Things Australians Find Totally Normal But Others Find Bizarre

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  • čas přidán 19. 05. 2024
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Komentáře • 4K

  • @brainblaze6526
    @brainblaze6526  Před 24 dny +41

    Signup for a free trial to see why Backblaze is recommended by Inc. Magazine, go to www.backblaze.com/blaze Thank you Backblaze for sponsoring the video.

    • @victoriaeads6126
      @victoriaeads6126 Před 24 dny +4

      I, uh, like Vegemite. I'm American. My kids think I'm a little insane, but in fairness, that's not because of the Vegemite.

    • @greglingle3663
      @greglingle3663 Před 23 dny

      ​@vict😂oriaeads6126 kkk 21:19 m😂td😂😮3is mr😂😂kkkk😂😂kikkr🎉. I m

    • @Sumcant
      @Sumcant Před 23 dny +3

      @@victoriaeads6126your not insane mate, nice spread of butter on toast with a thin spread Vegemite is delicious!
      Say my CZcams name in an Aussie accent!

    • @jonathanwhale7118
      @jonathanwhale7118 Před 21 dnem

      There were 137 wildfires in the UK in 2019!

    • @waynedieckmann9840
      @waynedieckmann9840 Před 20 dny +1

      There's a bbq every 50 metres here. I'm old enough to remember before they were electric. There's a law here that can't stop you cooking your food as long as it's safe. Otherwise you are looking at life in prison.

  • @DeidreL9
    @DeidreL9 Před 24 dny +1209

    People who think we’re a weird version of the US rather than the UK don’t realise we are literally Monty Python Land. Nothing again Texans or the US South, but we’re not them. We are the feral children of British sarcasm.

    • @Gothhippie667
      @Gothhippie667 Před 24 dny +69

      That's a huge reason Australians and U.S. Georgians get along so well.
      We're both penal colonies.
      Good to meet ya, cousin!!

    • @EveryFairyDies
      @EveryFairyDies Před 24 dny +24

      Bloody oath, mate!

    • @lexand_ecarg
      @lexand_ecarg Před 24 dny +19

      What a poetic way to describe it 😂😂

    • @arianamaria_
      @arianamaria_ Před 24 dny +38

      Ive always called Australia the feral love child of the UK and US 😂 your culture is such a random mix of the two that makes no discernible difference

    • @justindenney-hall5875
      @justindenney-hall5875 Před 24 dny +26

      @@arianamaria_ Hell Australia even had its own "Wild West" era with outlaw folk heroes, in America we had Billy the Kid and in Australia they had Reckless Kelly.

  • @headwerkn
    @headwerkn Před 18 dny +247

    Australian here. Can confirm “f-king Telstra!” is the third most commonly used phrase in the country, after ‘Yeah nah’ and ‘Nah yeah.’

    • @ehxjsjd4553
      @ehxjsjd4553 Před 16 dny +1

      I keep saying yeah nah when playing games with American friends, and it's hilarious how confused they get.

    • @MegaRazorback
      @MegaRazorback Před 14 dny +2

      Well to be fair to Telstra as a fellow Aussie, they have ZERO control over the NBN, within the first 6 months of our house being hooked into the NBN it died, turned out to be the line that went into the house itself and normally Telstra would be the one to replace that but because the NBN had been installed into the area and took over the wires the tech said "Even if i wanted to fix this i legally can't because the work that i need to fix/replace is NBN work and Telstra can't touch it" but hey that's what you get when the Gov decides to have the NBN as it's own entity and not under the telecoms who actually know what the fuck they are doing.

    • @MrBraddles3128
      @MrBraddles3128 Před 12 dny +4

      Telstra shits on Optus but fuck me dead either way.

    • @tanktahu
      @tanktahu Před 12 dny +1

      @@MegaRazorback ngl most of the telstra guys out where i live are also the nbn guys, so when it becomes an nbn problem they sometimes just swap vests and do the job. That's also why alot of those guys out here don't put telstra or nbn logos on their vans; it allows them to swap freely.

    • @mittinss
      @mittinss Před 11 dny

      once took 5 consecutive days of telstra promising they’ll send someone out to fix our internet for someone to actually show up.

  • @SnowTheBard
    @SnowTheBard Před 20 dny +201

    Okay I should perhaps clarify - dropbears are a half-joke. You see male koalas in mating season go really feral and can absolutely wreck your weekend. Having one leap on you from the trees or chase you is definitely going to make your day the worst. That's where the joke of mythical "dropbears" came from; as always a grain of truth which is perhaps scarier than the joke.

    • @TGPDrunknHick
      @TGPDrunknHick Před 18 dny

      hell the little fuckers fall out of trees while sleeping get startled awake and react agressively. might not be a literal bear but, they are scary little shits.

    • @mickhawkes125
      @mickhawkes125 Před 17 dny +6

      Don't worry about it, he is an arrogant Pom who thinks he is better than us

    • @buzzinbilby4308
      @buzzinbilby4308 Před 16 dny +3

      Dont be naive buddy, nothin mythical about it.. 😡

    • @TheCeleron450
      @TheCeleron450 Před 15 dny +5

      But then again if you fell out of your home you’d be pissed off and lash out at anyone nearby.

    • @sweetistweeter
      @sweetistweeter Před 13 dny +2

      I once tried to drive down a road in summer and came across a male koala literally inside a female in the middle of the road. It's like- what do you do? Try to go near them? Hell no. Eventually she walked away and he stared at me. If looks could kill.

  • @williambarnes5023
    @williambarnes5023 Před 11 dny +16

    Fosters: Australian for beer.
    Beer: Australian for piss.
    Piss: Better than Fosters.

  • @sambathelionking
    @sambathelionking Před 24 dny +942

    As an Australian, no everything is not literally trying to kill you. It can kill you, but it isn't trying.

    • @alanhilder1883
      @alanhilder1883 Před 24 dny +78

      The other day, while working someone's switchboard, the redback didn't come near me and I stayed out of his way.

    • @fuzzymurdermittens
      @fuzzymurdermittens Před 24 dny +21

      It's an important distinction. Sure, most things CAN kill you here, but the overwhelming majority of the wildlife and dangerous plants just want to hang out and not be bothered. If I recall correctly, the only thing that actively hunts people on the regular here is the crocs. Everything else is just unfortunate cross-species miscommunications and jump scares. Even the sharks only hunt people when they don't know how garbage we are compared to other ocean meat.

    • @spiderbellywildnails
      @spiderbellywildnails Před 23 dny +57

      As a living Australian I can safely say I've not been killed yet!

    • @Luubelaar
      @Luubelaar Před 23 dny +32

      Or it can't actually kill you, but it definitely wants to.

    • @sambathelionking
      @sambathelionking Před 23 dny +24

      @Luubelaar also an important distinction. The things that are trying to kill you can't. Kill or kill not there is no try.

  • @regulargoat7259
    @regulargoat7259 Před 23 dny +427

    Aussie here. I really do need to point out that getting harmed by our wildlife is shockingly rare and it’s frustrating how much people’s exaggerations are presented as fact. I’ve gone on many a bushwalk, been to the beach a ton, etc and I’ve never been harmed by anything more than a mosquito or leech.
    - The only snake I saw when I lived quite literally across the road from dense bushland (I lived there for about 12 years) was a non-venomous one.
    - Wearing enclosed shoes and not hugging a paper bark tree is a surefire way to not get bitten by a spider
    - stonefish aren’t found everywhere in australia, box jellies arent around at all times of the year or in all locations and there are less shark attacks here than in America (also sharks aren’t the crazy killing machines the media paints them ass)
    - ive never even seen a wild bluering octopus
    - crocodiles are mainly a northern thing
    - gympie-gympie is found only in northern NSW and southern Queensland, so just dont go bushwalking there
    - ive been in the presence of wild kangaroos before and they are more likely to run away than attack
    - our hospitals are stocked with every type of antivenom you could possibly need, unlike places like america, which means you are far less likely to die from a venomous animal here anyway
    I could go on and on. It is insane to me that people call australia dangerous. America is far scarier, with moose, bison, bears, mountain lions, wolves, etc as *well* as snakes and spiders. And overseas animals can have rabies, so a tiny little bat with a bite you can’t even feel could straight up kill anyone in America. Rabies isn’t a thing in Australia, meanwhile.

    • @lukes6868
      @lukes6868 Před 21 dnem +37

      I got to agree, in Australia, things bite you, In the USA, Things Eat you. But wherever you live, you cope with the natural surroundings and think other countries are full of danger.

    • @glennwatson
      @glennwatson Před 21 dnem +24

      @@lukes6868I saw more venomous snakes in the United States than in Australia. Most venomous snakes are weary of humans.

    • @NPC-fl3gq
      @NPC-fl3gq Před 21 dnem

      Nope. All potential mass immigrants should be warned that you will literally die within days of getting here.
      Not worth it. Stay where you are.
      Cheers.

    • @0Zolrender0
      @0Zolrender0 Před 21 dnem

      Hi there Aussie too. I however lived in the Outback (Alice Springs NT) google it..... I have been bitten by a red Back Spider. Went to hospital and didn't even get anti ven0om. Told to harden the fuck up. Recovered a few days later. I have been trampled by a charging wild Camel. Again went to hospital and was told I was lucky to be alive. I have been to Darwin once an swam in the ocean. Touched briefly a boxed jellyfish. Another trip to the hospital. It sting like hell. This time it took them ages to get those stingers off me. So thats my experience of 51 years in Australia, most of it in the real Outback.

    • @lukes6868
      @lukes6868 Před 21 dnem +9

      @@glennwatson True, the dangerous ones normally leave you alone.

  • @brentondorto1
    @brentondorto1 Před 16 dny +32

    I'm from Melbourne, Australia and work in telecommunications.
    In 2010 the government started to roll out their plan to give everyone (except extremely rural places) FTTP, they called it NBN.
    The next government cancelled that plan and replaced with a very out dated technology of FTTN.
    After a few years they changed it again to FTTC. Now they're changing as many FTTN to FTTP as feasibly possible, they send people out to survey the areas to see if it is feasible or not beforehand.
    My house has FTTP and I bought in this area because I knew it had it because I helped install it :)

    • @muzzthegreat
      @muzzthegreat Před 11 dny +5

      yeah NBN - Nobodys Bloody Network - I talked to the Fourth {!} guy who came to my house: he estimated that $3,000 had been spent trying to connect me: and I live in the burbs.
      First Guy: looks at POLE across the street and declares, 'the node is at the street corner [other side] - gonna need to string it from there to this pole, need a cherrypicker' laters . . .
      2nd Guy: jets and TRENCHES from the NEAR street corner to my house, then realizing that I have excavation for drainage at the close corner decides to go to the far corner of my house, but can't beat the trees and concrete and decides to run under my neighbours yard - puts in pipe and box with magic letters and blue/yellow winching rope.
      3rd guy: Unannounced Drilling my house at 8AM on a Saturday morning directly above my bedroom window.
      He is running the overhead cable from the Pole Across the street that the First guy tried to do.
      4th guy: makes appointment, connected; has whole history; estimates $3,000 has been spent.
      Another Government Boondoggle.

    • @tylerdotapp
      @tylerdotapp Před 9 dny

      my parents use to have FTTN now they have FTTP

    • @PiDsPagePrototypes
      @PiDsPagePrototypes Před 3 dny

      I have FTTP. Mice love it. Telstra techs pull the fibre too hard when they replace it,.. and so the NBN replaces it again a month later.
      And if I want world class speeds, it costs a significant amount more, and it gets throttled by congestion when everyone watches their netflix, to the point why you wonder what the point of paying stupid amounts for it is.

  • @matthewlrutledge
    @matthewlrutledge Před 20 dny +87

    So I’m an American who lived in Australia for 4 years and did my master’s degree there studying wildlife, including venomous organisms. Australia does have a wealth of venomous organisms, though whether it has more than its neighbours in SE Asia is arguable, and the reason for its fame for it over those countries may simply come down to English language publicity and greater numbers of scientific publications.
    The other main contributing factor is that as an island, Australia’s wildlife had relatively fewer common ancestors than many other places, and many of those ancestors were venomous. So when those organisms diversified and speculated, many of their descendants retained venom. As an example, the overwhelming majority of Australian snake species are Elapids (same family as cobras and coral snakes). Since the ancestral line was venomous, when the snakes diversified over time to fill different niches, most of them retained venom. The US on the other hand has only three Elapid species, a few dozen venomous Vipers, and the rest are nearly all nonvenomous or very mildly venomous Colubrids. If you want to know more about it, read up on Wallace’s Line. It’s a really interesting topic in evolutionary biology.
    Also also, microdosing Vegemite is the way to go, and gympie-gympie is a nightmare.

    • @jamesalbrecht418
      @jamesalbrecht418 Před 18 dny

      Ok mate so this is your opinion after a master's fuck off mate did you even step foot out of the class room

    • @terminal_atlas
      @terminal_atlas Před 18 dny +2

      >very mildly venomous
      The seppo has acclimatised

    • @mickhawkes125
      @mickhawkes125 Před 17 dny +1

      Don't worry about it, he is an arrogant Pom who thinks he is better than us

    • @kingofthejungle3833
      @kingofthejungle3833 Před 16 dny

      we have 9 of the top ten deadiest (or most venomous, I'm not sure which but there is a difference) snakes

    • @samuelpage5660
      @samuelpage5660 Před 13 dny

      Gympie-gympie stings aren't so bad if you've got some bush knowledge. The cunjevoi plant often grows in the same microclimates and rubbing the sap on the sting makes the pain lessen. Don't eat it or get any sap in your lips or eyes tho bc it has killed people before. Bullrouts are wayyyyy worse

  • @rickbarry2952
    @rickbarry2952 Před 24 dny +302

    As an Australian viewer, I want to give a huge shout out to Lorelai for throwing in lots of little things just for us. I don't think many internationals will fully get the Sammy J clip or just how annoying dealing with Telstra really can be, but ... IYKYK

    • @EveryFairyDies
      @EveryFairyDies Před 24 dny +18

      I love that Sammy J song. And you're welcome, mate!

    • @TheKrispyfort
      @TheKrispyfort Před 24 dny +2

      RIP Benita 😭

    • @bencodykirk
      @bencodykirk Před 21 dnem +4

      Lived Down Under (Under a rock, apparently) for 27 years - don't know what a "Sammy J" is. But I can agree that dealing with Telstra is worse than when I got a root canal.

    • @uraniumcranium2613
      @uraniumcranium2613 Před 21 dnem +2

      As an Australian I dont think its necessary to let everyone know you are Australian lol

    • @DEVILTAZ35
      @DEVILTAZ35 Před 21 dnem

      You don’t even need to use Telstra anymore.

  • @taylorslade961
    @taylorslade961 Před 24 dny +684

    Lorelei is literally the funniest editor on this channel. She deserves a raise.

    • @EveryFairyDies
      @EveryFairyDies Před 24 dny +82

      Yay, more mushrooms for me!

    • @christinebenson518
      @christinebenson518 Před 24 dny +32

      ​@@EveryFairyDiesDon't forget the Magic Spoon dust on your birthday.

    • @EveryFairyDies
      @EveryFairyDies Před 24 dny +16

      @@christinebenson518 WOOOOO!

    • @DeathByBlonde1
      @DeathByBlonde1 Před 24 dny +28

      I am here for Lorelei!!! The Holden Ute with the Chev badge had me crying. I own a Pontiac G8 which is on the Holden Commodore platform and here in the States everybody is changing out their Pontiac and Chev badges for the Holden ones. 😂😂😂

    • @EveryFairyDies
      @EveryFairyDies Před 24 dny +12

      @@DeathByBlonde1 That's hilarious. Though I'm a Ford gal.

  • @SireSquish
    @SireSquish Před 20 dny +62

    Tricking a pom with the dropbear thing is a rite of passage. We learn it in primary school.

    • @mickhawkes125
      @mickhawkes125 Před 17 dny

      Haha! yeah! the poms think they are soooo much better than us, but they are truly idiots

    • @Aquascape_Dreaming
      @Aquascape_Dreaming Před dnem +1

      Sure, but even Australians are initiated into it, themselves by friends or family members before they pass it along to foreigners.
      I remember being on a camp as a preteen, and being introduced to the concept of drop bears from my fellow peers. I was terrified, largely in part, because we were on a night walk at the time that I was informed (as is usually the time and place best used for maximising the fear effect).
      It was much later that I learned that it was a humorous myth.

  • @jonglass
    @jonglass Před 18 dny +14

    I was an American, living in Poland. We had a friend visit from Australia. She brought Vegemite for us to try. She showed us the proper method, a thin, barely perceptible amount on the toast. I decided it wasn't enough, and layered it on, more like peanut butter or jelly, and it was much better. I guess I like Vegemite.

    • @peter65zzfdfh
      @peter65zzfdfh Před 13 dny

      There are many Australians that do this also, it's just doing so has an almost 100% dislike rate with new people experiencing it at that concentration. Though most are somewhere between 'barely perceptible' and 'like peanut butter'.

    • @SpearChucker1990
      @SpearChucker1990 Před 7 dny +1

      Or eat it with a spoon as I just did because this video made me crave it

  • @blinddave8328
    @blinddave8328 Před 24 dny +539

    Massive shout out to cousin George, without whom this video would have been far less awesome

    • @thejudgmentalcat
      @thejudgmentalcat Před 24 dny +8

      You and me Dave (about Australia)...same page

    • @whaynelongjhonsondanglesmo986
      @whaynelongjhonsondanglesmo986 Před 24 dny +15

      The editor has thrown in a few shits and giggles too.

    • @awesomelephant42
      @awesomelephant42 Před 24 dny +8

      is there AI for reading randomly edited in captions in videos or do you just miss all the editors memes? Lorelai was not amused xD

    • @muadeeb
      @muadeeb Před 24 dny +3

      She typically tells him ahead of time

    • @AnotherOther99
      @AnotherOther99 Před 24 dny +18

      Now do one about English people coming here and complaining about everything... It's too hot, I can't breathe, the bushfires have surrounded me and I can't escape. Whinge, whinge, whinge.

  • @cozza248
    @cozza248 Před 24 dny +191

    As an Australian, Vegemite fking rocks. Vegemite and cheese sandwiches, Vegemite on toast, Vegemite just licked off a knife. Cant go wrong

    • @jarrodbright5231
      @jarrodbright5231 Před 24 dny +16

      Japanese friends love it too. Apparently it's like taking a hit of soy sauce straight from the bottle

    • @ClaireJorkowski
      @ClaireJorkowski Před 24 dny +7

      Do you remember the vegemite chocolate that was available 10 years ago.

    • @Darkinu2
      @Darkinu2 Před 24 dny +4

      As long as the knife isn't serrated 😂😂

    • @user-md2zp5xb8i
      @user-md2zp5xb8i Před 24 dny +5

      It sounds similar to marmite and I love that with cheese and toast, I'd definitely try it

    • @ShethTora
      @ShethTora Před 23 dny +1

      @@ClaireJorkowskiI use to eat Vegemite and Nutella (well the home brand version) on toast years before that came out.

  • @tealkerberus748
    @tealkerberus748 Před 20 dny +37

    Come to Australia in our winter. The snakes and spiders are dormant, the bushfire risk is negligible, and you'll love it here.
    Also, even when the wildlife are active, they actually don't want to mess with you. They'd much rather leave you alone so long as you leave them alone. The climate and the trees are much more likely to kill you than the fauna.

    • @Samqdf
      @Samqdf Před 9 dny +3

      I live 40Km S.E of Melbourne and in the 42 years of living in Australia I have only ever seen a single snake ever. I find it ironic that around the areas I live the bushland is safer than the ones in the USA / Canada. There are no Coyote's, Moose, bears, wolves and whatever else there is over there. If I waned to I can walk through my local woodland area at 2am and know that there is no risk of any animal attacking me.

    • @Aquascape_Dreaming
      @Aquascape_Dreaming Před dnem

      You got everything right until you said that the trees are more likely to kill you. What tree in Australia will kill you? Even the Gympie Gympie tree will only cause extreme pain, but I've never even seen one in all my life living here.
      There may indeed be a tree here that can kill a person, but that doesn't make it 'more likely' that you'd die from it, than the native wildlife.
      How often do you see news headlines about people being killed by trees in Australia? 😂
      Tree branches falling in a storm could definitely kill a person, but that's true of any place that experiences storms, which is almost everywhere on the globe. I'm assuming you're referring to trees that kill you in ways not related to being broken in a storm.

    • @Aquascape_Dreaming
      @Aquascape_Dreaming Před dnem

      ​@@Samqdfand mountain lions, and alligators. Admittedly, alligators aren't as aggressive as Australian saltwater crocs, but they still kill people if they feel so inclined.
      They also have bats, plus rabies that can be carried and transmitted from dogs (unlike the Australian Lyssa virus).

    • @Samqdf
      @Samqdf Před dnem

      @@Aquascape_Dreaming I didn't think of those, excellent points. There aren't any crocs in my part of Australia so that's not a factor either. I could be wrong but I don't even think there are ticks in these parts?

    • @tealkerberus748
      @tealkerberus748 Před dnem

      @@Aquascape_Dreaming I guess you don't live in the bush surrounded by widowmakers and the remains of branches and whole trees that just dropped one day because it was too hot for them. Gum trees don't give you any warning - one moment they're standing there like all the other trees, and the next moment there's a big chunk of firewood on the ground.
      You've just gotta try not to be under it when it drops, is all.

  • @anamorphica6863
    @anamorphica6863 Před 8 dny +6

    Fun fact, aussie infants go straight from breast milk to vegemite. You could say its their first solid food.🤔
    Two pro tips, 1) never ever camp in a dry river bed, even if it feels soft and comfortable. It can rain 300 kilometers upstream and wash you away. 2) don't camp under gum trees, their notorious for dropping limbs at any time of the day or night. Its not just the koalas you have to watch...
    Also on koalas, not entirely sure when breeding season is for koalas is, however an enamored male koala is not something you want to trifle with... the koalas you pat at any of the major tourist parks are showered, cleaned, deodorized and probably perfumed. My experience has been in the wild you will smell a koala a long time before you see it.
    I'm about 4 hours west of no mans land. Red belly blacks are less hostile than the other poisonous types of snakes we get here. Some of the locals even think a red belly black is a good thing as they'll prey on the young of the other more venomous types of snakes.
    Telstra is a 7 letter word more accurately described by most four letter words... enough said about that.

  • @erinjanssen8336
    @erinjanssen8336 Před 24 dny +244

    Australian here - What in the heck is a disposable BBQ?! You have a BBQ and you throw it away...? What?! I can't compute this. How does that work? What is it made out of? Is it metal? Huh? That sounds so wasteful!
    Most people in Australia do like Vegemite. I don't, but I am always teased as being un-Australian. It's very salty. Not to my tastes, but everyone else in my household loves it.
    As for the warm beer - NO! We make fun of people from England for having warm beer as they allegedly drink it at room temperature, which to us, means warm. We have ours ice-cold. Literally! Many of our beer taps have ice-build up on the outside of them. And no, Fosters is awful. No one drinks that here.
    We tried to fix the internet but rolling out the NBN (National Broadband Network), where fibre to the house was going to be rolled out everywhere, but there was a change of government early in this process and they decided to integrate this with the existing 50-60 year old copper network, which is badly degraded. The rural and remote areas are EXTREMELY badly affected by the internet and there are places that simply do not have access to the internet at all, not via mobile signals, not by NBN or wi-fi, not satellite, not at all. This issue taps into a lot of socioeconomic, sociopolitical and even racial issues in Australia, so it's a much bigger problem than buffering on video speeds, for example. It means children in far-remote communities are not able to access the same levels of education as suburban children, medical information is delayed or very hard to get, communication is extremely strained, ability to access services is very difficult. To compound this issue, it is often Indigenous communities that are the most adversely affected by this, due to the high populations of Indigenous peoples in remote and far-remote communities. This is a big problem.

    • @EveryFairyDies
      @EveryFairyDies Před 24 dny +28

      A disposable BBQ is basically a foil tray with coals in it and a grill over top. Bush fire fodder if ever there was one.
      I also do not like Vegemite but I wasn't born here, so I haven't been eating it since before I was in the womb.
      I wanted to explain the warm beer joke, but figured it would be too many interjections...
      I have FFTP, and it STILL goes down on me regularly. And not in the fun way.

    • @erinjanssen8336
      @erinjanssen8336 Před 24 dny +11

      @@EveryFairyDies yeah, that sounds really dangerous for Australia. It makes sense that they don’t have them here or they aren’t common at the very least.
      The beer thing, yeah, I thought people would jump all over this too but I was too lazy to read through the comments, so I thought I’d say something anyway.
      We have FTTP here too. It was initially pretty bad but it seems to have improved recently. We are still trailing behind most of the world.

    • @stephenpartridge686
      @stephenpartridge686 Před 24 dny +4

      @@EveryFairyDies never heard of a disposable BBQ either, I also don't like and have never liked Vegemite and get called un-Australian for this as well but I know lots of people who love it and it is very popular despite what foreigners claim....

    • @iowafarmboy
      @iowafarmboy Před 24 dny +7

      Although looks like starlink is available in Australia.
      I have it here in Rural US, and love it!
      No where near as fast as direct fiber, but certainly fast enough for 99% of what you do.

    • @u-neekusername4430
      @u-neekusername4430 Před 24 dny +7

      @@EveryFairyDies Haha, came to describe the BBQ, silly me. Got one in NZ, in Wellington, to take to the beach (yeah I know, n embarrassingly YES I was sober), couldn't even keep the damn thing lit, just blew away every spark or ember. At least it was cold marinated tofu & raw veg & not raw chicken.

  • @TheWombat2012
    @TheWombat2012 Před 22 dny +161

    Vegemite; the old advertising used to say “a mere smear is enough”. You only need a SMALL amount spread on toast with plenty of butter. Foreigners usually make the mistake of using it like jam and putting heaps of it on which even Australians don’t do.

    • @hatman1234
      @hatman1234 Před 21 dnem

      Absolutely agree, a smear is more than enough as it tastes awful. I know few fellow Aussies who actually like it.

    • @schroecat1
      @schroecat1 Před 21 dnem +22

      I actually like my vegemite to be thick like jam... and I eat it with jam as well.

    • @lukes6868
      @lukes6868 Před 21 dnem +7

      @@schroecat1 With lots of butter on top of it.

    • @M1ggins
      @M1ggins Před 21 dnem +1

      I always found it a weak version of marmite and always had to add more to get it to taste right.

    • @nevkirkham7657
      @nevkirkham7657 Před 21 dnem +9

      @@hatman1234 Aussie here and have it most days on toast with butter for breakie. Oh a sanga with cheese and lettuce was a school favorite 🙂

  • @telemeister
    @telemeister Před 20 dny +18

    The drop bear joke is actually us describing how insanely deadly it is and then tell you it is a joke after having terrified you. They exist and the joke is terrifying you and then making you think they aren’t actually real

  • @joshmcintyre5868
    @joshmcintyre5868 Před 19 dny +24

    Hello! Rural Aussie boy here. For the internet part- it is hell. I lived about an hour away from the nearest large-ish city. NBN was started in the early 2000’s I belive? And the area I lived didn’t even have the nbn till 2023. By which point, I had mastered the arts of low frame rate for my games- and thankfully the nbn sucks anyway so nothing changes!

    • @carriocamatey3183
      @carriocamatey3183 Před 18 dny +2

      We live on a farm in northern NSW. Up until a year ago we were on wireless broadband requiring a $1000 booster to get 4g. Terrible service! Went Starlink in Jan 23 & haven’t looked back👍

    • @rob1733
      @rob1733 Před 14 dny +1

      I just looked up Starlink in Aus and I see that Telstra now re-sells it?!? OMG...

    • @joshmcintyre5868
      @joshmcintyre5868 Před 13 dny

      @@rob1733 now that’s…just sad haha, sucks to suck Telstra

    • @peter65zzfdfh
      @peter65zzfdfh Před 13 dny

      The NBN was a 2009 announcement by the Rudd Government, who were going to do fiber to 97% of homes, before upgrading that to 99% when they realized it would be cheaper to do the extra 2% that way than re-use the old degrading copper and pay TV networks. Because planning and spinning up a massive entity to start that rollout takes time, the first connection wasn't until 2011. In 2013 the nation committed itself to poor internet by throwing them out and replacing them with the Abbott government who instead promised to do 'it faster and cheaper' by not actually upgrading most of the copper (and even being so dumb as to roll out NEW copper in many areas at a greater cost than fiber). This of course didn't happen, as all the planning needed to happen again now with a degrading copper network that didn't necessarily match in reality what the documentation said it should, so it took longer, cost several times as much, and limited some homes to 50mb/s instead of 1000mb/s. Finally after nearly 10 years of wastage the current government was elected and since 2022 has been replacing progressively the copper for most anyone not in a rural area that orders a service of 100mb/s or above.
      For those in rural areas if you want high speed your best option is to pay for Starlink. Fiber to the curb, unlike the video, is not 3G from the curb, it's a short run of existing copper from the curb, and is actually the only solution they should have even bothered entertaining that wasn't fiber right to the home as it might have actually saved money and been easily upgradable on demand to full fiber, unlike fiber to the node which was a complete waste as it underperforms and is expensive to upgrade unless you do most of the suburb.
      There's still 'pockets' of slow, but as long as you have a good ISP that isn't Telstra mostly, it's actually quite stable, I haven't had a single dropout of any length at all since 2019 and get 1000/50. Though that isn't cheap, and faster plans are seen as business plans which they squeeze 'businesses' heavily for to subsidize rural connections which likely cost much more than they earn. They basically capped uploads on residential plans to encourage businesses to spend more. 1000/1000 is available about anywhere non rural but for a huge $$$$$$$$ commitment, they give you a new fiber that only works on the business ethernet plans/network which cost a lot per month.

    • @gregbakes39
      @gregbakes39 Před 3 dny

      NBN started in 2011. We live in the Blue Mountains which is 90mins from inner Sydney and we only got NBN in 2021.

  • @jaredeiesland
    @jaredeiesland Před 24 dny +349

    Watching the editor vs writer battle going on over Simon is absolutely my favorite new thing about this channel.

    • @EveryFairyDies
      @EveryFairyDies Před 24 dny +56

      And I always make a point to tell Dave about my snarky comments, since he can't read them.

    • @BonelessKid
      @BonelessKid Před 23 dny +7

      ​@EveryFairyDies it was somehow funnier when I remembered he wouldn't see it!

    • @hoyks1
      @hoyks1 Před 23 dny +4

      The editor will always win.

    • @tubensalat1453
      @tubensalat1453 Před 23 dny +6

      @@EveryFairyDies Since I can't imagine Simon watching his own videos I assume he's largely unaware about them.

    • @EveryFairyDies
      @EveryFairyDies Před 23 dny +7

      @@tubensalat1453 He is. But we know. We know....

  • @8BitShadow
    @8BitShadow Před 20 dny +185

    "Isn't in australia they have like good currency? Don't they have like a strong currency? ... I thought they had lots of money?"
    Unironically the best (unintentional) joke in the entire video.

    • @nexusofboredom
      @nexusofboredom Před 19 dny +9

      I laughed at that.. I mean.. better to laugh than cry as they say OO

    • @OniGanon
      @OniGanon Před 18 dny +8

      The Australian Dollar is similar in strength to the Canadian Dollar, slightly less. We do have one of the higher average incomes in the world.

    • @jamesalbrecht418
      @jamesalbrecht418 Před 18 dny

      Our economy has completely collapsed sad to say its just not being reported on as they are trying to keep the housing market going. It's a complete joke.

    • @jamesalbrecht418
      @jamesalbrecht418 Před 18 dny +5

      ​@OniGanon but why does a shop that used to cost $40 is now I $160 come on mate if you live here you know our economy is completely collapsed

    • @tlpenguin3758
      @tlpenguin3758 Před 18 dny

      I mean at least the government is maybe kinda tryna make it so we can actually afford houses

  • @TheLissie09
    @TheLissie09 Před 19 dny +28

    It’s the Redback spider you’ll find under the toilet seat, they won’t kill you but the bite does hurt.
    The spider of concern is the Funnel web, it will hide in your shoes, or hide in the clothing that was dropped on the floor. So check your shoes before you put them on and don’t leave your clothes in the floordrobe.

    • @jesarablack1661
      @jesarablack1661 Před 17 dny +1

      For note, if bitten by the Redback spider, get your butt to the hospital, only 1 person has died from the bite (or rather complications from the bite, it caused a large abscess and infection) in the last roughly 70 years... because that is how long ago the antivenin was developed, so get it treated, it's not snakebite level of emergency, but still get it treated so you don't end up like him.

    • @virginiatressider5753
      @virginiatressider5753 Před 14 dny

      I just thought I should mention, because it's hilarious, that a known side-effect of a redback bite is priapism: a painful, non-sexual erection that can last for hours. According to the NHS, treatment may include
      using a needle to drain blood from your penis, which is done while the area is numbed under local anaesthetic
      tablets or injections directly into your penis
      surgery to drain the blood through a tiny cut, done while you're asleep under general anaesthetic
      Left untreated it can cause permanent damage to your todger.

    • @dietmarwolf79
      @dietmarwolf79 Před 8 dny

      sound advise, I can tell you !

    • @castleanthrax1833
      @castleanthrax1833 Před 7 dny

      Yes. The last fatality was a guy pulling on his jeans, and unfortunately for him, that act of pulling them up pulled the funnel web spiders fangs deeper into his leg, resulting in a greater amount of venom entering his body. Nobody his died since the development of an anti-venom aver 40 years ago.
      The deadliest animals in Australia (meaning the animals that kill the most people) are horses and cattle.

    • @jesarablack1661
      @jesarablack1661 Před 7 dny

      @@castleanthrax1833
      Unlike the redback spider discussed previously, which even when death did occur was a slow thing from complications, funnel web spider venom can kill directly.
      While no recent deaths from funnel web spiders due to antivenom, in cases prior to that death could come in as little as 1 hour after the bite, so treat it as seriously as very venomous snake, emergency services and straight to the hospital.

  • @rhys0564
    @rhys0564 Před 19 dny +12

    Also lets not forget the mid sized the birds which will happily take you on in a 1on1 if you so happen to wander in the general vicinity of their nesting tree. Magpies and Plovers do not hold back!

    • @oldcynic6964
      @oldcynic6964 Před 18 dny +2

      ... and the kookaburras which take a delight in raiding your barbecue and zooming off with whatever they can grab.

  • @Natsirt666
    @Natsirt666 Před 24 dny +112

    FYI, Redback Spiders are the ones you find under the toilet seat on outdoor bathrooms/dunnys. Not Funnelwebs. That would be truly horriffic.

    • @makavelismith
      @makavelismith Před 22 dny +4

      Margarine, instead of butter? Yuek.

    • @RavingKats
      @RavingKats Před 21 dnem +4

      Any toilet spider is bad news imho

    • @makavelismith
      @makavelismith Před 21 dnem +2

      @@RavingKats I have arachnophobia... But margarine?

    • @RavingKats
      @RavingKats Před 21 dnem +5

      @@makavelismith 😂 it's pretty popular stuff up here in Canada too. Butter is for recipes and I Can't Believe it's Not Butter, Becel, or Country Harvest margarine is for everything else lol

    • @makavelismith
      @makavelismith Před 21 dnem +2

      @@RavingKats I have lived most of my life here in Ireland, but I was born in Calgary. I just remember not liking margarine at all.
      You need those milk fats.

  • @85superHamster
    @85superHamster Před 23 dny +193

    The thing no one seems to mention in these kinds of videos is that the lawn is out to get you. If you ever notice a patch of grass that no one is walking on barefoot, it has bindis (or bindii). They WILL get you, and you WILL regret taking off your shoes.
    Ive never been bitten by a spider, hardly ever seen a snake, but FML the number of times bindis have made me regret everything is far too high to count.
    For the uninformed, bindis are basically cactus spines hidden in regular lawn. If you enjoy walking on cactuses, you'll love bindis.

    • @robinkelly1770
      @robinkelly1770 Před 21 dnem

      Courtesy South Africa...bl**dy awful things that grow anywhere and can germinate even after 7 years

    • @arjovenzia
      @arjovenzia Před 21 dnem +29

      How they manage to be so painful yet tiny is incredible. But the real nasty one are caltrops, like tyre spikes, the are shaped so there is always a spike straight up. And these are spikes, 5-10mm long. Easily goes through the sole of your shoe. Happily draw blood.

    • @NPC-fl3gq
      @NPC-fl3gq Před 21 dnem

      And blue-bottles are like sea-bindis on steroids.
      They won't kill you, they'll just make sure that your quota of four letter words for the day is taken care of.

    • @davejob630
      @davejob630 Před 21 dnem +2

      True!

    • @stuartdparnell
      @stuartdparnell Před 21 dnem +7

      Oh yeah, hate bindi patches. Walked on em when I was a kid, learned quick to always have shoes/thongs on.

  • @PanicGoat
    @PanicGoat Před 20 dny +9

    Hey, Fellow Aussie here.. Just wanted to inform fellow Aussies about Starlink As I use it and have used it for almost a year now.. I live in sunshine Coast, Queensland (so not remote at all) and I average around 150-200mbps down and 15-20mbps up (Ping around 20-40 which in 99% of games I don't notice).. Only really gets poor in severe weather (poor being below 100mbps) and only ever dropped out in that hectic lightning storm time at the start of the year and only for an hour or so (power was out longer but hooked up a genny and worked a treat)..
    Biggest downside IMO is price, I got a refurb kit at $300 and pay $140p/m so it's much cheaper to stick to the 'National Broken Network' but i as a gamer and large consumer of the interwebs (hundreds-thousand GBp/m easy) don't see myself going back to aussie net until some big changes happen.
    Anyway hope this helps some people and Have a good one! :)

    • @MILLlWATT
      @MILLlWATT Před 18 dny +3

      As an Aussie from Newcastle, I've heard nothing but fantastic things about Starlink! As quick as I am to criticise Musk and his questionable business decisions - it really seems like he's nailed it with this one, I reckon he should focus more on internet services bc I can genuinely see him revolutionising the game.
      I also hear from those waaaay outback who rely on it and they seem to love it.
      PS. a good friend of mine comes from the sunny coast and he thinks it's pretty similar down here

    • @Groaker
      @Groaker Před 12 dny +2

      "I live in sunshine Coast, Queensland"
      I'm sorry.

    • @Grane1234
      @Grane1234 Před 10 dny

      The hell? You're getting less than 200 ping?!

    • @PanicGoat
      @PanicGoat Před 10 dny

      @Grane1234 Yeah average ping is like around 20 on landlines (lower is better)

  • @johnoconnor7221
    @johnoconnor7221 Před 19 dny +6

    I just realised that I actually had to stop and count how many times I've been bitten or attacked by a member of our wildlife. I've lost track of how many snakes and spiders I've seen or sharks I've run into while diving or surfing. I also nearly sat on a Taipan, luckily it was a cold day, and he just couldn't be buggered biting me. We don't even bother moving the huntsmen spiders from inside the house. We saw one eating a mouse on the garage door and the reaction was basically "Aww she's gorgeous". Welcome to Oz.

    • @mickhawkes125
      @mickhawkes125 Před 17 dny

      Sounds like bullshit to me. Having spent 20 years in our military, on exercises in the back of beyond, I rarely encountered anything venomous. This is all pommy arrogance.

  • @mortimi100
    @mortimi100 Před 24 dny +146

    The combination of Simon his writers and his editors is what makes The Simonverse the best place to be on CZcams

  • @planetdisco4821
    @planetdisco4821 Před 22 dny +31

    No mention of the most terrifying Aussie animal of them all, the Magpie!
    As a kid I used to hand feed an entire family of them from our balcony in the afternoons, they’d land on the handrail and sing for their supper and if I wasn’t promptly out there they’d rap on the window with their beaks.
    Then every morning before dawn I’d cycle my bmx through the bushland to the train station and as I got near the creek I’d pass near the tree they roosted in overnight and knowing what was about to happen I’d hunch down over the handle bars and pedal for my life as I would suddenly hear the sinister whooshing of their wings flapping and with sweat streaming off my brow I’d cast a quick look over my shoulder to see them lined up in formation like F1-11 fighter planes aiming straight for the back of my head. Then three or more of them would clap their wings on both my ears like precision bombers and deftly land on an overhanging branch and cackle with magpie laughter at me as I passed under them shaking my fist and threatening to poison them that night when I got home from work.
    Btw, they totally knew it was me! This went on for nearly a decade lol. Magpies are fiendishly intelligent and capable of recognising individuals and very cheeky. That running battle I had with was one of the highlights of my childhood and I’ve no doubt that their decendents of the same clan are terrorising a fresh generation of Aussie school kids in the same leafy little valley I grew up in. I miss them. 🥲

  • @jewehhh169
    @jewehhh169 Před 19 dny +16

    Asking an Aussie if they like warm beer are fighting words, never in my life will I touch warm piss.

    • @mickhawkes125
      @mickhawkes125 Před 17 dny

      Don't worry about it, he is an arrogant Pom who thinks he is better than us

  • @gatness
    @gatness Před 16 dny +2

    Took me till the 20:21 minute mark to appreciate why the editing on this one was so 100% on point. You are a prime specimen of this fine sunburnt land, Lorelei.

  • @brettevans278
    @brettevans278 Před 24 dny +342

    Lorelei is hilarious and awesome! 😂😂😂

    • @Aemirys
      @Aemirys Před 24 dny +8

      I heartedly second that!

    • @ronaldmartin2666
      @ronaldmartin2666 Před 24 dny +20

      Yea I love that this channel perfectly includes the personality of all three of the creators. And Lorelei is the most mysterious

    • @GrimFandango92
      @GrimFandango92 Před 24 dny +13

      Outdid herself on this one - bravo! 👏

    • @9156j
      @9156j Před 24 dny +7

      Agreed! Lorelei is brilliant!

    • @AldrickExGladius
      @AldrickExGladius Před 24 dny +5

      One of the best editors on the internet!

  • @maddiethomas5892
    @maddiethomas5892 Před 24 dny +83

    5:40 I once said, "I literally died". My papa said, "I'm not paying for your funeral ". The man is a menace. 😂

    • @insertianameia2224
      @insertianameia2224 Před 24 dny +1

      I'll admit I use it for emphasis because I know it bothers people. I use air quotes for both that and because I like to and anyone that doesn't like it can get bent. Lmao

    • @maddiethomas5892
      @maddiethomas5892 Před 23 dny

      @@insertianameia2224 😅

    • @morrigan908
      @morrigan908 Před 22 dny +3

      ​@@insertianameia2224Being done for sarcasm is just fine. What bothers me is the valley girl (or guy) who says, "Like, oh my God, I will like literally die if he asks me!" You just know that they're too dumb to know what they're actually saying.

    • @insertianameia2224
      @insertianameia2224 Před 22 dny +1

      @@morrigan908 that in itself is a stupid take.

  • @muffinandme1
    @muffinandme1 Před 19 dny +5

    When Vegemite was first introduced in 1923, it wasn't called Vegemite. It was originally called Parwill. The name was a bad pun - the slogan was "If Marmite, Parwill". The name didn't catch on and it was changed to Vegemite in 1928. I was surprised to find that this wasn't mentioned in Wikipedia.

  • @ChristinaMaterna
    @ChristinaMaterna Před 19 dny +2

    Ok that was hilarious...
    T-Mobile decided that the best time to buffer my CZcams was during Simon stating the words "buffering speed"
    🤣🤣🤣🤣
    I do just want to just send Simon Vegemite (or even cheesymite)!

  • @vlamm676
    @vlamm676 Před 24 dny +88

    Lorelei had become my new favourite editor by a mile. The way she responded to Dave's script with her edits and slipped in replies was so hilarious! Keep up the amazing work Lorelei!

  • @Aemirys
    @Aemirys Před 24 dny +94

    As an Australian i loved this episode.... but then i always enjoy them! Love, love, love Lorelei's work! She is hilarious! Definitely a bloody champion!

    • @EveryFairyDies
      @EveryFairyDies Před 24 dny +7

      Love you too, Champion.

    • @ultimateskillchain
      @ultimateskillchain Před 24 dny +3

      ​@@EveryFairyDies fkn legend!

    • @u-neekusername4430
      @u-neekusername4430 Před 24 dny +1

      I 3rd that, the Lorelei's champion & legend, not the Australian part tho, Kiaora! But this Kiwi still loved this episode like a brother. 😉

    • @charlesstewart9246
      @charlesstewart9246 Před 23 dny

      Welcome from the town that gave Brisbane its name. Hope your warm down there🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🤔😀🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @judileeming1589
    @judileeming1589 Před 20 dny +2

    My husband’s family really really had to work hard to convince my 89 year old sister in law that it wasn’t a good idea to have just one more holiday from the UK to Australia for her 90th birthday next Summer (Xmas/New Year). She has been here at least half a dozen times enjoying road trips from Hobart to Cairns via the coastal and inland routes and the only “danger” encountered was that the mosquitoes loved my late brother in law who took to driving on the Australian roads for thousands of kilometres like a local.
    Now UK v AU BBQ-ing, we had a charcoal BBQ that had mains gas piped to it to heat the charcoal (perfectly cooked food) but our UK relatives gave us the laugh of a lifetime when they squirted some accelerant over the charcoal in their dinky little BBQ and they just about incinerated the food on the grill as well as created a flame thrower, the pitch of the squealing that the males emitted had never been reached before in their family barbershop quartet 😂 😂 😂 happy times 🇦🇺🤝♥️ 🇬🇧

  • @clairewalters8238
    @clairewalters8238 Před 17 dny +2

    ❤my family emigrated to Australia when i was 6. The first barbeque we attended had a sentence on the invite my mum had never before seen it said "please bring a plate", mum thought this strange but assumed due to the amount of ppl attending the hosts needed extra plates. (Dad undestood the BYOG, Bring your own grog) but mum just took extra plates. When we got to the barbeque everyone laughed their heads off at my mum cos bring a plate means dip & crackers or a bowl of crisps etc, it cracked everyone up.
    We dont have drop bears & i have never been stung by blue bottle jellyfish or any spiders but watch out for the hoop snakes that bite their tails to roll down hills in the BUSH cos we dont have forests. Most enjoyable video for quite some time Simon & yes our nbn suck dog nuts but i have been offered fibre cable recently for an extra $9 a month for a year but as i pay $80 for a month of the fastest internet in the most isolated city in the world i said no thanks cos i gotta cook my drop bear on the barbeque as its dinner time, LMAO. Much love from Perth Western Australia ❤❤❤

  • @TheSecretChateau
    @TheSecretChateau Před 24 dny +61

    My favourite thing about Australia are the wildlife viewing platforms on Sydney Harbour Bridge. They close the bridge every night at dusk so all the kangaroos, koalas, wombats and other Aussie creatures can go back to the bush for the night. It's free, but it's super popular. I once waited in line for a viewing spot for six hours and the queue is kilometres long and hot in the Aussie sun. Sure is worth it though! Magnificent sight, especially seeing all the birds flying across the bridge!

    • @bilindalaw-morley161
      @bilindalaw-morley161 Před 23 dny +6

      As an Aussie, I say this should be top comment. It's such a unique experience; We need all visitors to line up to see it.

    • @mdancey19.37
      @mdancey19.37 Před 23 dny +2

      Haha..

    • @TheSecretChateau
      @TheSecretChateau Před 23 dny +3

      @@bilindalaw-morley161 Tourists should be encouraged to go. It's an experience not to be missed!

    • @alexwallach7683
      @alexwallach7683 Před 23 dny +5

      Just remember to tip the line attendant $100 as it is customary and incredibly rude not do so.

    • @richard63
      @richard63 Před 22 dny +4

      LOL...very funny

  • @ashleygreen6328
    @ashleygreen6328 Před 24 dny +43

    As an Australian I approve this, Blaze. Yes, we do have lots of very deadly creatures but they are normally found in remote places. WE just like to tell everyone how dangerous it is her to keep away the more annoying tourists.

    • @hamishpmaccallum
      @hamishpmaccallum Před 21 dnem +2

      By 'remote places' do you mean outside the CBD?

    • @schroecat1
      @schroecat1 Před 21 dnem +1

      @@hamishpmaccallum Given how many of our CBDs are right on the waterfront, often the venomous creatures are right in the heart of the city too.

    • @stuartmcpherson1921
      @stuartmcpherson1921 Před 21 dnem

      When staying at overseas hostel I was asked how do we survive with so many deadly animals. Had to reassure them most will move away or ignore you. Still pays to be aware which seems to come natural with us.

    • @kiwimike2330
      @kiwimike2330 Před 17 dny +1

      That’s not true, I live in an inner suburb of Brisbane, and have seen death adders, brown snakes, whip snakes, red bellies in my neighbourhood. Most people don’t see them because they’re just not very observant.

  • @moonsharn
    @moonsharn Před 20 dny +2

    Our community bbq’s are such a normal part of daily life that they’re an expectation not a luxury. At our lake the toilets have been out of action for nearly a year. But one of the two bbqs stopped working a month ago and the town have been going nuts about it.
    So there you go, bbqs are more essential than toilets in OZ.

  • @ryougahibiki941
    @ryougahibiki941 Před 19 dny +2

    As an Aussie, the dangerous animals are very localised, and frequently only seasonal. These sort of videos give the illusion that they are all ever-present.
    I've had many long conversations with new immigrants who have moved into old suburbia, informing them of the how they shouldn't be in perpetual fear. They are not about to be killed by our local flora or fauna.
    When they list off all the deadly things they've read/been told to be fearful of, I let them know where in the country they reside, and under what circumstances they will attack a human, instead their usual response of buggering off.
    I have a white-tailed spider bite scar on my face. I show them the scar and then photos of what the spider looks like, so they know to weary of them. I then show them photos of all the other innocuous spiders that live in this suburb so they know which are safe to ignore and which to actually be careful of.

  • @simracing4simpletons978
    @simracing4simpletons978 Před 24 dny +45

    My dumb ass got mad at the buffering joke for the first little split second before busting up laughing. Well played Lorelei. Well played.

  • @ChrisTopher-xn1hi
    @ChrisTopher-xn1hi Před 22 dny +34

    Writer Dave wrote an articulate and informative script. A+
    Simon. There's a reason he hosts around 13 channels. He's a freaking legend.
    But hands down, Editor Lorelei was the absolute star of this video. I haven't consistently laughed this much during a Brain Blaze before. Whatever you're paying her, Simon - double it.

  • @MrMobii
    @MrMobii Před 6 dny

    Lorelei love your editing captured Australia so well and adding Garn in with the NBN 😂 cheers from Melbourne.

  • @jasntrace1971
    @jasntrace1971 Před 12 dny

    Fun fact - Oi is hello in Brazilian.
    NBN can drive people insane trying to get it working if it has a hiccup. I know that by experience.
    The free BBQs are great for having a sausages on bread with sauce for dinner with family and you can from Bunnings buy a Teflon BBQ liner to cook on if scared of the public hotplates.
    Toast the bread, spread plenty of butter or marge and then just a very light smear of Vegemite is a great Brecky.
    Regards, Jas.

  • @TheScreamMan
    @TheScreamMan Před 24 dny +312

    For the record:
    I'm Australian, I'm 44 and i have never been bitten by a super poisonous anything. People need to chill the fuck out.

    • @kaymarrand9970
      @kaymarrand9970 Před 24 dny +11

      Ah! See what you did there. Or... do Australian plants actually bite? 😰

    • @dangingerich2559
      @dangingerich2559 Před 24 dny

      You've just cursed yourself to get bitten by something venomous within the next 48 hours.

    • @asmo1313
      @asmo1313 Před 24 dny +20

      you don`t remember do you? You were bitten when you tried to put vegemite on the very big spider that turned up at the barbeque.

    • @TheScreamMan
      @TheScreamMan Před 24 dny +3

      @@kaymarrand9970 No, we're fine. I'd never heard of that plant TBH, but then i live in the middle of Sydney. :)

    • @droomzy
      @droomzy Před 24 dny +21

      I like that you put the qualifier "SUPER poisonous" indicating that you've sustained plenty of poisons that fortunately didn't do you all the way in 😅 can tell you Aussies are a hearty people!

  • @Marc83Aus
    @Marc83Aus Před 21 dnem +53

    So in november my NBN went down, I called the ISP over a dozen times to be told every time "Oh its fine on our end, has to be an NBN issue, we'll log it and they'll get to it eventually", finally in MARCH when I called to tell them to shove it the actual technician who answered the phone finally bothered to do a simple remote diagnosis on the equipment, in 10 minutes she found the router was broken and had a new one sent the next day. Nobody was told to shove it but they still owe me 3 months of connection fees not to mention the 90 bucks a month i wasted for cable tv.
    Im so happy to get my 12 megabit download speed and 0.8 mbit upload back. Its almost fast enough to watch youtube on.

    • @bmanone
      @bmanone Před 21 dnem +8

      It frustrates me when I hear stories like this and the blame is always put on the NBN, ISPs are responsible for determining if the issue is at the user end. That’s literally their job. NBN run the backbone

    • @thekrutchinator
      @thekrutchinator Před 20 dny +6

      12 MB you lucky bastard!... try 5MB 80km nth of Brissy

    • @Marc83Aus
      @Marc83Aus Před 20 dny +2

      @@thekrutchinator Thats kb, small b, equivalent to 1.5 MB. And paying 30% more than I was 2 years ago when i was getting 50% more speed on ADSL. affordable high speed fibre my ass.

    • @thekrutchinator
      @thekrutchinator Před 20 dny

      @@Marc83Aus Ouch!

    • @kitty-dc1nl
      @kitty-dc1nl Před 20 dny +1

      12 flipping months of backwards and forwards between Telstra and NBN with no service. I was crying in frustration at the store in the end ..which worked btw(every other time they told me I had to call them). So ugly tears for the win, fixed same day

  • @NedJeffery
    @NedJeffery Před 20 dny +4

    There are zero land based predators in Australia. No bears, no tigers, no hippopotamuses. Maybe an ill tempered dingo or 2. But they are no scarier than your average pet pooch.

  • @angieangel3090
    @angieangel3090 Před 11 dny +1

    One of the best unsaid rules of Australians is to make up stories about Australia to foreigners to get a good laugh.
    No ones told to do this, you know you are truly Australian when that instinct to talk about dropbears, giant trapdoor spiders (that one's true) and the ritual of sacrificing Prime ministers to the sea gods.

  • @nature48941
    @nature48941 Před 24 dny +83

    Everytime an ad starts for Backblaze, it pops into my head that it is a Beardblaze like product, but for your back hair...

    • @vicarious_cringe
      @vicarious_cringe Před 24 dny +4

      I always assume it's Simon's secret company...look at the logo for brain Blaze vs business blaze...not from the creative bankruptcy, definitely not...

    • @CharlesGriswold
      @CharlesGriswold Před 24 dny +4

      Because who doesn't want thick, luxurious back hair?

    • @simonamer9210
      @simonamer9210 Před 23 dny +3

      There's a product called the BakBlade which is designed so that men can easily shave their own backs. It's amazing! Simon should be sponsored by them.

    • @iplaysdrums
      @iplaysdrums Před 23 dny +1

      If he's anything like me, Simon's back hair is inversely proportional to his head hair

    • @SakuraKurosaki10
      @SakuraKurosaki10 Před 23 dny

      Do you reckon it would come with an applicator? Because I can’t imagine most back hair having folks could reach all of it.

  • @FunkyFae57
    @FunkyFae57 Před 24 dny +32

    Sitting in my loungeroom eating cheese and Vegemite toast and loving every second of this. Chefs kiss to your Aussie editor, she is a legend and had me nearly choking on my toast a few times 😂😂😂

    • @EveryFairyDies
      @EveryFairyDies Před 24 dny +5

      Cheers, champion! Glad you didn't choke!

    • @MatthewTheWanderer
      @MatthewTheWanderer Před 22 dny +4

      I had no idea she was Australian until this episode.

    • @EveryFairyDies
      @EveryFairyDies Před 22 dny

      @@MatthewTheWanderer I am Australian, Canadian and British!

  • @tobiasthegentleman9131

    Aussie here!
    Vegemite is an acquired taste, similar to how licorice, olives and sardines are.
    Yes, its a bitter taste that catches you off-guard without prior knowledge.
    Youre correct about consumption though, youll want maybe 2 or 3 times the butter/margarine to help nullify the bitterness.
    Over time, you'll find that the bitterness subsides and you could eat it by the spoonful, if you really want to.
    The best way to enjoy it is on any toasted piece of bread with the aforementioned mix of butter-Vegemite

  • @Gohka
    @Gohka Před 5 dny

    "Really? That's kind of a buzzkill."
    and there it is, a sentence that perfectly encapsulates the British government.

  • @novicemoviemaker
    @novicemoviemaker Před 24 dny +109

    Simon forgot to mention that Australia is the only place with "Rent a Skippy" where you can hop to work on the back of a kangaroo for just twenty didgeridollaridoos.

    • @andrewmangan118
      @andrewmangan118 Před 23 dny

      Go back to Russia

    • @beehambonio3378
      @beehambonio3378 Před 23 dny +10

      And just like electric scooters you can find plenty on the side of the road.

    • @goosenotmaverick1156
      @goosenotmaverick1156 Před 22 dny +5

      ​@@beehambonio3378damn those electric scooters really are just everywhere aren't they?
      I live near a college town and those things are a disaster 😂 we work on one of the places that runs them (I'm an electrician) and they managed to charge so many batteries in such a small area of their shop that it caught on fire during winter 😂

    • @makavelismith
      @makavelismith Před 22 dny

      You're the worst.

    • @Lostboy811
      @Lostboy811 Před 21 dnem

      Kangaroos so like gaint rats

  • @Ravenforce3
    @Ravenforce3 Před 24 dny +33

    Uploaded on ANZAC Day (according to my calendar.) Probably unintentional but a great touch, anyway.

  • @loreleihillard5078
    @loreleihillard5078 Před 12 dny +1

    A quick word about the NBN situation.
    Initially, when the NBN was announced, the plan was to have a socialised internet network so that everyone could have really good speeds all around the country, and people living in rural areas weren't to be charged a fortune for even basic speeds, since the cabling out to the bush would be very expensive to install. It was a very fair system, and it would've benefitted everyone in the long run.
    While the plan was going through parliament, there was a change in government, and the new government decided they would rather use cheaper options so that they could spend the extra money elsewhere.
    What has resulted is a monument to compromise, and, while still better than ADSL, poor connection quality, but at least everyone around the country will have the same poor quality and we can be upset about it together. As of now, the NBN has reached all around Australia.

  • @1caru5
    @1caru5 Před 8 dny

    As an Aussie I always laugh at these videos 🤣.
    Got a good one for you guys, I was at a horse show, bored, and decided to go climbing trees while I waited for my mum.
    As I climbing a paper bark I felt this wave of hot needles hit the back of ny neck and I fell out of the tree into the ground.
    I was in so much pain all I could do was run around crying for help to anyone. They found my mum and an ambulance, all while my neck blew up in red welts and just kept burning.
    turns out there Is this type of bug here that can bite and inject like acid into you.
    All you can do is bear with it…. For days..
    I’d rather go for a swim and fight bull shark than cop another one of those bites.

  • @amaccama3267
    @amaccama3267 Před 24 dny +39

    The Box Jellyfish. Yep, our killer animals come gift wrapped.

    • @TheKrispyfort
      @TheKrispyfort Před 24 dny +2

      Davo doesn't know about the Irukanji 😃
      That's the infinitely more toxic box shaped jellyfish that is the size of the top of your thumb

  • @robbaskerville253
    @robbaskerville253 Před 24 dny +17

    Australian here. Lightly brushed a Gympie Gympie leaf with my arm. Could still feel it 3 months later. The thought of a big sting is terrifying.

  • @aerotube7291
    @aerotube7291 Před 19 dny

    Haha, 30 years...the gentle poignant sarcasm here is fantastic...Simon appears all over my youtube feed now...i bought the beard oil before i grew one!

  • @MrValentine101
    @MrValentine101 Před 12 dny +1

    As a brown snake riding, Woollongabba hating, Fortitude Valley avoiding, Translink loathing, QR reluctant of this brown city we call Brisbane, I am honestly amazed that Lorelei can do the editing work in a way that doesn't completely derail Simon's uploading schedule due to the speeds down here.

  • @JdeeGeekyGao
    @JdeeGeekyGao Před 24 dny +21

    Lorelei is a bloody legend for her editing, she's my favourite one on this channel, I'm not biased, but as a kiwi who lived in Aussie for 2 years, I get her humour more than the others.
    Also in all my two years living there, I only encountered 2 huntsman spiders as the worst thing. So peeps need to chill tf out about stuff that can kill you. Minus the internet speeds it's just a beautiful country and I would live there for the rest of my life if I didn't need constant medical stuff sorted for free back in NZ. (yeah I do have a medicare card it's just out of date now XDD)

  • @haileyjones2311
    @haileyjones2311 Před 22 dny +18

    I don’t know how much poisonous stuff we got down here, but we sure do have a lot of venomous shit! 😂

  • @Pwecko
    @Pwecko Před 17 hodinami

    When you mentioned Bluey, I thought you were talking about the Aussie detective series from the 70s. I'd like to see that again.

  • @surface3122
    @surface3122 Před 19 dny

    Absolute fucking amazing. Props for including a clip from Garn. Old mate makes some of the funniest videos down under, when he can get enough bandwidth to upload them.

  • @ProfVaharrak
    @ProfVaharrak Před 24 dny +69

    BLUEY is hands down the absolute TOP DOG, thank you so much Australia for gifting it to us and our children.
    Also wth in Mexico we make a "BBQ" and everyone and their grandma just ends up plastered, the cooking/grilling is completely optional.

    • @captainspaulding5963
      @captainspaulding5963 Před 24 dny +3

      Wholeheartedly agree! The show is damn good!!

    • @doithimaceabhard7457
      @doithimaceabhard7457 Před 24 dny +1

      Bluey is awesome

    • @unarmored9973
      @unarmored9973 Před 24 dny +1

      Meh. Show about cartoon dogs +4, controversy about adult topics -2, funny accents +1, final score = 3/5 mid

    • @captainspaulding5963
      @captainspaulding5963 Před 24 dny +5

      ​@@unarmored9973 meh, personal opinions exist, and so do facts. When one show accounts for more than 20% of the views on a streaming service, it's good.

    • @unarmored9973
      @unarmored9973 Před 24 dny +2

      ​@@captainspaulding5963 Certainly 40 million viewers is a lot of peeps my man, it's almost the amount of people that think the m00n landings never happened.
      Hey but I'm not here to try and ruin your show for you man, I'm just some a-hole on the internet takin the piss out. Good day sir. 👍

  • @wolfvontyr2266
    @wolfvontyr2266 Před 23 dny +14

    Oh fuck yeah! I wasn't expecting this!
    If you do a second one:
    - Kangaroos being shredded AF and not afraid to have a slapping match in residential areas. Like throwing one another through fences.
    - Australian's past time of taking the piss out of foreigners. Like saying everyone rides kangaroos, and when they go through water they use their tail as a propeller, or the time a Scottish journalist was made to wear gridiron armour before holding a koala... convinced it was a drop bear.
    - Queensland is essentially Florida but with more deadly animals and less guns (come at me Lorelei!)
    - The recipe for ANZAC biscuits is protected by law
    - MAGPIES
    And to round it out on a positive note... quokkas.

    • @M1ggins
      @M1ggins Před 21 dnem +2

      And canine cane toad addiction.

    • @taviaseymour1635
      @taviaseymour1635 Před 20 dny +2

      Magpies are far scarier than drop bears. Drop bears fall. And then attack. Magpies can fly.

    • @v0w1x2
      @v0w1x2 Před 20 dny +1

      Quokka are basically mini marsupial Jesuses

    • @PeterThompson-qj2lm
      @PeterThompson-qj2lm Před 19 dny

      We seemed to have forgotten the worst one, Saltys.

  • @BearsTrains
    @BearsTrains Před 17 dny +1

    One thing you could have shown is the bushfire warning signs. The highest category is catastrophic which means "Forget running, you are fucked"

  • @nosonoliento
    @nosonoliento Před 20 dny +1

    11:53 Fun fact: We call them thongs in the western US as well.
    I've also heard them called Go Aheads, Beach Combers, Wing Wongs and Shower Shoes.

  • @MTB_Beth
    @MTB_Beth Před 24 dny +22

    As an Australian, I live for when fact boi speaks about us lowly upside down peasants.

  • @kacheek9101
    @kacheek9101 Před 24 dny +19

    I love how the desk still has the hole from that one video where Simon took out a knife and stuck it in the desk

    • @starrywizdom
      @starrywizdom Před 24 dny +2

      The continuity is strong in the Whistlerverse.

  • @anastasiaholmberg1330

    Lorelei literally made me laugh out loud multiple times this episode with the fantastic choice och clips and memes.

  • @muzzthegreat
    @muzzthegreat Před 11 dny

    16:20 Yes, I agree with Bacon on Pancakes - but you need to 'Coffs Harbour' it : add lightly fried Banana.
    Slice it lengthwise, fry it at the last minute with the bacon; Drape both over the pancakes, add syrup [or fake] and butter to taste.

  • @AndrewFishman
    @AndrewFishman Před 24 dny +15

    Simon's "horrific walk through the bushland" was my every day walk to the bus stop to go to school in the morning.

  • @laner.845
    @laner.845 Před 24 dny +7

    That buffering joke was hands down the best piece of editing I've ever witnessed. Ya got me.

  • @TwisterWizzleNineThousand

    The entirety of this video was great fun, but that Simpsonized-Simon head on Principal Skinner had me ☠️😂.

  • @AdelaideGuy1968
    @AdelaideGuy1968 Před 15 dny

    Simon. Regarding the White tipped spider. I was bitten by one, and the bacterial infection cause me to need 8 weeks to recover. 12 antibiotic tablets a day, and my lower leg was 100% ulcerated. It takes several years for your body to stop regular re-inflaming. Last time my leg re-inflamed ended up with me in hospital for 10 days

  • @jjudijo
    @jjudijo Před 24 dny +43

    My friend's son was a WoW addict and failed his freshman year of college, around 2005. Mom called her brother in Australia, booked a one-way flight for her son. He's now a pharmacist in Aus.

    • @alanhilder1883
      @alanhilder1883 Před 24 dny +19

      So you were shipping that "possible" convict out here before he got the chance to actually do "the crime".

    • @davescott7680
      @davescott7680 Před 24 dny +20

      Giving him a detox from the internet. Smart move.

    • @TheKrispyfort
      @TheKrispyfort Před 24 dny +5

      He's a mediaeval re-enactor as well, isn't he 😂

    • @Neojhun
      @Neojhun Před 24 dny +7

      @@davescott7680 When your ping is one large fraction of a second, time to touch grass.

  • @snailpaste
    @snailpaste Před 24 dny +23

    Can confirm, EVERYTHING in Aussie is out to get you. Recently went for a holiday there. Got bit by a Quokka... An adorable HERBIVORE !!

    • @fredk.2001
      @fredk.2001 Před 24 dny +10

      😂 A little Quokka bit you? What did you do, insult its' mum?

    • @simonjones2645
      @simonjones2645 Před 24 dny

      don't fn touch them ..........bloody kiwis !

    • @DreamingIce
      @DreamingIce Před 24 dny +5

      ...what did you do?! They are so used to people's presence on Rottnest, hence the proliferation of selfies with them. Were you getting to close to a baby or something?

    • @snailpaste
      @snailpaste Před 24 dny +10

      @@DreamingIce nah it was a friendly little nibble. I was crouched beside it doing the peace sign for a photo ✌and it just hopped up and bit a finger.
      Either it thought i was offering it food (it was under one of those trees that have finger like leaf clusters, something similar to king billy pine, other Quokkas were nibbling on those) or it is just a particularly war mongering marsupial

    • @lexand_ecarg
      @lexand_ecarg Před 24 dny +2

      The quokka smelt that you weren't from there 😂

  • @silasary
    @silasary Před 14 dny

    I have Vegemite toast every morning, it's great.
    As for internet, the NBN is a major upgrade to what we had beforehand. While yes, long cables are prone to latency, the bigger issue is signal degredation. Which means you need powered repeaters. At lot of them. In underground pits. That frequently flood.
    You haven't truly suffered until you find yourself saying "I'll upload that file once the rain stops". Because yes, internet access is weather permitting here.

  • @rmar127
    @rmar127 Před 6 dny

    7:06 Hercules Returns. I’d completely forgotten about this piece of cinema magic. Must seek it out. 😆

  • @jello1977
    @jello1977 Před 22 dny +9

    The phrase you're looking for is "Fosters! It's Australian for dog piss!" and no we don't drink Fosters or warm beer!

  • @victoriakenny632
    @victoriakenny632 Před 24 dny +12

    Oh, tell them its customary to have a huntsman spider permitted to live in the house to keep the flies and other spiders away. I have one in my bedroom doing laps of the walls.

  • @Nturner822
    @Nturner822 Před 15 dny

    You’re a hero for appreciating Vegemite! Apply thin with butter and it goes a looooong way - perfect for outback.
    It’s always weird at first, but much needed salts and
    vitamins makes you crave it…then it tastes amazing.

  • @TheShad0wW3av3r
    @TheShad0wW3av3r Před 8 dny

    "Foster's. Australian for beer" is the only catchphrase I remember in the commercials 🤔🤷‍♂️

  • @Oscar-gq4ro
    @Oscar-gq4ro Před 24 dny +9

    We have grills at parks here in the US too, also venomous snakes, spiders, alligators, crocodiles, bears, wolves, moose, angry people with guns

    • @paulbest6679
      @paulbest6679 Před 22 dny

      Panthers, Jaguars, and Lynx too.

    • @peter65zzfdfh
      @peter65zzfdfh Před 13 dny

      'Grills' in Australia in parks are enclosed (almost always electric but extremely rarely piped gas) flat hot plates with no exposed burning to remove fire risk. Sure they exist in the US, though have more often seen ones that require you to BYO fuel.

  • @rodneyfaulkner7453
    @rodneyfaulkner7453 Před 21 dnem +9

    Thank you, Dave and Simon - The funnel web spider will not get you in the toilet as they live in the ground - But the Red Back will defiantly get you - as for 25c that is a pleasant night where I work in the "Pilbara" in the north of western Australia. - Thankfully i am FIFO to escape the 47 to 50c days. As for distances, when we plan our Regional Exploration Camp, we drive 390km to buy food and then return the 390km in the same day and do not see one house on the drive. Love your work

  • @callumchalmers1475
    @callumchalmers1475 Před 14 dny

    @22:46 Strike me pink, I never expected my home town to be a reference on a joke map of Brisvegas on a flaming CZcams video! Holy frogs... What a time to be alive.

  • @garrgravarr
    @garrgravarr Před 20 dny

    Hooray, the bloke with an epic beard who produces 80% of the internet's total content noticed us! CARN STRAYA!! ❤

  • @gretchenmyers1279
    @gretchenmyers1279 Před 24 dny +31

    I've lived in multiple US states, and even the smallest local parks generally have at least 2 pavilions with picnic tables, and permanent hibachi grills set outside the pavilion. If you know where you want to go has no facilities, a small hibachi or weber grill is easily portable. Most campgrounds have permanent grills as well.

    • @Vaeldarg
      @Vaeldarg Před 24 dny +2

      Have them even here in southern U.S, the land of mosquitoes and flies which make having any food outdoors look like should be shut down by health inspectors.

    • @joshuahunt3032
      @joshuahunt3032 Před 24 dny

      My local park in my hometown had a couple picknicking spots that, last I checked, had some metal grilling frames. Like, I think you were supposed to burn something underneath the grating and grill something on top of said grating. I don’t know what kind of grill that was, and they could’ve changed that by now

    • @PayterX
      @PayterX Před 24 dny +1

      @@joshuahunt3032 Sounds like the permanently installed grills that are at every park I've ever seen, from Washington state to Florida. They do not have any cover on them, it's basically a flat piece of metal with 3 sides (where you put your charcoal) and then some metal bars making a surface (where you put your food)

    • @miniveedub
      @miniveedub Před 23 dny +3

      The ones in Australian parks are usually electric. It mostly started as a safety thing, it helps to prevent bushfires (wildfires). People don’t need to light a fire if there is a free barbecue hotplate already available at the turn of a switch. Now you find them everywhere.

    • @meikala2114
      @meikala2114 Před 22 dny +2

      they are electric and free

  • @Nianfur
    @Nianfur Před 21 dnem +10

    White Tail Spiders can cause necrosis, including loss of limbs. Also, you're forgetting our ants... They can jump and 1/10 people can have anaphylaxis shock when stung. :)

    • @muffinandme1
      @muffinandme1 Před 17 dny +1

      From 2008 until late 2014 I used to live in a tiny weatherboard house in Warragul, Victoria that I am sure was the National headquarters for whitetails. I had never been bitten before we moved there. First time I wS bitten was after the Black Saturday bushfire on the right hand side of my back. Not a pleasant experience. The next time I was bitten in three time, on either side of my back and on my lower left leg. It had crawled into bed with me . The leg was worst because I think I rolled on it causing a deeper bite. It felt like someone had lit a match in my leg. The third time was on my face and that was lanced under anaesthia in hospital. Do not miss them at all. My husband took to spaying down the outside of the house every six months and you should have seen the amount that pored out.

    • @Nianfur
      @Nianfur Před 17 dny +2

      @@muffinandme1 I knew one fellow who had to burn a bite wound out with acid as no treatment was stopping the gradual spread of necrosis. Another person got s so sick they couldn't work for two years. Those white tall spiders are no joke.

  • @alpinealpine2793
    @alpinealpine2793 Před 10 dny

    In a time long ago. Before the ancestors decimated x 9, the koala population, there was so many of them that their propensity to nod of and occasionally fall out of the trees was more pronounced. In other words they do sometimes fall out of the trees and when the place was full of koalas it was a genuine risk.

  • @toxicwarcat7739
    @toxicwarcat7739 Před 18 dny

    As a side note we have a "Cracker"/Biscuit/chip here in Australia known as Shapes, it has a vegemite and cheese flavour, and seeing as how i am Australian, I feel quite obligated to inform you i can eat quite an unholy amount of vegemite, either on toast or even from a spoon, although the texture of eating from a spoon is gross the taste is quite likeable, the savory bitter flavour with the bready after taste is quite delicious, it pairs very well with cheddar cheese or other savory cheeses on toast, its also great on its own, on toast provided you have the right amount, my tolerance for it is much higher than that of foreigners, so much so it would be comparable to the amount of butter most people put on their toast.

  • @ignitionfrn2223
    @ignitionfrn2223 Před 24 dny +54

    2:30 - Mid roll ads
    4:30 - Chapter 1 - The entire country is literally out to kill out
    10:05 - Chapter 2 - BBQ obsession
    13:35 - Chapter 3 - Vegemite
    18:15 - Chapter 4 - Terrible internet

    • @prephikz42
      @prephikz42 Před 24 dny +4

      Need to add the time stamps of the mesothelioma references 😂👌

  • @user-ti8et4kn8t
    @user-ti8et4kn8t Před 24 dny +18

    As somebody riding out the last of this month's data, that buffer was criminal 😅

  • @choklityum
    @choklityum Před 6 dny

    Going to Brisbane (from the US) at the end of June - thanks for the travel vid! 😂 Lorelei, your editorial shenanigans are total fire! 🔥🔥🔥🤣🤣🤣