of them and then we'd sing happy birthday and all the birthday people would circle the cake and have a contest to see who could blow out the most candles the quickest. Aunt Karen always won. She played the trumpet in high school.
    Christmas Eve we were all required to go to bed early. My grandfather would read "Twas the Night Before Christmas" and one or two other Christmas stories and then we were tucked into bed. We were ceremoniously "locked" in our rooms with a "magic paper padlock" and if we broke the lock we'd get coal for Christmas. We took very good care not to break the lock. That would be around seven at night. Then downstairs they would play Christmas music really loud. Sometimes Christmas carolers would come to the front yard and sing. We'd all rush to look down from our bedroom window and open the window despite the cold to hear them sing three or four Christmas carols. Then we'd close the sash and rush back into our beds to get warm again. In that old Victorian house it originally had coal heating and my father never removed the old ducts so we could hear the Christmas music echoing up through the vents until we fell asleep. Sometime in the night we would be woken up by the sound of hoof steps and the jingling of bells on the roof and a lot of noise and commotion. We could hear the sound of boxes and toys being dumped onto the floor echoing up through the duct work and into our rooms. Then we'd hear some way over dramatic "Ho! Ho! Ho'ing" which was always followed by some loud banging sounds going up the chimney and some sounds on the roof and a final jingling of bells. By this time the Christmas music had been long silenced. There was nothing but the occasional tinkling sound of the wind blowing ice crystals into our bedroom windows. It was always the same, we'd run to our bedroom door and crack it just a little bit open. If the paper lock was still there we had to go back to bed and wait. But if it had been replaced by an unlocked golden sparkling padlock then we could run down stairs and begin tearing through the loot below.
    No matter what my father was always the first one downstairs. We never knew how he managed to beat us downstairs every time. Christmas morning was always a magical time. It was a time we could be kids and not worry about many rules. We could tear through any gift that was "from Santa" as long as it was addressed to us. We didn't need to worry about what to do with wrapping paper or saving the pretty ribbon. We didn't have to keep it neat. We just went into a Christmas present feeding frenzy. Mom usually dragged herself downstairs about an hour into our Christmas morning. By then all the Santa gifts were open. Papa was always groggy and when Mom came down Papa would drag himself back up to bed. This was the time Mom would go around and gather up the debris and then we'd have a more formal unwrapping of gifts from family and friends. That took until sunrise or sometimes a little afterwards. It was during this time when we usually noticed all of the additional Christmas decorations and just how magical the whole house looked with all the added lights and candles.
    Then Mom would get us all ready for Christmas mass. We liked it because they always sang Christmas carols and the church was always decorated in such a festive way with pine bows and holly and candles. They never turned on any electric lights during Christmas mass. I remember when I was really young the Mass was said in Latin but they changed that though I don't remember when other than it was when I was still a young kid. There were often people chanting Christmas music in Latin in my earliest memories of Christmas. After mass we could play with our new toys and watch Christmas shows on TV while Mom made Christmas dinner which was really Christmas lunch since we ate at noon. We always had Turkey, mashed potatoes, gravy, home made roles and breads, stuffing and pink cauliflower. Mom soaked it in cranberry sauce over night which made it sweet. She soaked broccoli in apple juice and that made the broccoli sweet as well. Those were our Christmas vegetables served raw and crunchy. And of course there was cranberry sauce and occasionally other side dishes. Papa always dragged himself back downstairs for dinner and was usually dressed in a suit and tie which he hardly ever wore any other time. After Mom and Papa cleaned up we all piled into the car with gifts and treats dressed up in mostly red and green clothes and drove to our grandparents where Grandpa (the same one who read to us the night before) was always watching a football game on TV. It was a big old black and white TV, around 17 inches which got all the channels. Those were called "all channel" TVs since they had UHF channels. That meant instead of having only four channels like we had he got an extra three. We thought that was the coolest thing. Except he never let us watch it. Kids were all kicked outdoors at that point where we soon were distracted by sleds and toboggans and other ice based ludicrously fast forms of transportation. We had to be dragged back inside when it got dark out, usually an hour after sundown. At that point we all sat around my grandparent's tree and it was more gift exchanging and usually there were at least one gift for each of us that Santa somehow misdelivered at the wrong house. Then we had Christmas supper which was about the same as Christmas dinner except with more people, a bigger turkey and a larger variety of trimmings. After supper we could stay up as late as we wanted to, engorge ourselves on as much deserts, milk and soda pop as we could with no restrictions and fall asleep in our p.j.'s around the fire place next to the tree. By that point Grandpa had relinquished the TV to us though there rarely was much of interest to kids by that point.
    Somehow, magically, we would wake up in our own bed's the next morning with all our newly acquired loot spread around our room surrounding our beds as though in a way to remind us how fortunate we were.
    The next week or two, depending on the calendar, we continued to enjoy our Christmas vacation from school. The tree and decorations always stayed up until New Years Eve. New Years Day everything came down. By the time we went to bed New Years night, not a trace of Christmas was left except a few scant leftovers like fruit cake which usually was left over until Easter and of course, our Christmas gifts which by then had been incorporated into our inventory of possessions, some already broken or worn to the point of being useless and some already abandoned due to a miscalculation by an elf. Most were neatly stowed in their new homes, a toy box, dresser or closet or book shelf. Half would be forgotten by the next time Christmas rolled around. A few would never be forgotten, like the GI Joe in full combat gear and and articulated hands and his tank and foot locker with all the accessories! Or the red bicycle from Sears, the Flexible Flyer, Lincoln Logs and the best toy ever LEGOS! My mother and her poor bare feet and broken vacuum cleaner would disagree on that last one.

    • @jodeedugger9041
      @jodeedugger9041 Před 7 lety +6

      I loved reading your story :)

    • @ixchelkali
      @ixchelkali Před 7 lety +2

      Reading your wonderful Christmas memories warmed my heart.

    • @caroletraynor8763
      @caroletraynor8763 Před 7 lety +1

      nunya biznez

    • @FringePrincess
      @FringePrincess Před 7 lety +1

      That was wonderful. Thank you for sharing! 😃

    • @lisar817You
      @lisar817You Před 7 lety +2

      nunya biznez What beautiful Christmas memories! Thank you for sharing! 😊

  • @me4901
    @me4901 Před 9 lety +95

    "Every theatre has a panto with high camp, cross dressing and audience participation"
    Oh No They Don't!

    • @CIMAmotor
      @CIMAmotor Před 8 lety +8

      Chrisfs hahahahahahaha I see what you did there! Just spat my tea out laughing!

    • @alanladd7081
      @alanladd7081 Před 8 lety +12

      Chrisfs Oh Yes they do.

    • @lizibethjansen3044
      @lizibethjansen3044 Před 8 lety +4

      +Chrisfs Oh yes they do!

    • @jcellwood
      @jcellwood Před 8 lety +7

      +Chrisfs Oh, yes, they do! PS, Look out behind you!

    • @chrisstehlik7927
      @chrisstehlik7927 Před 8 lety +4

      +jcellwood Behind me ? Is there something behind me.?
      I don't see anything, Are you sure ?

  • @woden5132
    @woden5132 Před 9 lety +229

    Americans hearts must sink knowing they have to work the next day. Boxing day is a day to recover from over eating and drinking xD

    • @WhiteCamry
      @WhiteCamry Před 8 lety +5

      Frank Watson Which most of us Yanks do, anyway.

    • @Malon2006
      @Malon2006 Před 8 lety +4

      + Frank Watson It could be worse, when I was a kid my Dad had to work on Christmas day. Since they can not close the place down and they need someone there at all times because he worked at a Correctional Institution (Prison). Imagine having to deal with criminals some of which are murderers every Christmas. A lot of the time he worked in the mental health unit where they had the not so sane inmates. He would tell the most "interesting" stories about that place.

    • @LentPanic7
      @LentPanic7 Před 8 lety +1

      I'm not even going to be able to celebrate this upcoming christmas.

    • @kaylavictoria5360
      @kaylavictoria5360 Před 8 lety +11

      We don't work the next day, we usually have days off until the day after New Years.

    • @DisneySinger12
      @DisneySinger12 Před 8 lety +5

      +Frank Watson Psh I wish we had that. I know the day after Christmas, I'll have to be at work at like 6:30am. Ugh, I hate retail.

  • @kian6846
    @kian6846 Před 7 lety

    Very entertaining and educational video indeed, thanks for posting

  • @McJibbin
    @McJibbin Před rokem

    Idk about britain, but the most important part of a proper murican christmas is getting hammered and feasting. Love the video! Instantly subscribed! keep up the fantastic work!

  • @liammiller2407
    @liammiller2407 Před 7 lety +48

    My sister was so scared of Santa coming in her bedroom so we hung the stocking outside her door LOL

    • @lilyfox313
      @lilyfox313 Před 6 lety

      Liam Miller So was mine! We had to do this for years! 😂

  • @AtheistOrphan
    @AtheistOrphan Před 8 lety +65

    She forgot to mention the silver sixpence in the Christmas pudding!

    • @krashd
      @krashd Před 8 lety +15

      +Atheist Orphan Oh aye, British Christmases are choking hazards aplenty. My mum still puts about 8 20-pence pieces in a Christmas pudding. No one has died yet, but there's been a few broken teeth.

    • @ScaryWombat
      @ScaryWombat Před 8 lety +2

      +Atheist Orphan We don't do that anymore in my house, but we did for a long time. I really need to bring it back!

    • @lemonadecupcakes
      @lemonadecupcakes Před 8 lety +2

      +Rob Fraser You made me laugh! We have family with Danish roots and they put an almond in this bland, rice dish. We get the silver dollar afterward. Not as exciting as finding actual money in your food.

    • @AtheistOrphan
      @AtheistOrphan Před 8 lety +9

      +AllannaXD - We have a hundred year-old sixpence that we use especially for the pud

    • @tashazalinski5250
      @tashazalinski5250 Před 6 lety

      sixpence? we get a tuppence in ours

  • @Umbrellaoflove
    @Umbrellaoflove Před 8 lety +11

    Canada, in the past, under British rule, still to this day celebrate a lot of what the Brit's say differentiates themselves from Americans. ❣🇨🇦

  • @mayloo2137
    @mayloo2137 Před 4 měsíci +1

    In my Canadian city, we have a recycling program where the city will pick up your tree for free. The trees are mulched, then used as fertilizer throughout the city.

  • @1ninja1.
    @1ninja1. Před 9 lety +4

    It's funny how Australia has adopted bits and pieces from both countries. For example, we leave out cookies and milk for "Santa" but we also have boxing day specails (like black friday) and Turkey.

  • @davidmaxwaterman
    @davidmaxwaterman Před 7 lety +31

    Brussels Sprouts are delicious!

    • @Scripture-Man
      @Scripture-Man Před 7 lety +12

      Agreed. I don't get the whole anti-sprout deal. Gosh, that was an incredibly American speech pattern I just used. Must retain identity. Must retain identity...

    • @yasmin-gm3oi
      @yasmin-gm3oi Před 7 lety

      agreed

    • @dimitribaillat8464
      @dimitribaillat8464 Před 6 lety

      It's horrible.

  • @erwydconwyjester7321
    @erwydconwyjester7321 Před 7 lety

    Brilliant video. Apart from shopping on Boxing Day (and playing Manopolly) I do them all.
    Nadolig Llawen pawb!

  • @siphonsnob
    @siphonsnob Před 8 lety +38

    When you say "America" you mean specifically "United States of America". Here in Canada we have Christmas crackers, paper crowns, Christmas pudding on fire, HRH Message, and Boxing Day is a Holiday. And we sit around and watch Mrs. Brown's Christmas special on the TV.

    • @lewismurphy3499
      @lewismurphy3499 Před 5 lety

      siphonsnob I didn’t know we had so much in common with Canada. Even the Mrs Brown thing

    • @ghrtfhfgdfnfg
      @ghrtfhfgdfnfg Před 4 lety

      Obviously...

    • @beckerqueiroz
      @beckerqueiroz Před 4 lety +2

      In Brazil we also have different traditions... It's still America, though.
      With time, people will stop calling the US "America".

    • @Lil_Angry_Bitch
      @Lil_Angry_Bitch Před 4 lety

      "America" is short for "United States of America" just like how "Britain" is short for "Great Britain". So no shit, she is talking about America, the USA.

    • @rturtle5795
      @rturtle5795 Před rokem

      Canadians also have pictures of the queen in their homes.. Americans do not.
      But i do understand …. North America.. although many of these videos specifically compare Britain with the USA.

  • @lulurussell
    @lulurussell Před 8 lety +5

    Best joke: "What do you do when you see a space man?"/"Park in it, man!"

  • @g0pot
    @g0pot Před 9 lety +4

    Apart from dousing the Christmas Pud in brandy and (hopefully) setting light to it, as a child the Christmas Pud also had money scattered through it. Sixpence coins were the going rate for me as a toddler and later 5p pieces. If you escaped swallowing it or breaking a tooth on it you got to spend the money on sweets.

  • @bigboredthing
    @bigboredthing Před 8 lety +1

    Not forgetting the Boxing Day hunt popular with the posh that my family watered down to a two hour long gallop on horseback through rough ground and hedges. I miss it...

    • @bigboredthing
      @bigboredthing Před 8 lety

      Also watching Zulu. Think It's a wonderful life, but with more spears and less clothes.

  • @ladyofthecottage1160
    @ladyofthecottage1160 Před 6 lety

    this was awesome

  • @mrrandomperson3106
    @mrrandomperson3106 Před 9 lety +3

    I'm surprised Christmas Television wasn't mentioned! It's almost a tradition that all the old family films are broadcast almost back to back over the days surrounding Christmas. Doctor Who as well.

  • @Margie75
    @Margie75 Před 7 lety +5

    I so want to attend a British Christmas. It seems so much fun.

  • @feltum
    @feltum Před 8 lety

    Your vids are so funny, and true! Good work! 😄😄

  • @MisAJGraveS
    @MisAJGraveS Před 7 lety

    I have an artificial tree, and I'm definitely not in the majority in the states, but I like to keep my tree up through February because I love it and it makes me smile. And bitter cold and snow make me sad and grumpy. Plus I work retail, which in the US is kinda sole crushing. So I hang onto to all the holiday happy I can.

  • @jasminesirs2521
    @jasminesirs2521 Před 7 lety +8

    You missed out the Doctor Who and Downton Christmas specials!

  • @alyssamontgomery1694
    @alyssamontgomery1694 Před 7 lety +5

    Canadian Christmas shares a lot of these traditions. I also have Christian traditions mixed in too so I'd say my Christmas is pretty enjoyable.

  • @praveensharma1865
    @praveensharma1865 Před 4 lety +1

    I really enjoyed her mood 😊

  • @endelvelt7650
    @endelvelt7650 Před 8 lety +3

    OMG! She got everything right about my British Christmas! 👌

  • @remandstimpy
    @remandstimpy Před 9 lety +29

    You missed out the fact that at least two members of the family will drink one too many sherries, thus bringing out some obscure antagonism which has been gently simmering since last Christmas. The drunken participants in this dispute will then retire to the kitchen/garage/back-garden and scream insanely at each other for the next hour and a half, while everyone else watches James Bond on TV. This time honored ritual is compulsory and must be enacted at least once at every British Christmas gathering.

    • @jekkareighner
      @jekkareighner Před 9 lety +12

      Don't forget 'Slightly Racist Grandad' being clearly grumpy over being forced to wear a Santa hat.

    • @srkh8966
      @srkh8966 Před 4 lety

      ken smit That happens everywhere.

  • @DDelilahM
    @DDelilahM Před 8 lety +12

    I lived in America for a number of years and no American i ever knew or heard of keeps their trees up for months or even weeks after Christmas... Where do you get your information from or is it just fun to poke the Americans whether its true or not? Also as a Brit ive never heard of burning the letters to Santa in the fire. Also Pecan and pumpkin pies are for the American holiday of Thanksgiving. On Christmas they usually serve different kinds of fudge and every kind of biscuit/cookie you can think of. It was really rather marvelous!

    • @krashd
      @krashd Před 8 lety

      +DDelilahM She lives in NYC.

    • @snowXcapXangel
      @snowXcapXangel Před 8 lety +4

      +DDelilahM I've known people to keep their trees up till February occasionally. Also I agree with the pie comment, it's Thanksgiving for pie usually. I know my mom always makes cookies with colored frosting and then someone might bring a pie but it's usually a fruit pie or chocolate pie.

    • @DDelilahM
      @DDelilahM Před 8 lety

      Rob Fraser
      So did i ...for 8 years

    • @DDelilahM
      @DDelilahM Před 8 lety +2

      Amanda Wedemeyer
      I think those people are few and far between... this made it sound like its a regular occurrence....

    • @Tamar1973
      @Tamar1973 Před 8 lety

      +DDelilahM I've known people who kept their Christmas trees (the fake ones) up until spring or even early summer. People who use real trees are usually a little more sensible and take them down by January.

  • @brontewcat
    @brontewcat Před 8 lety

    I have a Jamie Oliver video on preparing a traditional Xmas dinner, and thankfully some British traditions did not make it to Australia - Brussels sprouts yuk. A lot of Australian Xmas traditions are based on the Brits, but we are developing some of our own. As much as I like the traditional Xmas dinner (the chestnut and pork stuffing is to die for) it is really great to have Chritmas in Summer, we are finally fusing our own traditions onto the great British Xmas traditions e.g. having seafood - prawns, crab, Balmain bugs, fish such as salmon - with, or even instead of turkey. Also we can eat fresh food in season - cherries yum; sing carols by candlelight in parks; play backyard cricket after Xmas lunch. Seasons greetings to you all.

  • @Kiki-
    @Kiki- Před 7 lety

    very few of these I actually do now, we have Christmas crackers and Christmas dinner but it's beef, chicken and pigs in blankets, with gravy, roasties and Yorkshire puddings. desert is usually jelly and strawberry whip

  • @tinybag
    @tinybag Před 8 lety +6

    "We leave him brandy and a mince pie... Because he's a grown up." Oh hell yeah. I always assumed Father Christmas visited America first to line his stomach with the milk and cookies before approaching the spirit isles.

    • @nunyabiznez6381
      @nunyabiznez6381 Před 7 lety +2

      Sorry but he travels from east to west following the stars.

    • @kuyaleinad4195
      @kuyaleinad4195 Před 7 lety

      +nunya biznez Well technically, Santa does stop by on the UK last since the US tend to put the cookies and have their Christmas dinner on the night of the 24th. The Brits have their dinner on the 25th :/

    • @TazPessle
      @TazPessle Před 7 lety

      nah. the brandy is always waiting on the 24th. And we dine 24th, 25th and 26th with different sides of the family on each day!!!

    • @tejaswoman
      @tejaswoman Před 7 lety

      +Kuya Dan American families actually differ in which day is the big day. For some, it is the 24th, while for others it is the 25th. My family had certain Christmas Eve traditions, but the meal was always on the 25th. In Latin America, the 24th can be so big that many people growing grow up thinking that IS Christmas Day.

  • @dougwatson5717
    @dougwatson5717 Před 8 lety +9

    In Canada we get the best of both the Yanks and the Brits Christmas so I love eating both pie and Christmas pudding as I watch the Queen's message.

    • @Jay-vr9ir
      @Jay-vr9ir Před 3 lety

      Also Boxing Day is great , when I worked Boxing Day , for the railway I was paid triple time , I felt sorry for The U.S.A. back then , everything was open and they had to work.

  • @PirateJessicaandcats
    @PirateJessicaandcats Před 8 lety

    University Challenge Christmas Special and the moment the cheese board comes out for teatime!

  • @judistull9197
    @judistull9197 Před 6 lety

    After living in England for nearly eight years, the things I miss the most are pantomimes and the Evensongs and Christmas programs put on by our sons' schools. We also can't get sausage rolls and mince pies here. I can make the pies that taste similar but our sausage is completely different, so I can't even make them. I also miss the week of movies that were on TV for the week between Christmas and New Years. We used to just run the recorder that whole week and have plenty of things to watch for months! LOL Sigh. I just miss England in its entirety. Happy Christmas everyone!

  • @mosaicmatt
    @mosaicmatt Před 9 lety +4

    In the states, pumpkin and/or pecan pie are traditionally eaten as dessert after a Thanksgiving meal. I've not heard that many have them as a Christmas dessert.

    • @Good-DaySunshine
      @Good-DaySunshine Před rokem

      WE EAT IT ALL YEAR WITH PILES OF WHIPPED CREAM ON TOP. ONE CAN OF CREAM PER PERSON.

    • @mrmadness2699
      @mrmadness2699 Před rokem

      Pumpkin Pie is there for us every Christmas too. Remember the lyrics from “No place like home for the Holidays:” 🎶 I met a man who lives in Tennessee and he was heading for Pennsylvania and some homemade pumpkin pie 🎶

  • @TheKevinGHutton
    @TheKevinGHutton Před 9 lety +8

    The xmas pud would traditionally have coins in it which the lucky finder could keep provided they didn't choke on it first.
    A lighter alternative to the xmas pud is a sherry trifle which is also heavily laden with alcohol. Not that we Brits are all hopeless drunkards who spend the whole festive season completely sozzled.
    Don't forget the tins of Quality Street and Roses sweets with everyone fighting to get their favourite. Oh and the epic hunt for the corkscrew/bottle opener. You end up having to borrow one from a neighbour and then yours suddenly reappears in mid January.

    • @jordanl2317
      @jordanl2317 Před 9 lety +1

      How can you say all if that and bloody well forget brandy butter?

    • @TheKevinGHutton
      @TheKevinGHutton Před 9 lety

      Haha! Yes you're quite right. Rum butter too. I never liked either of them but apparently when my older brother was a baby he wouldn't leave it alone. :-D

    • @jordanl2317
      @jordanl2317 Před 9 lety

      TheKevinGHutton I hate it but my brain goes "Screw it! Maybe this time I'll like it!". That's tradition for you!

  • @starwarsluke2827
    @starwarsluke2827 Před 7 lety +1

    We wish you a Merry Crimbo, We wish you a Merry Crimbo and a Happy Hogsmany!

  • @jessicanoriega5820
    @jessicanoriega5820 Před 7 lety

    Love the idea of placing the stockings by the beds.

  • @PEKUMBU
    @PEKUMBU Před 9 lety +4

    I always wondered about those paper hats.

    • @ldmorris621
      @ldmorris621 Před 9 lety

      let hope a lot of brown kids make it by then..

  • @United-bricks
    @United-bricks Před 9 lety +26

    Yorkshire puddings are a British tradition, you can't have Christmas dinner without them. :D

    • @andymullen684
      @andymullen684 Před 9 lety +1

      Nobody has Yorkshire pud with Turkey!

    • @rossini138
      @rossini138 Před 9 lety +1

      Whaaat? Yorkshire pudding with Turkey?? Blasphemy! lol

    • @jordanl2317
      @jordanl2317 Před 9 lety

      Necessary parts to the meal:
      Turkey
      Ham
      Stuffing
      Roast potatoes, carrots, parsnips
      Mashed potato
      Yorkshire pudding (optional)
      Gravy
      Bread sauce
      Cranberry sauce
      The list goes on.

    • @DukeFluker
      @DukeFluker Před 9 lety

      rossini138 truth.

    • @andymullen684
      @andymullen684 Před 9 lety +1

      Jordan Lawe You can have a chilli stuffing & a fried egg on the top as well if you want, but traditionally there is no Yorkshire pudding served with turkey in England.

  • @kisolli
    @kisolli Před 5 lety

    It was hilarious, thank you! :)

  • @SheilaRodriguesPiresRPaes

    Hi, there. I´m a Brazilian teacher of English. I loved this video and I´m definetely going to use it with my students. Thanks a lot!

  • @abcdefgold
    @abcdefgold Před 9 lety +4

    what about Yorkshires? I refuse to go along with all that "it doesn't go with turkey" stuff, imo Yorkshire Puddings are a key part of Christmas dinner

  • @hlonghi
    @hlonghi Před 9 lety +20

    British Christmas sounds bloody fun! I love soaking things in alcohol and lighting it on fire!

  • @KaikanoSei
    @KaikanoSei Před 7 lety

    Where I'm from (Michigan) we tend to take our trees down before New Years. It's considered tacky to keep them up afterwards. Though I have seen a new tradition of putting up small trees and decorating them for the season, which I think is pretty neat.

  • @victorromeromartinez8565
    @victorromeromartinez8565 Před 4 lety +1

    I started loving boxing day here in the US back in 2006 because of all the football (soccer) matches that are televised live on TV so early in the morning. Just a great way to get over the NBA and NFL matches played on Christmas day. I have the morning to enjoy watching soccer without people telling me to switch off the television, because, you know...Americans still hate soccer. Even though we have a (somewhat) strong league now.

  • @frost3005
    @frost3005 Před 7 lety +5

    'It's like your Black Friday but no one gets trampled' that almost makes me want to go to London on Christmas. But Doctor Who...

  • @Kerberos.Cosplay
    @Kerberos.Cosplay Před 7 lety +30

    For my whole entire life I thought we ate chicken for Christmas but last year mum told me that it was turkey.
    MY LIFE IS A LIE

    • @04nbod
      @04nbod Před 7 lety +1

      We have lamb because Turkey is so dry. Also, family likes to cook meat a day ahead of time and its the one that doesn't taste of cardboard after being re-heated

    • @ardisfaire
      @ardisfaire Před 7 lety +1

      Eilidh Edward we always have a ham for Christmas

    • @mahenonz
      @mahenonz Před 7 lety +1

      04nbod Turkey isn't dry if you cook it right. Try covering it with bacon rashers. Keeps it moist, and also then you have bacon. 😋

    • @endelvelt7650
      @endelvelt7650 Před 7 lety

      Eilidh Edward 😂😂😂

    • @endelvelt7650
      @endelvelt7650 Před 7 lety

      Eilidh Edward 😂😂😂

  • @hootmanwillie
    @hootmanwillie Před 8 lety

    The Hoff had a kilt on not a dress (smarty pants) and we never had chicken or turkey at Christmas in Scotland we had steak pie, mouthwatering just thinking about it. Thanks for sharing, very interesting.!!!!!!!!!!

  • @alexdmanley
    @alexdmanley Před 6 lety

    You forgot to mention the Boxing Day football fixtures. A stable of the festive season for many in the UK

  • @oyaswmi558
    @oyaswmi558 Před 7 lety +7

    It's just not Christmas without an argument over monopoly.

  • @marysouthen9686
    @marysouthen9686 Před 7 lety +4

    In my family it is compulsory to wear the paper hats from the christmas crackers and the first and second people to take theirs off have to do all the washing up.

    • @tejaswoman
      @tejaswoman Před 7 lety

      Fun!

    • @Scripture-Man
      @Scripture-Man Před 7 lety +1

      LOL. And then there's always someone wearing two hats or more isn't there!

  • @normlor8109
    @normlor8109 Před 4 lety

    being Canadian I love both Traditions and being half British I tend towards the British ones as My Granny was from Lancashire and owned a Bakery. I love our "North American" ways but short bread, Lemon curd AND Pudding is a must for me but for that Pudding ...only me. great fun Video, thanks!!

  • @oskarrozewicz5576
    @oskarrozewicz5576 Před 5 lety

    This video was adapted into a free, non-commercial, EFL worksheet! Come and take a look!
    (The description is in Polish, but the worksheet is fully in English)
    o-rozewicz.pl/2018/03/12/christmas-2017/

  • @inter-dimensionalhorror733
    @inter-dimensionalhorror733 Před 7 lety +10

    OF COURSE THE PUDDING IS BOILED. this is the UK we're talking about.

  • @santosamigo796
    @santosamigo796 Před 3 lety +15

    kto tu jest bo baba z angla kazala wlaczyc ten filmik? XD🎄🎅🎆

  • @disneyworlddreamer
    @disneyworlddreamer Před 7 lety

    We've kept our tree up until March on several occasions lol.
    We always have to cut it up where it stands or all the needles will fall off trying to take it out of the house.

  • @5GemmaAnn
    @5GemmaAnn Před 7 lety

    My family is from England and we managed to keep a lot of the traditions you mentioned. Christmas pudding is my absolute favourite part. Who doesn't love dousing a pudding in rum and lighting it on fire with a paper hat on :)

  • @alexwylie2459
    @alexwylie2459 Před 9 lety +8

    Traditionally we should actually eat a goose (turkeys being a North American bird), hence the references in Christmas Carol and Sherlock Holmes. It was swan at one point, but Queen Victoria banned the killing of swans - I believe they still remain under Royal protection.

    • @windystgeorge997
      @windystgeorge997 Před 9 lety +1

      Christmas Carol has a turkey. I know! I was shocked, too.

    • @alexwylie2459
      @alexwylie2459 Před 9 lety +1

      But it's a goose that Scrooge sends out for at the end. Who had a turkey?

    • @TheKevinGHutton
      @TheKevinGHutton Před 9 lety +1

      I think goose tastes much better than turkey but they are bloody expensive.

    • @alexwylie2459
      @alexwylie2459 Před 9 lety +2

      I agree. I like how they're moist even if they are a tiny bit rich.

    • @lordhoot1
      @lordhoot1 Před 9 lety +2

      The perception of a Christmas goose being traditional actually started with Dickens I believe. Before that any sort of roast would do- most often beef which was a British specialty.

  • @Larry
    @Larry Před 9 lety +116

    There's other traditions, like there's ALWAYS a James Bond movie on TV on Christmas Day (no idea why) and removing the Christmas tree means stuffing it behind the shed and leaving it there for the rest of eternity as you can't be arsed to take it down the dump and the bin men are too miserable to take it as you didn't leave them a tip.
    But Guy Fawkes night is a lot more fun in the UK, Children get to set fire to effigies of Catholics and celebrate that were a protestant nation with hideously overpriced, underpowered fireworks and no one gives a shit!!!

    • @coryoldham4217
      @coryoldham4217 Před 9 lety

      6 y hbb

    • @yolodench
      @yolodench Před 9 lety +1

      who even calls it guy fawkes night, and a dump, and pretty much everyone i know uses fake christmas trees

    • @connorlewis5947
      @connorlewis5947 Před 9 lety

      I thought a dump was wen u shat down the loo

    • @yolodench
      @yolodench Před 9 lety

      Connor Lewis its another word for skip if you weren't being sarcastic (i couldn't tell)

    • @Snagprophet
      @Snagprophet Před 9 lety +1

      yolodench We used a real one one year, it was a fucking disaster had to have paper underneath it or the stuff falls onto the carpet.

  • @gabrielburchell5286
    @gabrielburchell5286 Před 8 lety

    3:02
    That's definitely my favourite part of this video xD But the way she says it. lol

  • @tessasweet5792
    @tessasweet5792 Před 7 lety

    LOVE it !!!!