"Last year, São Paulo registered 4.2 murders per 100,000 people, one of the lowest rates in Brazil. In Philadelphia, the murder rate was six times as high, at 26.1 per 100,000 people, even surpassing the murder rate of 23.1 across Brazil, according to the Homicide Monitor, a database of government statistics from the Igarapé Institute, a research institute that studies security." source: NY TIMES
That is all true and I am not in the slightest supporting the false reports of risk with regards to travelling in Brazil. Quoting murder rates, however, is very much missing the point in general. The risk relating to tourism is somewhere else.
@@samil5601 The problem in Brazil is urban violence, murder is not the only form of urban violence but it surely is the worst of them, and it does serve as an indicator of how safe a city is, the point is not saying "Brazil is heaven and philly is hell", I just tried to point it out that the players that refused to bring their wives and said they weren't leaving the hotel etc, also live in a violent urban place and were completly wrong into thinking that it's too different from where they come from (xcuse my bad english)
@@malfunction1185 Sure, but murder is very unlikely outcome to any tourist as most of the violent crime occurs well away from tourist spots. Thus, running those numbers in isolation in this context is misleading and probably at the root of the media bias.
CanalCryptobros@@CanalCryptobrosAs unfortunate that is, the question in this context would be how many of the murdered are tourists? No-one is denying the levels of violence in Brazil, but trying to put it in to perspective of impact on tourists, let alone privileged visitors like these footballers.
The irony is that the Eagles' players were concerned about security in Sao Paulo. At the same time, during that same week, Rick Pearsall, the 49ers' first-round draft wide receiver, got SHOT on Union Square in downtown San Francisco at 2:30 p.m. on Saturday during an attempted mugging for his Rolex watch...
What these players don't understand is that they too are living in a country that is twice as worse and dangerous as any other third world country like brazil and north america has lots of brazilian illegals flooding over there on a day-to-day basis... how delusional that is lmao. Especially haitian and mexican migrants. This country is already a third world country and it's only the beginning until it falls to its knees.
I flew into Sao Paulo Monday morning and stayed until Saturday. I went around downtown (to the market, the Japanese area), to the futbol museum, beco do Batman, a bunch of museums, and a number of other places during the week. I had no issues whatsoever, didn't see or hear about any crime, etc. Like they said, just be smart with your valuables, and you'll be OK. Great time, delicious food, looking forward to the next time I go to Brazil.
Our biggest problem in São Paulo is cellphone theft-a surge that has been happening over the past few years. The risk of life does exist, but it is more concentrated in the city's outskirts. SP is beautiful! You visited some cool places.
Man, I walk about 4 miles everyday in SP, as a exercise routine. I take my phone, check it all the time on the streets and nothing bad happens. And I'm asian! C'mon, it's not dangerous. @@Yaten
Given that Philly has a higher crime rate than Sao Paulo, maybe the NFL told the Eagles to stay at the hotel, and escorted them to the stadium to protect the Brazilians, not the other way around.
@@fbaraky660I mean, things would have been even if it was on Rio though. But no matter where they went, they would have to deal with Brazil's most feared mythological creature: Dois Caras Numa Moto.
No offense, but I think the american football media is the most "american" in terms of stereotypes. So it's no surprise they don't know much about Brazil.
overall the people from the US think there is no civilization south of Arizona, actually for many nutheads there is no civilization after their proprierty lines. It might be a surprise to people that come here in this channel, but not to anyone that live in other parts of the World
São Paulo hosts the F1 every year without any issues. I’ve talked to several Americans here, and they all felt calm and safe. The financial center is quite large and easy to walk around.
Brazil has recently (past decade) had the Word Cup and Olympics. It’s asinine that the media and NFL itself fell for this nonsensical narrative. Also I find it completely ridiculous and incompetent that the NFL and network schedule the game on a Friday at the same time slot the Brazilian Soccer team is playing a meaningful WC qualifier. They would have had way more eyeballs and sold more jerseys and generated more hype if they would have thought things out a little better. Morons
@@DaniboyBR2 São Paulo has a lower homicide rate per 100,000 inhabitants than the U.S., but of course, the city faces challenges like any large metropolis around the world. However, the reality is nowhere near what is often portrayed in the media. The Formula 1 race takes place every year in the city, and last year’s event drew 267,000 people without any reports of theft or insecurity. There are numerous major events in the city every week. The misinformation combined with ignorance is truly unfortunate.
and don't stand near the NYC subway tracks on a platform or you will get pushed in front of a moving train. Sorry NYC, I've lived here all my life (Queens, Brooklyn)
@@Colin.1.8as a brazilian i h8 it here is like idiocracy movie. However... i see lots of shlt in videos of ny subway. Like that marine that going to have a trial for possible accident killing a guy that was arrested over 40 times.
Like, São Paulo is the biggest city in americas and biggest city on the south hemisphere. Shitty media lying like if a NFL game was the biggest event São Paulo ever hosted wtf. Its probably one of the most average events São Paulo hosts in a year. This same stadium hosted a WC.
And the next day morumbi hosted a giant the weeknd show wich had way more people with zero problems, sure São Paulo has its problems, but hosting events isn't one of those, it's deffo my favorite city when it comes to attending any type of event, no place is more organized in my own experience.
São Paulo hostsFormula 1 every year since the 90s, it moves about 1 billion reais in 3 days, the NFL wasn't even close to being the biggest event in the city's history
I was raised in the US and been living in Brazil for a decade... Most of the rumors are false. Brazil is a dangerous place for brazilians, mainly the ones that are outdoors daily going to work at crazy hours and in crazy places. Not to wear green in São Paulo, sounds like a joke for any experienced traveler, and just because you cant buy a subway ticket doesn't mean it's dangerous to have your camera out for some time. (?) As a tourist, I understand some fear, but players crying about coming to Brazil while the major athletes in the world are here yearly for F1 and soccer tournaments, thats wild.
@@laa0fa502It's true, but when it's game day for the teams Corinthians x Palmeiras, if you look for something about it, look for something like: Palmeiras x Corinthians briga
@@laa0fa502 It's not a joke. The rule banning green is part of our team's regulations. We really dislike green, and none of our players are allowed to wear it. However, it's no problem to wear green at games that aren't ours. The Brazilian national soccer team wears green, and green is part of our flag. The real issue is green associated with Palmeiras, our rival from the same city.
It’s actually not ridiculous, Brazil has very dangerous parts, even the local Brazilians told us what parts gringos should definitely avoid. They don’t get many tourists compared to other popular destinations which is criminal.Just give props to the us that traveled down there and that will be returning 😅
@@ThePhillyspade We do have dangerous parts as you guys also have. The thing is what the players and media was talking is ridiculous. For 25 years I have been living in São Paulo Brazil and I never got stolen. Just 1 year living abroad was enough to to someone stole me 🤣
@@genericman-j9u no, it does. I’ve also lived in Michigan, California, Georgia, Texas, currently reside in Florida and have visited majority of the states in the US. I’ve been very fortunate to have the experiences that I’ve had so far in my life. So, I’d say that I know what I’m talking about.
Brazil has violent cities, just like the US. Brazil has "hoods", just like the US. I don't get the animosity and why the US throws so much shade at us.
@@samil5601 Right, because literally everyone, especially people in the European Union just love to bring up how the U.S. does things "worse" than them.
@@samil5601 Don't worry, I'm reminded of it a lot, since foreigners are so obsessed with bringing up what America seems to do wrong every second of the day, for some reason
The irony being american subways are utterly disgusting 🤢 They really think they’re better than everyone else, and get surprised when things look good 🤦🏻♀️😂
While NFL players complained about Brazil, Jaylen Brown was having fun on vacation in Rio de Janeiro. Jimmy Butler always comes to Rio. Typical ignorance of the average North American
@@Carioka92 kkkkkk I know he's not but it's funny to me when people in Latin America refuse to say American because "we're American too!" but then they say "North American". By doing so, they've grouped Mexico and Canada in with United States.. this classification is objectively incorrect.
@@danczarnik457 Exactly, here there is the custom of calling Americans North Americans. An incorrect assumption being that there is Mexico and Canada on the continent. 😂🤦🏻♂️
I think it's the US media spreading lies to the athletes and they managers. It's sad that this happened. Somebody does not want the NFL to succeed in Brazil!!!
I don't judge the players. Their instructions probably came from the American embassy, which will always issue warnings when visiting foreign countries. The problem is that the same warnings aren't issued when visiting dangerous cities in the US. It causes confusion.
My wife is brazilian from sao paulo, about 10 min drive from the stadium. LOVE the city, been there many times. Never had an issue with any crime or gangs or any of that BS. Never seen anything i dont see in philly every day. The whole thing was ridiculous and if the players just stayed in their hotels thats a shame
True, me too, I moved from Germany to São Paulo 15 years ago and I never had any issue with crime here! But the American players didn't left their hotel out of fear, like frail old ladies frightened by the mosquitoes! KKK!
You guys been lucky then cuz some people have different experiences. Yes there some propaganda but still have to be cautious. My friend had experience robbery so everyone will have different experiences there 😂
@Antbeast23 you can say that about literally any city in the world, tho. There's no rational reason to pick on sao paulo over any other. Bad experiences happen everywhere
Brazil has “recently” hosted a World Cup and the Olympics.. what’s that compared to a NFL match .. locally, we have multiple football (soccer) matches in a week , and the attendance rate is about 30.000 per match ( being the biggest 51.000 and the lowest 5.500 )
precisa botar soccer não amigo, football ta correto, so americano q chama football (futebol) de soccer, tenho amigos de outros paises e eles ate tiram onda disso (esporte q so uma ocasião perdida eles chutam, o resto é segurando o ovo que nem é bola kkkk).
@@hugocarvalho8906 voce ta falando com americano, a palavra é soccer. ficar fazendo birrinha querendo dizer como eles devem falar o proprio idioma é bem ridiculo.
I'm a member of an American Packers fan group and man...I was so mad about seeing how much disinformation there was about Brazil! Thank you for bringing boots on the ground perspective for your fellow Americans. I hope you'll be back soon.
@@_sorvete_frito_187 aproximadamente 1 em 6 pessoas tem Alzheimer depois dos 80 anos, mas quem joga futebol americano, 99% (literalmente 99%, num estudo que fizeram em 2017 descobriram que 110 de 111 atletas da NFL analisados tinham dano grave no cérebro) tem Alzheimer e outros problemas mentais graves antes dos 40 anos.
Unfortunately NFL did not allow vendors of traditional stadium food around the arena. In other events, specially Soccer Games you can buy cold beer, lots of sandwiches filled with some sort of options like sausage, pork, beef, hamburger and amazing Brazilian Hot Dogs (very different compared to American HD). You might visit a soccer game and have the actual Brazilian experience.
I was in SP BY MYSELF (I am a 5’3 female) and walked basically everywhere in SP, I met up with a couple of girlfriends for some of it, but 70% of my trip I was alone, and it was such a great time, met new people, saw some very cool museums, great food, etc.. I’m excited to go back. I live in the US, and the crime rate has been increasing year after year for many years (under both parties). The US folks live in a bubble and I feel sad for them. That’s all I have to say.
i'm an english guy that's lived in Brazil since 2005. Dude, seriously, this bad news people see about Brazil on the news is just hyped up. unfortunately, this makes people scared to visit a nice, relatively safe place. i've never been robbed. the trick is speak portuguese, and don't be such a monolingual anglaphone.
Doesn’t dismiss the fact that Brazil is still dangerous. Got to be cautious everywhere you go. It’s like comparing apples and oranges. Everyone going to have different experiences so of course some people will say it’s safe others will say it’s dangerous lmao.
@@Antbeast23 Saying Brazil is dangerous is one of the worst generalizations possible. I live in the south of Brazil and the crime rate in most cities is comparable to europe and nordic countrys. São Paulo and the southeast is more dangerous, but not the worst. If you want to really know the violent Brazil that the media portraits, go to the North and northwest. There are some small cities there with a homicide rate of 224 by 100.000 habitants.
One thing that I find really funny and kinda cool is how passionate they are about their country(specially online), if you see any brazilian talk about their country they'll probably complain and how bad it is, but the moment someone from outside does it they enter mad mode to defend their country Its like a family thing, "I can talk shit about my family, you don't"
guilty as charged. but i hate it here for cultural and political reasons. basically i hate how corruption is an integral part of everything. this ruins the country to me. a tourist doesn't get to experience that so that's not really a downside for them.
@@GraveUypo but what br dont know is that corruption exists evetywhere. I lived in nyc and I went to fort laurdale to get away from ny winter, and my american friends found Bloomberg's (a former nyc mayor) 6 floor yatch, and he kept saying to the IRS that his company was basically banckrupt. The difference btw us and them, is that everything bad that happens in Br is a scandal, that gets front cover everywhere.
10:34 that's a Brazilian Song called "Evidências". It our "Sweet Caroline". You can check here with English lyrics. Thanks for showing the reality of our country.
Thanks for nothing because they are the ones who always portray our country in a worst way possible, it is only about fvele and crmes in their documentaries while they hide their 🗑️, vir-lata!
I don't like talking with Americans too much because many of them seem to be locked in a bubble where they don't know anything about other countries and think that everything that isn't the USA is horrible But it's very nice to see people who want to get to know new cultures abroad without reinforcing aspects where their country is better.
Brazil has incredible cities to visit, I really recommend it. As for the problem of robberies, we have cities in the US and Europe that are more dangerous.
As a Brazilian from São Paulo this whole iscussion about the players shiting on their pants cuz they were too afraid of São Paulo was hilarious lol! Not only the city has lower rate crimes when comparing to other cities in US - Philly for example - but they stayed in noble areas of the city. Really guys, São Paulo is just as any other big city in the world; there areas where is not a good idea to go visit and others that are pretty safe. Just do your research, go around, there's tons of things to see and a lot of good stuff the city can offer and normally people will be very welcoming and help you if you are lost.
Every year there is an F1 race, Indy, we host the World Cup and the Olympics. the US press are liars, they talk as if we were a mix of bandits and cavemen
CORRECTION: Brazil is the 3rd behind USA and México… Not Canada. In reference to the players talking trash… DONT ACT like they came from a privileged family or town… São Paulo has almost 13 million in the Capitol alone… the State of São Paulo has near 44 million people the crime rate is 6.4/100k Guess how many people are in Philly? 1.5 million and the CRIME RATE is 46/100k. Yep… and those players talking like they don’t have siblings from different dads and a family member or a friend in jail.
the same prejudice americans had on brazil in 2014 world cup and rio 2016 olympics they had again for this nfl game... it is just media sensationalism and ignorance
yes... if we face it we have to mention what Ryan Lochte did in the Olympics here, or what Hope Solo said at the same time... lembra do grito de Zika nos estádios?
this is very good, you arrived with your head stereotyped by what Americans think of what Brazil is and saw what it really is, as a Brazilian I get upset with the view you have of us, I'm happy that you lived and saw how good it's here.
As a Dane who is the son of the best Brazilian mom anyone in the world could get, I was so thrilled that the NFL decided to host a game in São Paulo!!! Specially at the Corinthians Arena!!! All of my Brazilian family support Corinthians, me included!!!! I only wish The Raiders were playing in that game!!! Raiders are my favourite NFL team, and Corinthians fans have a lot in common with the Raiders fan base!!! We’re all equally crazy!!! 😂😂😂😂
I’m brazilian from Rio de Janeiro, currently living in the Netherlands but Sao Paulo is my favorite city in the world. Is such a nice underrated place. There is so much fun there that is nice to see people recognizing it.
For those wondering, the reason of the banning of the colour green is that, the club that gave permision to the game to be held on, Corinthians, has a rivalry with another club called Palmeiras, in which their main color is green, its such a big rivalry, that Corinthias asked FIFA to be able to change the color of their field into black, and one of their own players was not alowed to play because he was wearing a green shoe
Exactly! I hate north american media bruh 😡😒 They said it was because of gang activity or some bs but they did not said what "gangs" specifically that they should know just to let millions of people know who are the names of those so called gangs lmao 😂😂 They didn't say no MK-13, green crips, no cartel gang wearing green... nothing 😑 seriously north america? ahaha
And things aren't like the 90s no more. As a Palmeiras fan, we just don't wear black inside the our stadium and that's about it. Some lunatics may not use black/green daily, but that ain't the norm.
@@THBronx Black or White are more neutral colors that are way more present in normal day-to-day shirts or pants, whatever. This is why you can go to a Palmeiras game wearing white or black, and there won't be any issue despite Corinthians being black and white. Green is not a "neutral" color though, if you go to a Corinthians game with a green shirt, they WILL order you to take it off.
As a brazilian, i feel very happy, because when i read that americans were saying that it was going to be almost as a war zone i felt very sad, because i know São Paulo and i know that it's not fully wonderful, but now hearing your depoiment about the overall experiense, and as a Corinthians fan that loved the arena too, i feel happy, and sorry about my bad english.
São Paulo hosts the F1 every year without any issues. I’ve talked to several Americans here, and they all felt calm and safe. The financial center is quite large and easy to walk around…
Irmão não precisa ficar se desculpando pelo seu inglês que por sinal dá pra compreender perfeitamente, só uma dica, quando for digitar I ou o eu, é sempre maiúsculo, logo fica mais vistoso pra ler
Não precisa ficar se desculpando por ainda não estar num nível mais avançado num idioma que não é o seu nativo, só falar que tá aprendendo mas nunca peça desculpa. Tu vai ser brabo ainda no idioma e em outros que quiser aprender 💭
Don’t be a clown hajaa I live in Brazil. Don’t wear red or blue in LA, Chicago, NY, Miami. Don’t get shot at school, church, or the mall back home in USA hajaa 😂😂 The subway is way way waaaaaaayy more dangerous in NY and ATL 🧐 🤔
I live in central Brazil and travel to São Paulo 3 or 4 times a year. You know how many times I’ve been robbed there? NONE. ZERO. Not once! But then I spent 6 months in the Bay Area. I bet you can already guess where this is going... In just 6 months, I was robbed FOUR TIMES. Four! The last time, in Oakland, they took my backpack with my passport, iPad, MacBook-my whole life, gone. So, to the American media: do me a favor and shut up. Look in the mirror before you go around saying Brazil is dangerous.
It was interesting they made their ranking criteria and got frustrated realizing the experience was much better then their own terms tells. Basically the Brazilian experience has bugged their mains 😂
I had no idea of this repercussion, the media exaggerated what they said about Brazil. We have problems, but it's not a mess. At big events, there is security. About my favorite player, it's also Drew Brees.
I spent 6 months in California, if the Americans had self-criticism they would never talk about Brazil as they say. No one told me, I saw people park their cars and when they came back all the wheels were stolen, I saw the sale and use of drugs in front of authorities and children, I saw armed robbery, I saw the car windows broken for theft and even so I loved the USA because these problems do not summarize the country of you and the problems of Brazil should not summarize it.
I was very excited for the first NFL game to take place in my country. It was really cool to see a regular season game taking place on our territory. I've been following the NFL since 2009. I became a fan of the Pittsburgh Steelers after that incredible SB XLIII. I want to thank you guys for covering this great game and for showing Brazil to the world... You're always welcome!!
@@gabrielsrc8369 Na verdade foi por que o jogo foi no estádio do Curintians, e lá é "proibido" usar verde por conta do palmeiras, eles já até tentaram até pintar a grama de preto, mas não tem nada a ver com o jogo da NFL e não é como se fossem matar alguém de verde, foi loucura dos jornalistas como sempre.
São Paulo has a lower homicide rate than all of the following NFL cities: Baltimore, Detroit, New Orleans, Kansas City, Philadelphia, Milwaukee, Chicago, Indianapolis, Minneapolis, Washington DC, Pittsburgh, Atlanta, Nashville, Las Vegas, Dallas, Houston, Miami, Tampa, Jacksonville and Charlotte.
As a Brazillian, born and raised in Sao Paulo, thanks for the fair rank and it was so great to watch all your video about your experience here. I left Sao Paulo two years ago to live in a small city 2 hours far from there because I could not stand the traffic and crime rates anymore. Sao Paulo has all the best and the worst of what any other huge city of the word offers. Of course you should be aware when going out, specially at night, and of course there are places you should not go without someone local, but there are a lot of nice things to do and most Brazillians will be more than pleased to help you. We loved to host the first of many NFL games here and please come back to visit other spots, as we are the most biodiverse country of the world and we have a very rich culture to experience!
thank you for saying and showing the truth about my country. i was there and the game was just amazing. hope the nfl come back next year to brazil.. i'll be there again
Thanks a lot for this content, guys. We in Brazil are really proud of what we are, both as a country but as a community too. Hearing/reading the things americans were saying before the game was really tough. São Paulo, as any big city of the world, has violence. But this doesn't define what the city or the people are. Glad that you guys had a nice experience. Hope you guys will come back to the next one.
Yeah, I needed to check Canada's population. For them to have more fans than Brazil, the NFL would need to be loved by more than 90% of the canadian population. Then I returned to the frame and saw Brazil was behind USA and Mexico.
I'm Brazilian, this is the first video I've seen from you guys, considering the whole video I think you did a huge justice to Brazil and the experience as a whole, I thought the score would be higher, but now I'll need to see the videos from the other events to be able to compare, congratulations on the work!
Gotta say, this whole vortex of fake news, exaggerations and poor journalism just reminded me of how a lot of people from the USA view Brazil. It's revolting, honestly.
I'm brazilian and thanks for your sincere score and analysis, I hate when foreigners flatter the Brazilian people by talking too much good stuff about Brazil just to get our engagement and hype.
I’m from Rio, called by many the most beautiful city in World. I have been in the U.S. for 45 years and will soon retire in Brazil that’s larger than continental U.S. São Paulo is now the 4th largest city in the world. It’s true that there’s serious problems in Brazil but the lack of knowledge from Americans about our unique and diverse country is well documented. To this day I have Americans ask me if I speak Spanish. The NFL is wise to cater to an enormous nascent market of fans. When I arrived in San Francisco in 1982 it was the beginning of the 49’s dynasty with the great Joe Montana and the amazing Jerry Rice. I became an instant fan! 😊🇺🇸🇧🇷
Thank you guys for telling the truth about Brasil guys! I was raised in the U.S. and live today in Brazil, it's truly not bad, obviously there are places that are more dangerous, but the U.S. has a lot of very dangerous places, but in geleral it's pretty chill, just like Brazil.
I'm Brazilian and I bet you guys that the next game will be as unique as this one if it's not in São Paulo... Brazil is a huge country with a population that changes considerably depending on where you are... If next year there is a Rio game, completely different thing
@@AlwaysWillStayTrue let's reverse your question... Imagine I'm going to Missouri for a Chiefs game, then I'll head to Florida for a Buccs game... Completely different experiences right?! And yet both would be amazing...
This is an example of how fake news acts on ignorant minds. And I refer to ignorant as someone who has no idea about anything other than their own reality.
Thank you guys for coming and sharing your experience here in Brazil. I hope this video reaches a lot of people so they can see how much bs the media tends to spread about South American countries. Our country (as many others) has a lot to improve, but we are a hardworking, welcoming people and our fan base its really passionate.
It would be cool if you guys came back to see our national sport, soccer, being played. Like in a major cup, Libertadores or Copa do Brasil, then i think you guys would get the real bazilian fan experience wich is insane.
As a Brazilian I realize why the midia do all this stuff, they want to kind of shut us down and talk about bad stuff only, but every country have their pros and cons. And in Brazil the people are so willing to connect with foreigns and make sure they feel safe here as they should. The people are so lovely and full of joy here every one just want to have a good time and big laughs. If u guys are thinking of coming here again make sure u look out for any cool events or concert and a good tip: carnaval is always the coolest event of the year . Love the vid guys ❤
I seriously doubt the 36 million NFL fans figure for Brazil. That would be like 1 out of every 6 Brazilians approximately. NO WAY. You need to stop 1 in every 50 Brazilians to find someone who can remember the name of an American football team
@@adelsonregisteixeira9335 40 thousand tickets for a unique event that brazilians don´t know when it will happen again. With 2 million fans in the entire country you can sell out the tickets because of the uniqueness of the event.
@@gabacontri468 provavelmente é pq tu mora em São Paulo. Pq os Corinthianos em geral estavam excitados por ser no estádio deles. Pq é algo diferente. Novamente... pergunta 5 times da NFL. Ou algumas regras... como quantos pontos vale um touch down. E mais... faz isso com população aleatória, como pesquisa do IBGE, não num bar onde metade do pessoal fala inglês.
Não me tornei financeiramente independente até o final dos meus 40 anos, e ainda estou na casa dos 40. Além de ter comprado minha segunda casa e ganhar dinheiro mensalmente por meio de renda passiva, também alcancei três de cinco objetivos. Espero que isso inspire alguém a perceber que não importa se você ainda não tem nenhuma dessas coisas, você pode começar hoje, não importa sua idade. Mude seu futuro investindo! Tomei uma decisão bem grande ao investir no mercado financeiro.
Cada um dos meus pedidos de oração está prestes a se manifestar no Nome de Jesus. Eu recebo e me conecto com esta mensagem no poderoso Nome de Jesus. Amém 🙏👏🏼👏🏼
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Can I came
can it be me i love you guys!
hopefully I win
cool video - ive never seen your channel before. I was trying to find your germany video but couldn't, is it uploaded on this channel?
@@Iroxit I was wondering the same thing
"Last year, São Paulo registered 4.2 murders per 100,000 people, one of the lowest rates in Brazil. In Philadelphia, the murder rate was six times as high, at 26.1 per 100,000 people, even surpassing the murder rate of 23.1 across Brazil, according to the Homicide Monitor, a database of government statistics from the Igarapé Institute, a research institute that studies security."
source: NY TIMES
That is all true and I am not in the slightest supporting the false reports of risk with regards to travelling in Brazil.
Quoting murder rates, however, is very much missing the point in general. The risk relating to tourism is somewhere else.
@@samil5601 The problem in Brazil is urban violence, murder is not the only form of urban violence but it surely is the worst of them, and it does serve as an indicator of how safe a city is, the point is not saying "Brazil is heaven and philly is hell", I just tried to point it out that the players that refused to bring their wives and said they weren't leaving the hotel etc, also live in a violent urban place and were completly wrong into thinking that it's too different from where they come from (xcuse my bad english)
@@malfunction1185 Sure, but murder is very unlikely outcome to any tourist as most of the violent crime occurs well away from tourist spots. Thus, running those numbers in isolation in this context is misleading and probably at the root of the media bias.
I am from são paulo and I think just my street has that much murders per year
CanalCryptobros@@CanalCryptobrosAs unfortunate that is, the question in this context would be how many of the murdered are tourists?
No-one is denying the levels of violence in Brazil, but trying to put it in to perspective of impact on tourists, let alone privileged visitors like these footballers.
The irony is that the Eagles' players were concerned about security in Sao Paulo. At the same time, during that same week, Rick Pearsall, the 49ers' first-round draft wide receiver, got SHOT on Union Square in downtown San Francisco at 2:30 p.m. on Saturday during an attempted mugging for his Rolex watch...
To be fair, San Francisco is literally a shit hole
What these players don't understand is that they too are living in a country that is twice as worse and dangerous as any other third world country like brazil and north america has lots of brazilian illegals flooding over there on a day-to-day basis... how delusional that is lmao. Especially haitian and mexican migrants. This country is already a third world country and it's only the beginning until it falls to its knees.
Crime happens everywhere, some places more than others…….
the crime rate in brazil is almost 5x higher than in the US, based on real numbers.
Right or when the football stadium in New Jersey got raided for the final of copa America
I flew into Sao Paulo Monday morning and stayed until Saturday. I went around downtown (to the market, the Japanese area), to the futbol museum, beco do Batman, a bunch of museums, and a number of other places during the week. I had no issues whatsoever, didn't see or hear about any crime, etc. Like they said, just be smart with your valuables, and you'll be OK. Great time, delicious food, looking forward to the next time I go to Brazil.
The japanese area is called "Liberdade" and means literaly "Liberty"
Our biggest problem in São Paulo is cellphone theft-a surge that has been happening over the past few years. The risk of life does exist, but it is more concentrated in the city's outskirts. SP is beautiful! You visited some cool places.
Que bom que conseguiu aproveitar outros lugares, espero ter a NFL novamente aqui. E sim a nossa comida é deliciosa hahaha
👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
Man, I walk about 4 miles everyday in SP, as a exercise routine. I take my phone, check it all the time on the streets and nothing bad happens. And I'm asian! C'mon, it's not dangerous. @@Yaten
Given that Philly has a higher crime rate than Sao Paulo, maybe the NFL told the Eagles to stay at the hotel, and escorted them to the stadium to protect the Brazilians, not the other way around.
😂😂😂
Yes, I was really scared about people from Philadelphia coming. I'm happy everything went well and us brazilians didn't suffer any violence.
Lmfaaao
kkkjkjkkkkkkkk isso aqui foi hilário
@@fbaraky660I mean, things would have been even if it was on Rio though. But no matter where they went, they would have to deal with Brazil's most feared mythological creature: Dois Caras Numa Moto.
No offense, but I think the american football media is the most "american" in terms of stereotypes. So it's no surprise they don't know much about Brazil.
The players, they don't know much about their own country, imagine abroad.
it's crazy how they think that wearing green is a problem here.
Not just American football media, it’s all media
overall the people from the US think there is no civilization south of Arizona, actually for many nutheads there is no civilization after their proprierty lines.
It might be a surprise to people that come here in this channel, but not to anyone that live in other parts of the World
eu fico pasmo com a quantidade de gente BURRA q tem nos estragos unidos. provavelmente emburreceram a população para manterem eles na linha...
São Paulo hosts the F1 every year without any issues. I’ve talked to several Americans here, and they all felt calm and safe. The financial center is quite large and easy to walk around.
Brazil has recently (past decade) had the Word Cup and Olympics. It’s asinine that the media and NFL itself fell for this nonsensical narrative. Also I find it completely ridiculous and incompetent that the NFL and network schedule the game on a Friday at the same time slot the Brazilian Soccer team is playing a meaningful WC qualifier. They would have had way more eyeballs and sold more jerseys and generated more hype if they would have thought things out a little better. Morons
Without any issues? They even hijacked a whole truck, don't fool people, Brazil has a huge security problem.
@@DaniboyBR2just like USA and every other country in the world.. 😑
@@DaniboyBR2 São Paulo has a lower homicide rate per 100,000 inhabitants than the U.S., but of course, the city faces challenges like any large metropolis around the world. However, the reality is nowhere near what is often portrayed in the media. The Formula 1 race takes place every year in the city, and last year’s event drew 267,000 people without any reports of theft or insecurity. There are numerous major events in the city every week. The misinformation combined with ignorance is truly unfortunate.
and also saquarema hosts wsl
"Sao paulo is not safe, come to philadelphia" 😂😂😂
and don't stand near the NYC subway tracks on a platform or you will get pushed in front of a moving train. Sorry NYC, I've lived here all my life (Queens, Brooklyn)
@@esciteach7997 wait do people get pushed into trains??? WTF
@@jj-jb2cdit has happened like 2 times ever
@@Colin.1.8 it is 2 times too much
@@Colin.1.8as a brazilian i h8 it here is like idiocracy movie. However... i see lots of shlt in videos of ny subway. Like that marine that going to have a trial for possible accident killing a guy that was arrested over 40 times.
Like, São Paulo is the biggest city in americas and biggest city on the south hemisphere. Shitty media lying like if a NFL game was the biggest event São Paulo ever hosted wtf. Its probably one of the most average events São Paulo hosts in a year. This same stadium hosted a WC.
And the next day morumbi hosted a giant the weeknd show wich had way more people with zero problems, sure São Paulo has its problems, but hosting events isn't one of those, it's deffo my favorite city when it comes to attending any type of event, no place is more organized in my own experience.
São Paulo hostsFormula 1 every year since the 90s, it moves about 1 billion reais in 3 days, the NFL wasn't even close to being the biggest event in the city's history
@@PStahn ofc not, for what i've seen felt like a brasileirão real football game.
The Taylor Swift Tour was more talked 😂
I mean NFL is most valuable sports league so huge deal for a 3rd world country like Brazil to get!
I was raised in the US and been living in Brazil for a decade... Most of the rumors are false. Brazil is a dangerous place for brazilians, mainly the ones that are outdoors daily going to work at crazy hours and in crazy places. Not to wear green in São Paulo, sounds like a joke for any experienced traveler, and just because you cant buy a subway ticket doesn't mean it's dangerous to have your camera out for some time. (?) As a tourist, I understand some fear, but players crying about coming to Brazil while the major athletes in the world are here yearly for F1 and soccer tournaments, thats wild.
I think the issue with the recording is that in some countries you can get arrested easily for having a camera out.
Isn't the whole green thing just a reference to the soccer team that plays there banning green as a joke?
@@laa0fa502It's true, but when it's game day for the teams Corinthians x Palmeiras, if you look for something about it, look for something like: Palmeiras x Corinthians briga
@@ManuelHernandez-tm1mq Okay, but in Brazil? WTF
@@laa0fa502 It's not a joke. The rule banning green is part of our team's regulations. We really dislike green, and none of our players are allowed to wear it. However, it's no problem to wear green at games that aren't ours. The Brazilian national soccer team wears green, and green is part of our flag. The real issue is green associated with Palmeiras, our rival from the same city.
Acting like Brazil is dangerous while Philadelphia has way more murders and crimes is just ridiculous
It’s actually not ridiculous, Brazil has very dangerous parts, even the local Brazilians told us what parts gringos should definitely avoid. They don’t get many tourists compared to other popular destinations which is criminal.Just give props to the us that traveled down there and that will be returning 😅
@@ThePhillyspade We do have dangerous parts as you guys also have. The thing is what the players and media was talking is ridiculous. For 25 years I have been living in São Paulo Brazil and I never got stolen. Just 1 year living abroad was enough to to someone stole me 🤣
Philadelphia has a murder rate of 34.1 per 100,000 people, São Paulo has a murder rate of 7.8 per 100,000 and Brasil 22 per 100,000.
One minute Brazilians are telling you how dangerous and how much it sucks. The next that its not that bad. I hate the internet
@@k.t.1641Brazil is giant man, of course people will say different things
I’ve been to 26 countries and one thing I’ve notice is, people are a lot nicer than they are in the U.S.
Yes!!!
I’ve had the opposite experience, especially in the European countries
@@genericman-j9u no, it does. I’ve also lived in Michigan, California, Georgia, Texas, currently reside in Florida and have visited majority of the states in the US. I’ve been very fortunate to have the experiences that I’ve had so far in my life. So, I’d say that I know what I’m talking about.
@@PharSyde6ix ive lived all over the US and people are incredibly nice. Maybe you are just a bad person lol
@@kyledabearsfan if you came to brasil, you understand what "nice" means bro
Brazil has violent cities, just like the US. Brazil has "hoods", just like the US.
I don't get the animosity and why the US throws so much shade at us.
They do that to everybody, though.
@@samil5601 Right, because literally everyone, especially people in the European Union just love to bring up how the U.S. does things "worse" than them.
If anything, Europeans online and a lot of people online talk bad about the U.S.
@@9mmtrilla You may want to compare crime rates between Europe and the US, perhaps?
@@samil5601 Don't worry, I'm reminded of it a lot, since foreigners are so obsessed with bringing up what America seems to do wrong every second of the day, for some reason
6:20 "subway was clean" that really must be a shock to americans. he must have been like "where are the rats??" lol
The irony being american subways are utterly disgusting 🤢
They really think they’re better than everyone else, and get surprised when things look good 🤦🏻♀️😂
While NFL players complained about Brazil, Jaylen Brown was having fun on vacation in Rio de Janeiro. Jimmy Butler always comes to Rio. Typical ignorance of the average North American
By North American are you referring to Mexico as well?
@@danczarnik457 no bro
@@Carioka92 kkkkkk I know he's not but it's funny to me when people in Latin America refuse to say American because "we're American too!" but then they say "North American". By doing so, they've grouped Mexico and Canada in with United States.. this classification is objectively incorrect.
@@danczarnik457 Exactly, here there is the custom of calling Americans North Americans. An incorrect assumption being that there is Mexico and Canada on the continent. 😂🤦🏻♂️
I think it's the US media spreading lies to the athletes and they managers. It's sad that this happened. Somebody does not want the NFL to succeed in Brazil!!!
On behalf of America and also Marlon Humphrey, apologies to Brazil. The country was amazing!!
those claims were embarrassing and showed american ignorance on the world
America isn't a country.
Tell the player who complained about Brazil, to look at his country's problems, before he starts talking about others!
I don't judge the players.
Their instructions probably came from the American embassy, which will always issue warnings when visiting foreign countries.
The problem is that the same warnings aren't issued when visiting dangerous cities in the US. It causes confusion.
Tmj gringo
My wife is brazilian from sao paulo, about 10 min drive from the stadium. LOVE the city, been there many times. Never had an issue with any crime or gangs or any of that BS. Never seen anything i dont see in philly every day. The whole thing was ridiculous and if the players just stayed in their hotels thats a shame
True, me too, I moved from Germany to São Paulo 15 years ago and I never had any issue with crime here! But the American players didn't left their hotel out of fear, like frail old ladies frightened by the mosquitoes! KKK!
You guys been lucky then cuz some people have different experiences. Yes there some propaganda but still have to be cautious. My friend had experience robbery so everyone will have different experiences there 😂
@Antbeast23 you can say that about literally any city in the world, tho. There's no rational reason to pick on sao paulo over any other. Bad experiences happen everywhere
It's funny to see those NFL players saying Brazil is dangerous when a lot of them come from dangerous hoods
😂it was also funny to me to see NFL players say the Brazilian are cursing them out in Brazilian 😂 and not Portuguese
@@takionjose6657 that's peak ignorance. But they wouldn't even get to college if wasn't for football scholarships anyways
@@takionjose6657 Lol
and back home they act tough tryna be 'gang' but are pussies when it comes to other countries hoods and want all the security and privileges LMAO
Exactly what I thought. Guys coming from the hood, where it's way worse than Brazil, talking sh*t about it. Ridiculous.
Brazil has “recently” hosted a World Cup and the Olympics.. what’s that compared to a NFL match .. locally, we have multiple football (soccer) matches in a week , and the attendance rate is about 30.000 per match ( being the biggest 51.000 and the lowest 5.500 )
Brazil also hosts the Carnaval annually and that is bigger than all those events combined.
@@samil5601There's also F1
precisa botar soccer não amigo, football ta correto, so americano q chama football (futebol) de soccer, tenho amigos de outros paises e eles ate tiram onda disso (esporte q so uma ocasião perdida eles chutam, o resto é segurando o ovo que nem é bola kkkk).
@@hugocarvalho8906 É de fato um esporte esquisito kkkkk
@@hugocarvalho8906 voce ta falando com americano, a palavra é soccer. ficar fazendo birrinha querendo dizer como eles devem falar o proprio idioma é bem ridiculo.
I'm a member of an American Packers fan group and man...I was so mad about seeing how much disinformation there was about Brazil! Thank you for bringing boots on the ground perspective for your fellow Americans. I hope you'll be back soon.
That's a superiority complex, a lot of Americans have it
Eu nao seloko kkkkkkk nao quero esse jogo por aqui, imagina todo mundo aqui querendo jogar futebol americano e ficando com dano cerebral depois dos 40
@@korpzmarcelfranca6825dano cerebral tem uns que tem e nem joga futebol de gringo
Vai, Felipe, ser capacho de estadunidense. É assim que pensam em você lá
@@_sorvete_frito_187 aproximadamente 1 em 6 pessoas tem Alzheimer depois dos 80 anos, mas quem joga futebol americano, 99% (literalmente 99%, num estudo que fizeram em 2017 descobriram que 110 de 111 atletas da NFL analisados tinham dano grave no cérebro) tem Alzheimer e outros problemas mentais graves antes dos 40 anos.
Unfortunately NFL did not allow vendors of traditional stadium food around the arena. In other events, specially Soccer Games you can buy cold beer, lots of sandwiches filled with some sort of options like sausage, pork, beef, hamburger and amazing Brazilian Hot Dogs (very different compared to American HD). You might visit a soccer game and have the actual Brazilian experience.
sim... esses caras não souberam (dessa vez) o que é um dogão, um podrão ou um sanduíche de pernil.
fica a lição, na próxima cheguem 2, 3 dias antes
I was in SP BY MYSELF (I am a 5’3 female) and walked basically everywhere in SP, I met up with a couple of girlfriends for some of it, but 70% of my trip I was alone, and it was such a great time, met new people, saw some very cool museums, great food, etc.. I’m excited to go back.
I live in the US, and the crime rate has been increasing year after year for many years (under both parties).
The US folks live in a bubble and I feel sad for them. That’s all I have to say.
4:20 as a fellow broncos fan I just wanna sit down with this guy and chop it up he seems so chill
hes the goat
@@SnapbackSports1 THEY HAVE A CHANNEL ITSS CALLED ON THE CLOCK BRASIL
I played football with him, he's my friend!! 😂😂 I got scared when I saw him! We call him Sean he looks like Sean Kingston 😂😂
Yall literally won a superbowl in recent memory and destroyed a unstoppable team to do it at that. Stop with “PAIN”
@@immortal_SO watch Paxton Lynch and come back to me
i'm an english guy that's lived in Brazil since 2005. Dude, seriously, this bad news people see about Brazil on the news is just hyped up. unfortunately, this makes people scared to visit a nice, relatively safe place. i've never been robbed. the trick is speak portuguese, and don't be such a monolingual anglaphone.
Eagles players being scared to go to Brazil while Philadelphia is like 6x more dangerous
Doesn’t dismiss the fact that Brazil is still dangerous. Got to be cautious everywhere you go. It’s like comparing apples and oranges. Everyone going to have different experiences so of course some people will say it’s safe others will say it’s dangerous lmao.
@@Antbeast23 Saying Brazil is dangerous is one of the worst generalizations possible. I live in the south of Brazil and the crime rate in most cities is comparable to europe and nordic countrys. São Paulo and the southeast is more dangerous, but not the worst. If you want to really know the violent Brazil that the media portraits, go to the North and northwest. There are some small cities there with a homicide rate of 224 by 100.000 habitants.
@@Antbeast23so? It’s like that everywhere.
BFD… 🙄
One thing that I find really funny and kinda cool is how passionate they are about their country(specially online), if you see any brazilian talk about their country they'll probably complain and how bad it is, but the moment someone from outside does it they enter mad mode to defend their country
Its like a family thing, "I can talk shit about my family, you don't"
Its exactly that lol
guilty as charged.
but i hate it here for cultural and political reasons. basically i hate how corruption is an integral part of everything. this ruins the country to me. a tourist doesn't get to experience that so that's not really a downside for them.
@@GraveUypo but what br dont know is that corruption exists evetywhere. I lived in nyc and I went to fort laurdale to get away from ny winter, and my american friends found Bloomberg's (a former nyc mayor) 6 floor yatch, and he kept saying to the IRS that his company was basically banckrupt.
The difference btw us and them, is that everything bad that happens in Br is a scandal, that gets front cover everywhere.
Do you want something INTENSE? Watch a Libertadores Cup game in Brazil. I dare you. I double dare you!
Ou FlaXFlu copa do brasil
Agree. Seen several Fla-Flus and a couple of Libertadores games.
As well as this event presents Brazil, it does not show the true culture.
10:34 that's a Brazilian Song called "Evidências". It our "Sweet Caroline". You can check here with English lyrics. Thanks for showing the reality of our country.
I came to see if anyone had posted this.
Thanks for nothing because they are the ones who always portray our country in a worst way possible, it is only about fvele and crmes in their documentaries while they hide their 🗑️, vir-lata!
nobodys care about his annoying song
this***
@@djiejsbdiejebs-qn2mj 1 negative comment and 493 likes. Yeah, you're probably right.
brazil is a very underrated country
Mago
Sendo tu brasileiro isso soa "overpedante".
@@arrentinooverpedante hakjuahauah
@@arrentinoultrapedante?
overrated for me
Broncos guy might be the goat 😂
the goat
Yeah man, as a Broncos fan even I was shocked....😂
I don't like talking with Americans too much because many of them seem to be locked in a bubble where they don't know anything about other countries and think that everything that isn't the USA is horrible
But it's very nice to see people who want to get to know new cultures abroad without reinforcing aspects where their country is better.
Brazil has incredible cities to visit, I really recommend it. As for the problem of robberies, we have cities in the US and Europe that are more dangerous.
The state of paraná is a good example
@@gv7165 Yes, but there are other examples of fantastic places to visit.
As a Brazilian from São Paulo this whole iscussion about the players shiting on their pants cuz they were too afraid of São Paulo was hilarious lol! Not only the city has lower rate crimes when comparing to other cities in US - Philly for example - but they stayed in noble areas of the city. Really guys, São Paulo is just as any other big city in the world; there areas where is not a good idea to go visit and others that are pretty safe. Just do your research, go around, there's tons of things to see and a lot of good stuff the city can offer and normally people will be very welcoming and help you if you are lost.
I went to the game and spent a whole week in SP. It was amazing.
Every year there is an F1 race, Indy, we host the World Cup and the Olympics. the US press are liars, they talk as if we were a mix of bandits and cavemen
CORRECTION: Brazil is the 3rd behind USA and México… Not Canada. In reference to the players talking trash… DONT ACT like they came from a privileged family or town… São Paulo has almost 13 million in the Capitol alone… the State of São Paulo has near 44 million people the crime rate is 6.4/100k Guess how many people are in Philly? 1.5 million and the CRIME RATE is 46/100k. Yep… and those players talking like they don’t have siblings from different dads and a family member or a friend in jail.
3rd in what?
@@azirmandias4191Fanbase
@@azirmandias4191 fans I think
Theyre wrong but no need to be racist tho
@@azirmandias4191 3rd global NFL market
That broncos fan was actually super funny. Made my day
the same prejudice americans had on brazil in 2014 world cup and rio 2016 olympics they had again for this nfl game... it is just media sensationalism and ignorance
yes... if we face it we have to mention what Ryan Lochte did in the Olympics here, or what Hope Solo said at the same time... lembra do grito de Zika nos estádios?
this is very good, you arrived with your head stereotyped by what Americans think of what Brazil is and saw what it really is, as a Brazilian I get upset with the view you have of us, I'm happy that you lived and saw how good it's here.
Not all people in the U.S. think Brazil is a dangerous place. Stop being ignorant of the average person in the U.S. please
@@9mmtrillasee how it feels when you get stereotyped because of the media
@@AlwaysWillStayTrue So every day of the year even when things unrelated to the U.S. is mentioned? I agree, that's why I had to say it.
As a Dane who is the son of the best Brazilian mom anyone in the world could get, I was so thrilled that the NFL decided to host a game in São Paulo!!! Specially at the Corinthians Arena!!! All of my Brazilian family support Corinthians, me included!!!! I only wish The Raiders were playing in that game!!! Raiders are my favourite NFL team, and Corinthians fans have a lot in common with the Raiders fan base!!! We’re all equally crazy!!! 😂😂😂😂
VAI CORINTHIANS!!!
@@Yaten VAI CORINTHIANS PORRAAAAAA!!!!
As cores do Raiders se identificam com o Corinthians.
Vai Corinthians 🤍🖤
I am a Brazilian who lives in the U.S. I'm also a Corinthians and Raiders fan! ❤ Vai Corinthians! Raider Nation RNFL!
I didn't expect myself such a great stadium, their bathrooms are much better than my company's ones. Great pick for the 1st experience 😊
Wow no shit. Maybe Brazil having five World Cups and football being something also played at stadiums is related, shocking.
C'mon guys, the Lions still play in Detroit every year, right?! What could be worse ?! 😂
Detroit is no joke... Shit is crazy...
I’m brazilian from Rio de Janeiro, currently living in the Netherlands but Sao Paulo is my favorite city in the world. Is such a nice underrated place. There is so much fun there that is nice to see people recognizing it.
For those wondering, the reason of the banning of the colour green is that, the club that gave permision to the game to be held on, Corinthians, has a rivalry with another club called Palmeiras, in which their main color is green, its such a big rivalry, that Corinthias asked FIFA to be able to change the color of their field into black, and one of their own players was not alowed to play because he was wearing a green shoe
Exactly! I hate north american media bruh 😡😒 They said it was because of gang activity or some bs but they did not said what "gangs" specifically that they should know just to let millions of people know who are the names of those so called gangs lmao 😂😂 They didn't say no MK-13, green crips, no cartel gang wearing green... nothing 😑 seriously north america? ahaha
And things aren't like the 90s no more. As a Palmeiras fan, we just don't wear black inside the our stadium and that's about it. Some lunatics may not use black/green daily, but that ain't the norm.
@@THBronx BS, I went to a billion Palmeiras games wearing black shirts (metal bands) and regular jeans and no one said one word about my dress code.
@@fpsqt So the situation is better than what I thought.
@@THBronx Black or White are more neutral colors that are way more present in normal day-to-day shirts or pants, whatever.
This is why you can go to a Palmeiras game wearing white or black, and there won't be any issue despite Corinthians being black and white.
Green is not a "neutral" color though, if you go to a Corinthians game with a green shirt, they WILL order you to take it off.
that broncos fan was hilarious.
He was so epic
@@SnapbackSports1I know this dude! He's one of my friends from a football group. His name is Matheus
Good news is that multiple Eagles players admited that they loved it and the concerns were overblown.
Who would have imagined that Brazil is not just a crime infested big jungle with favelas and Christ the redeemer on top, right? 😂😂
Sim É as girafas elefantes etc passeando pelas ruas 😂😂😂😂
Excellent video, Brazil is much more civilized than many cities in the USA, big hug from a Brazilian friend.
As a brazilian, i feel very happy, because when i read that americans were saying that it was going to be almost as a war zone i felt very sad, because i know São Paulo and i know that it's not fully wonderful, but now hearing your depoiment about the overall experiense, and as a Corinthians fan that loved the arena too, i feel happy, and sorry about my bad english.
São Paulo hosts the F1 every year without any issues. I’ve talked to several Americans here, and they all felt calm and safe. The financial center is quite large and easy to walk around…
Irmão não precisa ficar se desculpando pelo seu inglês que por sinal dá pra compreender perfeitamente, só uma dica, quando for digitar I ou o eu, é sempre maiúsculo, logo fica mais vistoso pra ler
Não precisa ficar se desculpando por ainda não estar num nível mais avançado num idioma que não é o seu nativo, só falar que tá aprendendo mas nunca peça desculpa. Tu vai ser brabo ainda no idioma e em outros que quiser aprender 💭
@@Pedro-ii6qgVlw cara
@@ban_eiraObrigado
So cool to see you guys enjoyed so much ! São Paulo is a really fun place to visit. Try to stay longer next time.
Don’t be a clown hajaa I live in Brazil. Don’t wear red or blue in LA, Chicago, NY, Miami. Don’t get shot at school, church, or the mall back home in USA hajaa 😂😂
The subway is way way waaaaaaayy more dangerous in NY and ATL 🧐 🤔
8:05 This represents Brazil more than soccer and samba ( even tho its a soccer reference lol)
No, definitely not
@@Techzin127 minha pomba
I live in central Brazil and travel to São Paulo 3 or 4 times a year. You know how many times I’ve been robbed there? NONE. ZERO. Not once! But then I spent 6 months in the Bay Area. I bet you can already guess where this is going... In just 6 months, I was robbed FOUR TIMES. Four! The last time, in Oakland, they took my backpack with my passport, iPad, MacBook-my whole life, gone. So, to the American media: do me a favor and shut up. Look in the mirror before you go around saying Brazil is dangerous.
It was interesting they made their ranking criteria and got frustrated realizing the experience was much better then their own terms tells. Basically the Brazilian experience has bugged their mains 😂
Thank you for showing the good part of Brazil! Always welcome
Philadelphia is way more dangerous than Brazil lol
Thanks for the video, Brazil is so nice.
Thank you SO MUCH for making this!
I had no idea of this repercussion, the media exaggerated what they said about Brazil. We have problems, but it's not a mess. At big events, there is security. About my favorite player, it's also Drew Brees.
I spent 6 months in California, if the Americans had self-criticism they would never talk about Brazil as they say. No one told me, I saw people park their cars and when they came back all the wheels were stolen, I saw the sale and use of drugs in front of authorities and children, I saw armed robbery, I saw the car windows broken for theft and even so I loved the USA because these problems do not summarize the country of you and the problems of Brazil should not summarize it.
I was very excited for the first NFL game to take place in my country. It was really cool to see a regular season game taking place on our territory. I've been following the NFL since 2009. I became a fan of the Pittsburgh Steelers after that incredible SB XLIII. I want to thank you guys for covering this great game and for showing Brazil to the world... You're always welcome!!
"we advise to not wear green there"
... What do they think we are? The Ballas? We aint got no problem with Grove Street bro
Por causa de politica provavelmente
@@gabrielsrc8369 Na verdade foi por que o jogo foi no estádio do Curintians, e lá é "proibido" usar verde por conta do palmeiras, eles já até tentaram até pintar a grama de preto, mas não tem nada a ver com o jogo da NFL e não é como se fossem matar alguém de verde, foi loucura dos jornalistas como sempre.
@@NemusD pqp torcedor de futebol é primitivo mesmo em
São Paulo has a lower homicide rate than all of the following NFL cities: Baltimore, Detroit, New Orleans, Kansas City, Philadelphia, Milwaukee, Chicago, Indianapolis, Minneapolis, Washington DC, Pittsburgh, Atlanta, Nashville, Las Vegas, Dallas, Houston, Miami, Tampa, Jacksonville and Charlotte.
As a Brazillian, born and raised in Sao Paulo, thanks for the fair rank and it was so great to watch all your video about your experience here.
I left Sao Paulo two years ago to live in a small city 2 hours far from there because I could not stand the traffic and crime rates anymore.
Sao Paulo has all the best and the worst of what any other huge city of the word offers. Of course you should be aware when going out, specially at night, and of course there are places you should not go without someone local, but there are a lot of nice things to do and most Brazillians will be more than pleased to help you.
We loved to host the first of many NFL games here and please come back to visit other spots, as we are the most biodiverse country of the world and we have a very rich culture to experience!
as a brazilian, loved that you told the truth!! respect bro! welcome and feel yourself at home
5:12 this guy represented the true Brazilian hate feeling! 😂
thank you for saying and showing the truth about my country. i was there and the game was just amazing. hope the nfl come back next year to brazil.. i'll be there again
As for security, there is no safer place, France is a clear example, when it had the Olympics😒
Paris is Africa
Thanks a lot for this content, guys.
We in Brazil are really proud of what we are, both as a country but as a community too.
Hearing/reading the things americans were saying before the game was really tough.
São Paulo, as any big city of the world, has violence. But this doesn't define what the city or the people are.
Glad that you guys had a nice experience.
Hope you guys will come back to the next one.
I'm Brazilian, and I never heard of anyone here that follow said sport.
0:13 Actually is the third GLOBALLY, the first is USA, second is Mexico and then is BRASILLLLLLL hehe
Brazil top 2 actual
México!!?😂😂😂
Yeah, I needed to check Canada's population. For them to have more fans than Brazil, the NFL would need to be loved by more than 90% of the canadian population. Then I returned to the frame and saw Brazil was behind USA and Mexico.
@@lo4726yup, you have no idea
@@CanalDescomplicado top2 outside USA
I'm Brazilian, this is the first video I've seen from you guys, considering the whole video I think you did a huge justice to Brazil and the experience as a whole, I thought the score would be higher, but now I'll need to see the videos from the other events to be able to compare, congratulations on the work!
Thanks for showing the reality about Brazil and the event
How y’all aren’t more popular is crazy
Gotta say, this whole vortex of fake news, exaggerations and poor journalism just reminded me of how a lot of people from the USA view Brazil. It's revolting, honestly.
0:50 Increased caution and extreme caution are two different things bud….
Snapback needs to hire the guy in the Broncos jersey
Hire the GOAT. Bro looks like that kid from Nickelodeon Kennan and Kel
Lol do you mean Kenan Thompson, who's been on snl for like 20 years now?
and Sean Kingston
Those big guys being afraid of Brazil is comical.
I'm brazilian and thanks for your sincere score and analysis, I hate when foreigners flatter the Brazilian people by talking too much good stuff about Brazil just to get our engagement and hype.
Same shit happens with Filipinos bro
I’m from Rio, called by many the most beautiful city in World. I have been in the U.S. for 45 years and will soon retire in Brazil that’s larger than continental U.S. São Paulo is now the 4th largest city in the world. It’s true that there’s serious problems in Brazil but the lack of knowledge from Americans about our unique and diverse country is well documented. To this day I have Americans ask me if I speak Spanish. The NFL is wise to cater to an enormous nascent market of fans. When I arrived in San Francisco in 1982 it was the beginning of the 49’s dynasty with the great Joe Montana and the amazing Jerry Rice. I became an instant fan! 😊🇺🇸🇧🇷
As a Brazilian living in US over 5y this video is so refreshing! Brazilian ppl are generally the coolest! Cheers
They think SAO PAULO and RIO are the same think
Thank you guys for telling the truth about Brasil guys! I was raised in the U.S. and live today in Brazil, it's truly not bad, obviously there are places that are more dangerous, but the U.S. has a lot of very dangerous places, but in geleral it's pretty chill, just like Brazil.
I'm Brazilian and I bet you guys that the next game will be as unique as this one if it's not in São Paulo... Brazil is a huge country with a population that changes considerably depending on where you are... If next year there is a Rio game, completely different thing
Completely different in a good way?)
@@AlwaysWillStayTruemaybe not lol, but im from São Paulo i may be biased
@@AlwaysWillStayTrue let's reverse your question... Imagine I'm going to Missouri for a Chiefs game, then I'll head to Florida for a Buccs game... Completely different experiences right?! And yet both would be amazing...
I was there, great game, great experience. The next one should be in Rio, another level of experience.
I moved to Brazil in 2007. I'll never move back to the USA. Brazil is the best.
This is an example of how fake news acts on ignorant minds. And I refer to ignorant as someone who has no idea about anything other than their own reality.
4:05 - He just found the Brazilian version of Kenan Rockmore
I was searching for this comment. So, i'm not the only one who noticed that. 🤣
holy shit, he looks just like Kenan
Thank you guys for coming and sharing your experience here in Brazil. I hope this video reaches a lot of people so they can see how much bs the media tends to spread about South American countries. Our country (as many others) has a lot to improve, but we are a hardworking, welcoming people and our fan base its really passionate.
It would be cool if you guys came back to see our national sport, soccer, being played. Like in a major cup, Libertadores or Copa do Brasil, then i think you guys would get the real bazilian fan experience wich is insane.
We would love that! We went to Copa America with Neymar. check out that video on our channel
As a Brazilian I realize why the midia do all this stuff, they want to kind of shut us down and talk about bad stuff only, but every country have their pros and cons. And in Brazil the people are so willing to connect with foreigns and make sure they feel safe here as they should. The people are so lovely and full of joy here every one just want to have a good time and big laughs. If u guys are thinking of coming here again make sure u look out for any cool events or concert and a good tip: carnaval is always the coolest event of the year . Love the vid guys ❤
I seriously doubt the 36 million NFL fans figure for Brazil.
That would be like 1 out of every 6 Brazilians approximately.
NO WAY. You need to stop 1 in every 50 Brazilians to find someone who can remember the name of an American football team
I am watched NFL games on Brazilian tv for years. I would love to see this particular game but the tickets are sold out in minutes.
Cara, pode ser pq eu moro em São Paulo mas eu fui no jogo e saí parecendo uma superestrela "nossa como foi o jogo? Queria ter ido"
@@adelsonregisteixeira9335 40 thousand tickets for a unique event that brazilians don´t know when it will happen again. With 2 million fans in the entire country you can sell out the tickets because of the uniqueness of the event.
@@gabacontri468 provavelmente é pq tu mora em São Paulo.
Pq os Corinthianos em geral estavam excitados por ser no estádio deles.
Pq é algo diferente.
Novamente... pergunta 5 times da NFL. Ou algumas regras... como quantos pontos vale um touch down.
E mais... faz isso com população aleatória, como pesquisa do IBGE, não num bar onde metade do pessoal fala inglês.
Nem a torcida do Corinthians tem 36 milhões de torcedores.
the easy access by one of the biggest and cheapest subway system in the world should grant a little more rating
15:22 Casey comeback more times my guy you already Brazilian ❤
Kinda crazy you put out these high quality videos in a completely different hemisphere but only 20k people are subbed smh
I've been to Brasil many times and it is always so funny seeing people who have never been terrify themselves for no reason
Não me tornei financeiramente independente até o final dos meus 40 anos, e ainda estou na casa dos 40. Além de ter comprado minha segunda casa e ganhar dinheiro mensalmente por meio de renda passiva, também alcancei três de cinco objetivos. Espero que isso inspire alguém a perceber que não importa se você ainda não tem nenhuma dessas coisas, você pode começar hoje, não importa sua idade. Mude seu futuro investindo! Tomei uma decisão bem grande ao investir no mercado financeiro.
Tenho 37 anos e estou procurando maneiras de ter sucesso. Por favor, como?
Cada um dos meus pedidos de oração está prestes a se manifestar no Nome de Jesus. Eu recebo e me conecto com esta mensagem no poderoso Nome de Jesus. Amém 🙏👏🏼👏🏼
Começou com 5.000$ e retirou lucros
89.000$
Isso é ótimo!!. Não entendo nada de investimentos e pretendo começar.
Quais são suas estratégias?
Eu também posso fazer isso??? Minha vida está enfrentando muitos desafios ultimamente.
Thats so nice to see! thank you guys for standing up and bringing the overall ideia of Brasil!
8:03 they were chanting against the refferees after that Flag after a packers touchdown
thanks for showing how Brazil really is guys, this means a lot to us, hope NFL come down here again next year
I'm Brazilian and I don't like NFL but I hope this market grows in Brazil.
After the slight they did, I hope they apologize. If they don't, they don't have to come back.