Regarding above the waist physical gestures... it's not an accident that the UK is also a place where interpersonal violence happens a lot. We are a fighty bunch. Raising your hands above your waist is generally going to trigger my fight or flight response.
Or maybe we tend to get violent because we drink too much to help ourselves escape this constant repressiveness, and then we get all aggro and confident and end up scrappin because some dude didn't say sorry and bumped your shoulder in a really crowded place ? Funnily enough, in Spain where I lived for a while, people don't often say sorry when they bump each other's shoulders, they just ignore it completely...
Maybe brits should express their feelings more. It would be a more peaceful place 🌈 because withholding you emotions is like a pimple. It gets worse and worse and eventually explodes. All that comes out is muck. ✌ I know it. I'm gErMaN
Deffo agree! And we are actually so bad at other languages. The whole purpose of the Australian accent is to get your meaning across using the least amount of energy and effort as possible. That's why we have so much slang and shit. Other languages you have to pronounce every single letter of every single word, and our mouths just aren't used to doing that. We always end up sounding drunk.
We tend to keep our top lip still. I think it evolved to stop all the flies flying into your mouth lol. First step to mimicking an Aussie accent. So "yeah" becomes "...eah".
This is true because the Aussie accent was formed when the English found this country. There was so many flies that they had to open their mouth as little as possible when speaking which formed the Aussie accent. So pretty much the Australian accent was formed because the English people did not want flies in their mouths.
'T is known as the "stiff upper lip", isn't it? It also helps to wrinkle the nose as if smelling something dead. And raise the eyebrows slightly and you'll be proper posh.
It's strange that Russell Kane at 43yrs old has more or less, performance wise, admitted that he'd like to be Russell Howard (39yrs old) when he grows up! ffs
I asked a French person what English sounds like, they said it sounds rather lilting, compared with French which prides itself on its lack of stress and non-stress ..... English is beautiful, we should appreciate it more. Think he has a point about us Brits needing to be less uptight, though.
@@magdelenacloutier7523 True. Speaking for myself I don't like divulging too much is a sign of weakness amd can be intrusive. I open up on my terms not spill my guts to make someone else feel comfortable. It's quite amusing seeing someone fill in silence with gibber gabber!
Hilarious bit but for an Australians natural facial movement when we're talking it's not very much at all. Like our mouths barely move its impressive that we are even forming words sometimes
I seriously doubt there's more french spoken in Aus than in the UK. When I was at school (in AUS) the only language options were Japanese and Mandarin.
@@emmelinedrummond4570 or Indonesian. I think it was expected that we should know a few words, given most of us end up going to Bali at one time or another ;)
Katerina Kemp Ok, I thought you’d say neither. Yes, I’m an Aussie. Anyway, although we both have pretty recognisable accents with minor differences across the country, the shouting thing is pretty far-fetched, to say we do or you don’t. Far too general a statement, I’ve heard that from both because there are lots of people in both our countries. That thing he did was so far from being like our accent, and more close to a crappy version of yours. Plus half of you are here anyway so I get to hear it A LOT.
I've never experienced another european country where social 'classes' are so frequently and openly mentioned. Like a constant reminder of fortune/misfortune. Never forget where you belong. That's pretty shite
Hereisa jakualin honestly we have to belong where we belong because middle class and working will never get along completely different upbringings values just worlds apart, I was brought up in a very poverty stricken area and managed to move somewhere abit nicer and I can’t stand the people around me to be honest only reason I haven’t gone back to the estate is because of my kids
@@knorty4004 I'm in the same boat here mate! Moved to a middle class area after being stabbed for the 4th time and I almost want to go back! I don't know how much more talk of golf, mortgages and the value of the things people have bought I can cope with but my daughter is safe here so it'll do for now.
There's a totally ignored value to belonging. I don't know if things have hugely changed in England (I've been in the USA for 18 years) but being from the family, area, class you're from gives you connection and a place you do belong. It might not be what you want or aspire to but that feeling of knowing you're safe in your place isn't easy to find.
Hence why around a third of us keep voting for the so called 'ruling class' Eton educated Tories. Yep, pretty depressing. But, it doesn't rule our lives every moment of the day ... and being in Scotland you'd be lucky to fill an Oxbridge river punt with Tory voters, they are despised beyond belief.
I really wanted to learn new languages when i was younger but the school language class was crap, i have tried my best through you tube but i only know bits
I’m a British American and speak both French and Spanish but they’re quite different after you gain organic fluency and actually begin to think and dream in them-even lovely although English has its linguistic uniqueness going for it that makes it the language of literature.
Its true us brits are too awkward and in french class everyone says whats the point even though we can travel to france so easily and we use a lot of french words in our language lol
For those wondering, yes, Brits do sometimes say "Nigel Farage" at the end of their sentences! But it's really hard to translate what that phrase actually means. It's a bit like "You're a loser!" Or "This conversation has been utterly distasteful" or even "Fuck you mate Brexit was a mistake"
He's very good, however English is in my opinion is a beautiful language of it's own. Elizabeth Barrett Browning, How do I love thee? Let me count the ways. I love thee to the depth and breadth and height My soul can reach, when feeling out of sight For the ends of being and ideal grace. I love thee to the level of every day’s Most quiet need, by sun and candle-light. I love thee freely, as men strive for right. I love thee purely, as they turn from praise. I love thee with the passion put to use In my old griefs, and with my childhood’s faith. I love thee with a love I seemed to lose With my lost saints. I love thee with the breath, Smiles, tears, of all my life; and, if God choose, I shall but love thee better after death.
I mean, I love you isn't phonetically the most beautiful phrase, but English with the right acccent and used in an eloquent or romantic fashion can be very beautiful. Regardless, It's not exactly the language of love.
........ I'm all three. I'm not even joking I'm American, Australian AND British. Yes, my accent is confusing as all hell. But it's funny to see my friends reactions when I can understand all the slang and they can only understand the slang from where they're from.
All native English speakers in the UK know more French than we think. 30% of British English derives from French, which is about 30,000 words. I'm British and speak 7 languages, granted my hobby is self-studying languages.
Aha Queens English maybe but there’s a whole of regions here try looking up different accents in England alone and I’m from The Black Country, believe me take up Spanish or Italian please 😂😂
British? Like a perfect combo of English, Welsh, Scottish, and northern Irish combined?!?! That's got to be difficult to perfect! (British isn't an accent, you're thinking of a posh English accent I imagine).
@@RosieWilliamOlivia you are 100% correct. british is NOT one dialect. it's wrong by definition. BUT to the untrained ear it is just "british". it's just some kind of relatively popular not-scottish, not-welsh, not-northern-irish, probably some area of london-based (as tom maguire mentioned queens english) dialect.
@3:45 Haha! Love the idea that this Britt's idea of an "excellent linguist" is someone speaking 3 languages. I speak 5, understand 7 and I know a guy who is fluent in 20, I also know an African who had no schooling beyond primary and speaks 5. None of us are linguists. Let alone excellent ones.
I heard a theory (might have been during my phd as my lab had a melting pot of nationalities) that northern Europeans evolved to talk without opening their mouth much or any over expression facially as to conserve heat, whereas southern Europeans didn’t need to conserve heat and so they evolved to facially express and open their mouths more. Any anthropologists or linguists out there to clarify?
popping an ''O'' is such a wonderful thing, why would you call it, Nigel Farage? sorry sorry sorry sorry about to finish and...thank you dear no nigel needed LOL
Jack Segond no no no, he doesn’t mean French is more common than English in Australia. He meant more Australians speak French than English people which is ironic as England has such strong links with France
@@oldishandwoke-ish1181 buenos días is good morning. They don't say "buenas mañanas" unless they're talking actually of good mornings of (something) because mañana is more translated as tomorrow. It would make some sense with something like... tenemos buenas mañanas con el tiempo local entre junio y septiembre (we have good mornings with local weather between June and September) would make sense, but commonly buenos días or buen día - I'm not being pedantic, I'm a linguist.
Robert Heslop Agree that I have never heard "buenas mañanas". It's always "buenos dias" until about mid-afternoon. Was just commenting on the noun-adjective agreement thing. And before you point it out, my keyboard no longer does vowel accents, only the tilde.
He's actually very wrong about Australian speech patterns ... Aussies are known for the diminutive and shortening of words to extract the maximum with the minimum of effort. The mouth and lips move very little often jokingly attributed to keeping the flies out of your mouth. While funny ... Russ is way off the mark. In hot climates like OZ, we do the least when we talk.
a shame every time he does an american accent he defaults to an annoying valley girl/kardashian kind of accent but at the same time it's so relentlessly easy to make fun of i really can't blame him. plus that the rich and beautiful are so ridiculously publicized in the american media even in other countries you watch american tv shows you end up hearing it alot. so much of the american media these days is geared towards appealing to teenage girls since they tend to be the biggest spenders and the most likely to follow trends and "fall into the pack". btw, that accent is not natural to ANYBODY. it's affected mostly by females between the ages of 12 and 25 and gay males. NOBODY is raised to speak like that it is very much an affectation.
@@rookymusic6310 very few females talk like that either but it's heavily satirized in american media so people in other countries end up hearing it alot. plus it's so very easy to make fun of.
Talking bollocks, Europeans don!t need to take out British citizenship to stay here, in Australia they go there to get Australian citizenship, they are the Aussies speaking French.
Nah mate we don’t lean languages cause we couldn’t be arsed with the hassle so much so that we pretty much only go to countries that speak the bare minimum English and avoid the rest
Robert Heslop yea I get that I was making a joke I’ve been to multiple places where I’m fucked as I can’t speak their language such as Italy, Spain and France
I want to like him so much but... British?! I'm English. All the accents he's coming up with are English, his mannerisms, his body language... ffs... stop it English people! I never hear any Scottish, northern Irish, or Welsh calling themselves British. You're English, have some pride.
This is a prime example of left wing comedy. if they couldn't insult their own people they would be lost. You can tell its left wing because it isn't remotely funny.
@@tutenvanman2715 I never claimed I found it funny... you're putting words in my mouth. I was merely asking how talking about mannerisms of different people in the world could be construed as left or right wing.
When he first does the Aussie accent, he’s doing a near perfect New Zealand.
It sounded like a really intense attempt at the kiwi accent but still not lazy enough for us
"Do you have any toilet paper please mate"
- the whole of the British population in March 2020
was just gonna comment that
*I do*
@Taylah Hurst yes
It's because they're all Full of sh**
computer says no!
Regarding above the waist physical gestures... it's not an accident that the UK is also a place where interpersonal violence happens a lot. We are a fighty bunch. Raising your hands above your waist is generally going to trigger my fight or flight response.
Or maybe we tend to get violent because we drink too much to help ourselves escape this constant repressiveness, and then we get all aggro and confident and end up scrappin because some dude didn't say sorry and bumped your shoulder in a really crowded place ?
Funnily enough, in Spain where I lived for a while, people don't often say sorry when they bump each other's shoulders, they just ignore it completely...
@@jean-claudefrancoisbaroudd730 Completely true; poverty, alcohol and fightiness are essentially the cornerstones of the British cultural identity.
Maybe brits should express their feelings more. It would be a more peaceful place 🌈 because withholding you emotions is like a pimple. It gets worse and worse and eventually explodes. All that comes out is muck. ✌
I know it. I'm gErMaN
Hereisa jakualin oh TRUST ME we express our feelings all right
Hereisa jakualin god no if that happened people would cry and hug in public
As an Australian I'd have to disagree about aussies moving their face a lot when talking. Australians barely move their mouths!
Deffo agree! And we are actually so bad at other languages. The whole purpose of the Australian accent is to get your meaning across using the least amount of energy and effort as possible. That's why we have so much slang and shit. Other languages you have to pronounce every single letter of every single word, and our mouths just aren't used to doing that. We always end up sounding drunk.
We tend to keep our top lip still. I think it evolved to stop all the flies flying into your mouth lol. First step to mimicking an Aussie accent. So "yeah" becomes "...eah".
Ben J every language and country has slang tho mate
This is true because the Aussie accent was formed when the English found this country. There was so many flies that they had to open their mouth as little as possible when speaking which formed the Aussie accent.
So pretty much the Australian accent was formed because the English people did not want flies in their mouths.
Australia has many accents. But we are willing to screw up a language to learn it.
the top lip thing was so good🤣🤣🤣
'T is known as the "stiff upper lip", isn't it? It also helps to wrinkle the nose as if smelling something dead. And raise the eyebrows slightly and you'll be proper posh.
Started off the video thinking this bloke moves too bloody much, by the end of it he was solid AF.
hahahaha...It (his ackward, nervous movement) is the reason, for which I cannot watch him--he makes me nervous :/
It's strange that Russell Kane at 43yrs old has more or less, performance wise, admitted that he'd like to be Russell Howard (39yrs old) when he grows up! ffs
I asked a French person what English sounds like, they said it sounds rather lilting, compared with French which prides itself on its lack of stress and non-stress ..... English is beautiful, we should appreciate it more. Think he has a point about us Brits needing to be less uptight, though.
@Customer Service It's our cultural style. We're coconuts, not peaches! :)
@@magdelenacloutier7523
True. Speaking for myself I don't like divulging too much is a sign of weakness amd can be intrusive. I open up on my terms not spill my guts to make someone else feel comfortable. It's quite amusing seeing someone fill in silence with gibber gabber!
Russell is as good as ever - love him!
Hilarious bit but for an Australians natural facial movement when we're talking it's not very much at all. Like our mouths barely move its impressive that we are even forming words sometimes
I seriously doubt there's more french spoken in Aus than in the UK. When I was at school (in AUS) the only language options were Japanese and Mandarin.
Yep or German. Never met a French speaking Aussie
@@emmelinedrummond4570 or Indonesian. I think it was expected that we should know a few words, given most of us end up going to Bali at one time or another ;)
We have German, Japanese, French and Spanish
Really? I’ve only ever had the option to speak Indonesian, in like primary school, nothing offered in high school (Australia)
The only thing i know about Australian schools are Summer bay and Erinsborough high, they seem to be a very well educated bunch of folk😉
Man your Aussie accent was seriously Kiwi! And who told you there’s lots of us who can speak French? Yeah nah, not a thing.
Never heard a kiwi sound like that, the kiwis I have met, don't shout to be heard actually they don't seem to shout at all, but ozzies do.
Katerina Kemp Where do you live? In NZ or Australia?
@@llddau kiwi, you across the ditch
Katerina Kemp Ok, I thought you’d say neither. Yes, I’m an Aussie. Anyway, although we both have pretty recognisable accents with minor differences across the country, the shouting thing is pretty far-fetched, to say we do or you don’t. Far too general a statement, I’ve heard that from both because there are lots of people in both our countries. That thing he did was so far from being like our accent, and more close to a crappy version of yours. Plus half of you are here anyway so I get to hear it A LOT.
@@llddau you got that right, poor buggers lol.
Sorry, sorry, sorry, Nigel Farage! This guy is a legend.
Old comment, I know, but can you explain that bit to me? AFAIK, Nigel Farage is a politician. Is he known for apologizing a lot?
@@marioprawirosudiro7301 no just the british in general.
"I'm so english my bones are fucked from it"
😂🤣😂👍
I've never experienced another european country where social 'classes' are so frequently and openly mentioned. Like a constant reminder of fortune/misfortune. Never forget where you belong. That's pretty shite
Hereisa jakualin honestly we have to belong where we belong because middle class and working will never get along completely different upbringings values just worlds apart, I was brought up in a very poverty stricken area and managed to move somewhere abit nicer and I can’t stand the people around me to be honest only reason I haven’t gone back to the estate is because of my kids
@@knorty4004 I'm in the same boat here mate! Moved to a middle class area after being stabbed for the 4th time and I almost want to go back! I don't know how much more talk of golf, mortgages and the value of the things people have bought I can cope with but my daughter is safe here so it'll do for now.
There's a totally ignored value to belonging. I don't know if things have hugely changed in England (I've been in the USA for 18 years) but being from the family, area, class you're from gives you connection and a place you do belong. It might not be what you want or aspire to but that feeling of knowing you're safe in your place isn't easy to find.
Hence why around a third of us keep voting for the so called 'ruling class' Eton educated Tories. Yep, pretty depressing. But, it doesn't rule our lives every moment of the day ... and being in Scotland you'd be lucky to fill an Oxbridge river punt with Tory voters, they are despised beyond belief.
This guy is really good...
He was really funny 😂
As an Aussie, gotta disagree about us moving our faces a lot. We don't even use our top lip, let alone the rest of our face.
In comparison to us Brits, you're a lot more expressive.
It's not hard though. A brick has more expression than the British.
Omg the Spanish is honestly so true. When he spoke he legit had a Spanish accent
Russell kane is a lovely man. Hes so funny .
"If you'd like to come through to the conservatory Carol I've got something to tell you" - I fucking lost it 🤣🤣🤣🤣
I really wanted to learn new languages when i was younger but the school language class was crap, i have tried my best through you tube but i only know bits
Try duolingo
I’m a British American and speak both French and Spanish but they’re quite different after you gain organic fluency and actually begin to think and dream in them-even lovely although English has its linguistic uniqueness going for it that makes it the language of literature.
Monsieur P. You’re a British American? Guess I’m a white Somalian then🤷🏻♂️
@@jamieosullivan2684 um what do u even mean?
Its true us brits are too awkward and in french class everyone says whats the point even though we can travel to france so easily and we use a lot of french words in our language lol
For those wondering, yes, Brits do sometimes say "Nigel Farage" at the end of their sentences! But it's really hard to translate what that phrase actually means. It's a bit like "You're a loser!" Or "This conversation has been utterly distasteful" or even "Fuck you mate Brexit was a mistake"
I couldn't help but think of the end of the countdown tune. sorry sorry NIGELFORAGE boom
This is a masterpice❤❤❤❤😍🇮🇹
He's very good, however English is in my opinion is a beautiful language of it's own.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning,
How do I love thee? Let me count the ways.
I love thee to the depth and breadth and height
My soul can reach, when feeling out of sight
For the ends of being and ideal grace.
I love thee to the level of every day’s
Most quiet need, by sun and candle-light.
I love thee freely, as men strive for right.
I love thee purely, as they turn from praise.
I love thee with the passion put to use
In my old griefs, and with my childhood’s faith.
I love thee with a love I seemed to lose
With my lost saints. I love thee with the breath,
Smiles, tears, of all my life; and, if God choose,
I shall but love thee better after death.
Bobbybigballs words are pretty English is still shit
@@hannahsmith3807 explain that to me please. English words are pretty, and English is shit?
I mean, I love you isn't phonetically the most beautiful phrase, but English with the right acccent and used in an eloquent or romantic fashion can be very beautiful.
Regardless, It's not exactly the language of love.
@@amiracampbell5973 Are you Muslim?
yeah but you dont hear shit like that nowadays
So many triggered Aussies in here hahaha
Hahaha and i thought us Brits were bad at that🤣
He is so funny! XD
4:24 must have pinged with some Aussies
........ I'm all three. I'm not even joking I'm American, Australian AND British. Yes, my accent is confusing as all hell. But it's funny to see my friends reactions when I can understand all the slang and they can only understand the slang from where they're from.
Mina Ashido Thats pretty interesting, You were born in 1, went to school in another and then moved to the last ? Tell me !
Te Amo, Sharon!
Gracias si estuvo bueno tu show
Getting better with age..
If you'd like to come through to the conservatory 😂
His delivery is the nuts
GOOD. KEEP DOING
Brilliant
Am I the only one imaging colin firth as Mr. Darcy in 'Pride and Prejudice'?
X''D
All native English speakers in the UK know more French than we think. 30% of British English derives from French, which is about 30,000 words.
I'm British and speak 7 languages, granted my hobby is self-studying languages.
now i feel stupid for having trained myself to sound british because I think it's beautiful
Aha Queens English maybe but there’s a whole of regions here try looking up different accents in England alone and I’m from The Black Country, believe me take up Spanish or Italian please 😂😂
@@knorty4004 okay i see your point :D thanks love
British? Like a perfect combo of English, Welsh, Scottish, and northern Irish combined?!?! That's got to be difficult to perfect! (British isn't an accent, you're thinking of a posh English accent I imagine).
@@RosieWilliamOlivia you are 100% correct. british is NOT one dialect. it's wrong by definition. BUT to the untrained ear it is just "british". it's just some kind of relatively popular not-scottish, not-welsh, not-northern-irish, probably some area of london-based (as tom maguire mentioned queens english) dialect.
The solution to the language conundrum... be camp af
@3:45 Haha! Love the idea that this Britt's idea of an "excellent linguist" is someone speaking 3 languages. I speak 5, understand 7 and I know a guy who is fluent in 20, I also know an African who had no schooling beyond primary and speaks 5. None of us are linguists. Let alone excellent ones.
Lel he was fucking smooth hitting on Sharon in the end huehue ✌🏻
"How good would that be on mushrooms?"
From experience, not good. 😂
The thing is, as an Aussie, you don't need to use any of your facial muscles at all to speak
3:20 wryyyyyyyyyy
The Australian he is basing this off was definitely on caps 4:22
6:20-6:35 🤣😭😂
I heard a theory (might have been during my phd as my lab had a melting pot of nationalities) that northern Europeans evolved to talk without opening their mouth much or any over expression facially as to conserve heat, whereas southern Europeans didn’t need to conserve heat and so they evolved to facially express and open their mouths more. Any anthropologists or linguists out there to clarify?
popping an ''O'' is such a wonderful thing, why would you call it, Nigel Farage?
sorry sorry sorry sorry about to finish and...thank you dear no nigel needed LOL
Saw this guy in a posh English hotel. What a dive...
My bones are fucked. Must have british ancestors, wait I'm Norwegian.... oh.
Ha. Definitely
You'll find more aussie's speaking aussie english than you'll fine people speaking french. French is rarely heard here
Jack Segond but the point was Aussies speak more french than the English which is true
Jack Segond no no no, he doesn’t mean French is more common than English in Australia. He meant more Australians speak French than English people which is ironic as England has such strong links with France
His point is that Aussies are ‘have a go heroes’ which we do pride ourselves on. The Brits not so much.
Well everything is true for every British person but me
Sorry for running the moment...
:`-
the Aussie part is like a badly dubbed film
Top banana
Must be an area thing because I’m from the uk and I don’t walk or talk like that in the slightest
You also have no sense of humour.
I find your idiocy hilarious actually
Well it's an obvious exaggeration. People don't actually walk like that unless they have physical issues.
anyone esle concerned that he didn't know that hola is spanish for hello not buenos dias. Buenos dias mean good morning.
Emily L'Anomalie Sorry to be pedantic, but don't you mean "buenas mañanas"? And I have never heard that said in full, just "Buenas"....
@@oldishandwoke-ish1181 buenos días is good morning. They don't say "buenas mañanas" unless they're talking actually of good mornings of (something) because mañana is more translated as tomorrow. It would make some sense with something like... tenemos buenas mañanas con el tiempo local entre junio y septiembre (we have good mornings with local weather between June and September) would make sense, but commonly buenos días or buen día - I'm not being pedantic, I'm a linguist.
Robert Heslop Agree that I have never heard "buenas mañanas". It's always "buenos dias" until about mid-afternoon. Was just commenting on the noun-adjective agreement thing. And before you point it out, my keyboard no longer does vowel accents, only the tilde.
@@oldishandwoke-ish1181 No problem
He's actually very wrong about Australian speech patterns ... Aussies are known for the diminutive and shortening of words to extract the maximum with the minimum of effort. The mouth and lips move very little often jokingly attributed to keeping the flies out of your mouth. While funny ... Russ is way off the mark. In hot climates like OZ, we do the least when we talk.
When I think Australia I think Russell Crowe. Are they all named Russell?
Hugh Jackman, Olivia Newton John, Heath Ledger..... so, I think not...
Russell Crowe isn’t even Australian...
@@deadshot8077 My bad, I always pegged him as Aussie.
Russell is from New Zealand
Yeah nah
❤️
😂😂😂😂
a shame every time he does an american accent he defaults to an annoying valley girl/kardashian kind of accent but at the same time it's so relentlessly easy to make fun of i really can't blame him. plus that the rich and beautiful are so ridiculously publicized in the american media even in other countries you watch american tv shows you end up hearing it alot. so much of the american media these days is geared towards appealing to teenage girls since they tend to be the biggest spenders and the most likely to follow trends and "fall into the pack".
btw, that accent is not natural to ANYBODY. it's affected mostly by females between the ages of 12 and 25 and gay males. NOBODY is raised to speak like that it is very much an affectation.
Agree. When he kept doing that for "american accent" I was thinking "Why is he talking like a valley girl from california?" No men talk like that
@@rookymusic6310 very few females talk like that either but it's heavily satirized in american media so people in other countries end up hearing it alot. plus it's so very easy to make fun of.
Sorry sorry dear sorry sorry dear x1000000
my face is very expressive and british
i feel superior
There is a girl in the audience and she was also at another comedian show... don't remember who it was?
He's funny but totally wrong about Aussie's talking. We hardly move our mouths at all. Footy players are the worst.
Sorry sorry sorry Nigel Farage!!!
Dude you think Britisch isn't romantical? Try Dutch.
0:26 because the French are weird
Notice that all his American impersonations are gay.
You mean dumb
Ii
You guys talk through your nose or would you say couldn't be bothered
Funny concept but it’s just been so over done it’s not funny.
Talking bollocks, Europeans don!t need to take out British citizenship to stay here, in Australia they go there to get Australian citizenship, they are the Aussies speaking French.
Observational humour is so much better when accurate. Pity Russell. Not your best work.
Nah mate we don’t lean languages cause we couldn’t be arsed with the hassle so much so that we pretty much only go to countries that speak the bare minimum English and avoid the rest
Robert Heslop yea I get that I was making a joke I’ve been to multiple places where I’m fucked as I can’t speak their language such as Italy, Spain and France
Holy shit this is bad.
I want to like him so much but... British?! I'm English. All the accents he's coming up with are English, his mannerisms, his body language... ffs... stop it English people! I never hear any Scottish, northern Irish, or Welsh calling themselves British. You're English, have some pride.
He’s not funny, comedy is dead
Go listen to Amy schumer
This is a prime example of left wing comedy. if they couldn't insult their own people they would be lost. You can tell its left wing because it isn't remotely funny.
You are a complete halfwit.
I mean I thought it was pretty funny but I guess everyone has their own opinions
Lol, how is there anything remotely political about this set?
@@MrGooner92 How is there anything remotely funny about this set. You are so indoctrinated you don't see what is in front of you.
@@tutenvanman2715 I never claimed I found it funny... you're putting words in my mouth.
I was merely asking how talking about mannerisms of different people in the world could be construed as left or right wing.