Streetfoods made from Banana, like Banana Que, Maruya (like a hotcake or a fritter), Turon (wrapped and fried banana) or Banana Con Yelo (Banana with crushed ice and milk)
Try street foods in the Philippines such as the fried intestine of the chicken,kwek kwek also hard boiled egg covered with flour dip in really spicy vinegar with cucumber :) please
Jollibee’s menu was originally catered for kids thats why the spaghetti is sweet and has sausages. Over the years it became a household name in the Philippines because it brings back the kid inside of every Filipino grew up with it. I’m a certified Jollibee kid!
I love and appreciate all the vloggers who feature things a lit about the Philippines 🇵🇭 it’s a win win for our tourism and for vloggers to have more followers. It’s only in the Philippines we’re vloggers get lots of followers. Thank you you are helping our evonomy.
People who usually works at fastfood chain are college students. Extra money for tuition. Though the first comment seems to be coming from a guy living in the Philippines because they like to judge people who works abroad . When they have no idea how hard it is to look for a decent job.
Jollibee, please start your restaurant here in Sweden as well! Introduce our good Jollibee all over Europe specially in Scandinavia. The McDonald's here in Sweden just started serving customers' orders to the table while in Philippines we had that system since decades, I mean the chain restaurants in the Philippines.
I love Jollibee. Originally from Cali where I was introduced to Jollibee by my filipino friends years ago. The chicken is always juicy and super flavorful. I get the original, not the spicy. Tried the spicy and didn't care for it. The spaghetti is super good, too. I love the sweetness to it. Very different than italian spaghetti. For dessert I also get the peach mango pie 🤤
Wow that's nice comments :) thank you for promoting Filipino food that so nice of you .Jollibee is really indeed amazing .I'm from Philippines :) proud Filipino !
Thank you guys for featuring Jollibee, one of the Phillippines popular fast food! Children love to go there because of jollibee, my grand kids love to take pictures with jollibee! And they enjoy their sphagetti.
There’s a Jollibee here in Carson, California, where I always see families eating so happy together and kids love the spaghetti with chicken joy. On a Sunday it’s always a long line, full of people.
Actually, it also has a Chinese influence since the owners aren't really Filipinos they are originally from China but due to the hard life there. They migrated to the Philippines and tried their luck in business here. What's interesting is that the owner was able to graduate in a university with a bachelor's degree but put up a business instead of getting a job related to his course. So I think it's more of a mix of Chinese also. But the owner really did his research in knowing which food the people liked best and it did made a great imprint on Filipinos before other international brand came in like McDonald's when they started in 1981. If you ask each and every Filipinos most likely they would choose Jollibee because it has the taste of our culture..also the food pancit palabok is a dish influenced by Chinese.
Someone should do a comparison between local Jolibees and those in other countries. It certainly looks like the Jolibees in other countries are way better.
thank you sir for trying our best and most famous fast food chain of the philippines “the Jollibee”. i love their food but the most i love is chickenjoy and burger and spaghetti and im happy that we have some branches here in california.
Filipino culture has some Southeast Asian and Indian influences. Then the Chinese and the Japanese traders came to add their food influences. The Spanish set up the trans-Pacific galleon trade for 200+ years that included many Nahuatl Mexican influences. Finally the Americans brought 20th-Century food preparation. It's great that you're bringing friends to try Jollibee.
Halo word in Philippines means "mix" , so when a filipino food have the word "halo halo" that means you should mix it. The flavor will mix in and compliment each flavor in the food. Just a suggestion, you can eat it the way you want to 😊
You got me at the entrance song...that's like 70s or early 80s song....wow. i'm not even born that time yet. by the way, you have to mix the halo-halo before eating them.
Oh men proud Filipino here and I really 💙😍💙 Jollibee actually I almost grow up in their eating there delightful super yummy meals from breakfast, lunch snack & dinner when I was a kid and until now w/my💙ones.. my god I reminisce the moments.. #JustSharingMyJolliestDaysWithJollibee💙 Ps: Nice choice of music
Wow! I did not know that they have JOLIBEE right in Times Square! The rent must be really expensive to set up a fast food chain there. We finally have one here in Toronto too but unfortunately it is not located downtown, its in the suburbs of Scarborough. You guys ordered so much.. lol..
Whoah I didn’t know there was one in Manhattan? I was just there last month, too! I remember there is one in Queens and that’s the one I’ve been to yrs ago. Now I gotta go to this one next time I go to NYC!
The 3 mix of culture you have mentioned is so on point. Although, Filipino culture is fundamentally Hispanic-Asian with a touch of Americanization. You can see this even in architecture, tradition, arts, literature, music, and as mentioned, culinary arts. I was surprised you have noticed that because some people regard The Philippines as not asian enough or not hispanic enough, hence the confusion. Very good video! Cheers from The Philippines.
Nope you guys ain’t hispanic in the slightest because 1. Filipino culture is still dominantly Asian 2. You guys don’t speak Spanish and number 3. The majority of the population in the Philippines aren’t mixed and don’t carry any Spanish ancestry. * claiming that Filipinos are "Hispanic" because of religion, Spanish loanwords and surnames is like claiming that Malaysians are Arabs… because they're mostly Muslim, with Islamic names and surnames and their language had also adopted a lot of Arabic loanwords. These kinds of arguments just don't make any sense at all.
@@racooncity3325 @Racoon City You clearly don't know much about Philippine pre-colonial, colonial, and post-colonial history and heritage don't you? Moreso about the more than 400 years history of Filipino-Spanish language. As well as the relativity of the definition of the term "hispanic" as applied by the Latin Union and other statistics agencies. I bet not even customs, traditions, arts, music, literature and the distinct arquitectura mestiza. All your arguments, I assume were probably based solely on stereotypical connotations of what Filipinos are and what their culture is. You even put words into my mouth and made assumptions on the rationale of my argument not to mention your usage of strawman fallacy. Now on your claim: 1. An oversimplification. Hispanic culture here is not deemed foreign by Filipinos themselves, by that, I mean they practice such without even knowing it's from Spain. From Misa de Gallo, siesta, fiestas, day of the dead, aguinaldo, semana santa, expressions or even the cuisine and pastries. Not even the architecture as mentioned. A typical contemporary Filipino (subject to certain exceptions) will feel both comfortable with both southeast asian cultures and hispanic american nations. But on my experience, a catholic Filipino will have a hard time relating to the likes of Thais, not their architecture which we find exotic and their buddhist customs and traditions. To summarize, please research and study more. We share the same cultural pattern with Mexico where they merge pre-colonial and colonial culture together. Our Fiestas here are usually a merger of both indigenous and spanish culture which makes it uniquely Filipino. It is hispano-asiatico. 2. Again, debatable and oversimplified. I am basing my definition of the term "Hispanic" on the now defunct Latin Union's standards. If you studied more, you'll realize that Spanish language was taught and stopped here only in 1987. It's decline began in the early 1902 to 1945 when the US colonized the nation and banned the usage of Spanish with the goal of replacing it with english. According to statistics back then by the US soldiers, 70% of Filipinos speak Spanish and growing. It is the language of business, law, and recreation. The Spanish language severly dwindled during the occupation and massacre by Japan in 1945. Being said. In 1988, there were only 1.8 million Spanish speakers in The Philippines but the numbers are growing. 3. Again, seriously? The term Hispanic is a very relative term. The Latin Union standards, Hispanic african nations, and indigenous hispanic american communities would disagree with you. The Philippines don't consider race in their statistics. But I believe (despite the lack of stats) we are predominantly austronesian. With significant numbers of mestizo de sangley, mestizo de españa, negritos and tornatrás. I could continue but my argument would be a thesis-long. Trust me, you don't know much about our history and culture than you think despite your pedantic attitude. And I understand that your sentiments may come from Filipinos who love kissing Spain's ass and using the same illogical oversimplifications like what you used to rebut just to boost their pathetic ego.
@@hijodelsoldeoriente You’re wring When the Philippines had a population of just a little over four million and a half (4,500,000 persons), Agustín de la Cavada y Méndez de Vigo pointed out that those who spoke Spanish did not exceed 2.8% of the cited population and by the early 1900s it was less than 10% of the population, Spanish was never widespread spoken. The Spanish language itself was never sufficiently established as a lingua franca. This was because: - It was limited to the educated minority in the Philippines, and generally not taught to the masses - Many Hispanophile loyalists were wiped out in the Philippine American war; decimating the already low number of speakers - American occupation for the first 50 years of the 20th century saw a great expansion of the Philippine Public School system, thanks to the efforts of the US Military, and a group of colonisers called the Thomasites. The revamped system was now anchored in English, and taught not just students, but natives who became teachers Latin American colonies were often "settler" colonies to where spaniards migrated (think USA, Canada, Australia-style colonies, made up mostly of migrants who didn't originate from there). Philippines was an "extractive" colony, there for trade. More like the African colonies or the British in India. Spaniards didn't migrate there in large numbers, they traded and opened plantations. As a general rule, when I'm teaching colonial history, I explain that these are the two main types of colonies to the kids. It's fairly easy to understand and is broadly accurate, though on a micro level it's always more complicated than that.
@@hijodelsoldeoriente The philippines is a homogenous country . The majority of the people are from Austronesian and Chinese stock. Filipinos with Spanish ancestry are a minority and at 0.5-1%.
@@hijodelsoldeoriente Despite the Spanish's long period of rule there were tons of foreign intervention and eventually, the United States. In fact, today's Philippines honestly has more similarity to the South East Asia and the U.S than Spain at this point. But Spain at that point in time very much had ultimately sovereignty over the Philippines - the Philippines' name refers to King Philip. Geographically, though it still very much is part of Asia. So I'm still partially confused by your question - imperialism doesn't automatically completely changing the culture and ethnic makeup, but rather utilizing the place for resources - which is still exactly what happened. The Philippines was very much a Spanish colony, but as far as what we consider to be "Latin" country that doesn't apply. Again, Consider it like Britain's relationship to India. There are just numerous bubbles of resistance and self-preservation that prevented a complete takeover, but the influence still clearly remains in both respective cultures. But that wouldn't make India a legitimate British state, would it? Also consider modern day colonies, like the Virgin Islands. They have a weird relationship when it comes to their rights as to who "owns" them, like when it comes to voting in elections, etc, but they aren't inherently recognized as say, another state for the United States. Filipinos very much identify distinctly as Asian . Some minority people have Spanish blood, but the populations carrying indigenous or other Asian ancestries still far outweigh that by atleast 95%. A lot of nomenclature may have Spanish to it; Tagalog, the most common Filipino language is distinctive of this, but this is the only dialect to have these traces. Knowing Spanish is definitely not going to help you at all if you seek to learn Filipino. Tons of other dialects are inherently unique in structure and are still Malay-inspired
Before way back in the 90's I ate mango pie in jollibee here in the Philippines it waz just the same size as ur mango pie there bro, but now it's just half of that size... there's some sort cost cutting here so sad...
I can't wait to open a jollibee store also here in Parish France I Love jollibee I'm big fanatic of jollibee since I'm a kid until now I missed it so much the chicken joy And the spaghetti 👍👌😋😋😋😍♥️
🧡 What Filipino food should I feature next? I'll find the best place in NYC that has it!
Try the boodle fight in Jeepney
Try next ''biko and suman'' its our other philippine desserts
Pissed that the third reply is this?
Streetfoods made from Banana, like Banana Que, Maruya (like a hotcake or a fritter), Turon (wrapped and fried banana) or Banana Con Yelo (Banana with crushed ice and milk)
Try street foods in the Philippines such as the fried intestine of the chicken,kwek kwek also hard boiled egg covered with flour dip in really spicy vinegar with cucumber :) please
The intro music is pure manila classic music
yong profile picture mo hahahahahah xD
@@devourer1389 bakit pangit po ba
Whats the title?
OfficialHiddentest "sorry na pwede ba"
I'm not from manila.. probably why I don't know it
That is the classiest branch of Jollibee I have ever seen
TIME SQUARE EH
havent been to bgc branch? d mo na need mag order , pindot2 knlg sa screen kng ano i order mo.
Lol yup cause its time square dude
Pag ignorante talaga hahaha
Jollibee ng Rosario Cavite ay may class rin Ksi bago
Jollibee’s menu was originally catered for kids thats why the spaghetti is sweet and has sausages. Over the years it became a household name in the Philippines because it brings back the kid inside of every Filipino grew up with it. I’m a certified Jollibee kid!
Just had it Friday and it was delicious
I'm glad you tried it! I'm eager to go back myself
Jackie Newton yeah it was so delicious bcoz Filipino food are so cool
Oh..... I book a plane this instant
@@timothymcglynn1935 Funny I was just talking About Jollibee today there needs to be one in CT
diba sabi ko sayo eh sarap diyan
I love and appreciate all the vloggers who feature things a lit about the Philippines 🇵🇭 it’s a win win for our tourism and for vloggers to have more followers. It’s only in the Philippines we’re vloggers get lots of followers. Thank you you are helping our evonomy.
love the intro music!
gotta love those classic Filipino ballads
If I'm not mistaken that song is by Rey Valera.
@@joevicmeneses8918 Not sure if he composed it but it's popularized by Rico J. Puno
@@UrbanistExploringCities Title?
@@romelalonzotaban1124 sorry na pwede na
Why is the size of the peach mango pie sold in NYC is bigger than the one sold in the Philippines?
bc its America, they have to make it bigger so more people will buy it
They are bigger in size than a typical Asian. They need bigger portion of food as well 😁 Pag punta mo US, magugulat ka nalang sa dami ng serving. 😂
Because its much expensive than ours. Duh
coz they pay bigger too lul
Talagang malalaki ang portions ng western countries . Kumpara mo sa asia na di naman nantitipid . Pero siguro ganun na nga xD
Nice background pinoy music..😊
Imagine going abroad and just working at jollibee NYC.
Still better than having no job👀
I’m wondering, are they still contractual workers? 🤔
SadLettuce who cares if you're working on a fast food what matters is you're getting money
Mr K. I think it matters, you see there’s this thing called underemployment. Who knows if they are a degree holder yet working as a fast food crew
People who usually works at fastfood chain are college students. Extra money for tuition. Though the first comment seems to be coming from a guy living in the Philippines because they like to judge people who works abroad . When they have no idea how hard it is to look for a decent job.
I love how Jollibee is spreading Filipino style fastfood everywhere in the world. Kudos Jollibee!
Jollibee, please start your restaurant here in Sweden as well! Introduce our good Jollibee all over Europe specially in Scandinavia. The McDonald's here in Sweden just started serving customers' orders to the table while in Philippines we had that system since decades, I mean the chain restaurants in the Philippines.
There is already in Italy
They have Jollibee in London now
@@JohanMatthewMRuiz oh wow, good for kabayans there.
@@hotmessmissy good for people there but i mean here in Sweden there is still none huhu✌️❤️
@@JohanMatthewMRuiz there is still none in Sweden where i live huhu ✌️❤️
you are supposed to mix the Halo Halo Sundae because Halo Halo literally means Mix Mix
I don't mix my Halo Halo. I love eating it that way
@@Filipinoenglish Then you're a monster
@@yowiewowie8388 HAHAHAHA
@@Filipinoenglish lol pano mo kakainin un?
Its literally ice cream with topings, if it was ice then i would mix it
I love Jollibee. Originally from Cali where I was introduced to Jollibee by my filipino friends years ago. The chicken is always juicy and super flavorful. I get the original, not the spicy. Tried the spicy and didn't care for it. The spaghetti is super good, too. I love the sweetness to it. Very different than italian spaghetti. For dessert I also get the peach mango pie 🤤
When I pressed the video the ad of McDonald’s showed up
LOL🤣
Mac float daw 29.00 lng sabi ng ad
But theres no ad in the beginning its only at the end
Hahaha realyyy
Jollibee:Daww look a video about me
*McDonald's Ad comes out of nowhere*
Ronald McfuckenDonald:Sup bitch
Jollibee: *PUTA!!!*
Mcdo still trying to fight back 😂🤣
Why can't the PH have the Jollibee Chicken Sandwich? 😭
It used to, probably around 7 years ago I think
me kinikilingan
if i remember correctly it was available for limited time only and it was endorsed by Sarah G way way back
Meron nun yan
Kasi d daw natin kakainin yung gulay. Hahahhaa chicken lng yung kakainin natin. Hahahahahhahah.
Wow that's nice comments :) thank you for promoting Filipino food that so nice of you .Jollibee is really indeed amazing .I'm from Philippines :) proud Filipino !
Fantastic work Ariel! This could be the video that changes everything!
Outside it is NYC but when you enter the Jollibee it feels like you're in the Philippines lol😅😅
Yeah I thought it is in the Philippines hahaha
We Filipinos are so proud watching foreign people's eating our famous fast food "Jollibee" and gets a really good comment about it 💕❤️
Its so good to see people eating classic Filipino fast food and liking it in other country... Definitely a great achievement for filipinos.
Thank you guys for featuring Jollibee, one of the Phillippines popular fast food! Children love to go there because of jollibee, my grand kids love to take pictures with jollibee! And they enjoy their sphagetti.
Nice song in the beginning thats very classic original pilipino music 👍👍 because of that i subscribed your channel😊😊
Folks in the south knows gravy and rice we grew up on it. Country or brown gravy and we even dip our chicken in gravy too
even the Jollibee looks extra good when you're in NYC
There’s a Jollibee here in Carson, California, where I always see families eating so happy together and kids love the spaghetti with chicken joy. On a Sunday it’s always a long line, full of people.
Actually, it also has a Chinese influence since the owners aren't really Filipinos they are originally from China but due to the hard life there. They migrated to the Philippines and tried their luck in business here. What's interesting is that the owner was able to graduate in a university with a bachelor's degree but put up a business instead of getting a job related to his course. So I think it's more of a mix of Chinese also. But the owner really did his research in knowing which food the people liked best and it did made a great imprint on Filipinos before other international brand came in like McDonald's when they started in 1981. If you ask each and every Filipinos most likely they would choose Jollibee because it has the taste of our culture..also the food pancit palabok is a dish influenced by Chinese.
As a Filipino, this make me reeeeaaalllyyyy proud!🥰
Someone should do a comparison between local Jolibees and those in other countries. It certainly looks like the Jolibees in other countries are way better.
stay tuned ;)
Not necessary I think?
Great to watch you featuring a bit of our culture. Thank you for that
Their chicken sandwich actually looks like what the ads portray wooww
thank you sir for trying our best and most famous fast food chain of the philippines “the Jollibee”. i love their food but the most i love is chickenjoy and burger and spaghetti and im happy that we have some branches here in california.
Why are there no chicken sandwiches in its place of origin😔
I See YOU meron dati, I was at gradeschool that time
@@bruceclbng Past is past, we have to move on...
Di bibilhin ng pinoy. Mahal
Phase out na...even the pastillas sundae which i love
MNC AND TNC
Filipino culture has some Southeast Asian and Indian influences. Then the Chinese and the Japanese traders came to add their food influences. The Spanish set up the trans-Pacific galleon trade for 200+ years that included many Nahuatl Mexican influences. Finally the Americans brought 20th-Century food preparation. It's great that you're bringing friends to try Jollibee.
Halo halo. You should mix it before you eat ... Halo halo.. In english mix mix....
Its a sundae not halo halo, look it doesn't contain ice on it its just a sundae with toppings
Halo halo more like variety, coz it has a lot of ingredients, not literal na halo halo.
so what?
Halo word in Philippines means "mix" , so when a filipino food have the word "halo halo" that means you should mix it. The flavor will mix in and compliment each flavor in the food. Just a suggestion, you can eat it the way you want to 😊
Dude try buying burgerstake gravy and mix it on Ur rice, damn it's heaven 😁
@@arcciimp I'm talking about specific gravy, the burger stake gravy not the chicken gravy. : )
Try to mix fries and Sunday the best food I ever tasted try mo
@@phantomplayzyt2774 mas masarap yung Sunday ng magandang supervisor ng jollibe malaman at masabaw 😂
Gravy is soup for me haha I pour everything in my rice
@@Genithineurope IKR
Omg i love the classic filipino background music on the montage!!
In the PH we have Jolly Yum Burger instead of the Chicken Sandwich
Wait what? 3 years ago? So the news about the “opening” at Times Square is not the first time? “Re-opening” maybe?
Haha yea this was the first flagship store but they built an even bigger one right in Times Square this time
Boogie Bob has done a review on the just opened one in Times Square
i am filipino but it's my first time to hear that song lmfao...
Same
You got me at the entrance song...that's like 70s or early 80s song....wow. i'm not even born that time yet. by the way, you have to mix the halo-halo before eating them.
I'm Filipino and I love love love their food, my fav is the palabok, buko pandan, and halo-halo
DerpyToes _ 24 okay???? Di mo naman kaylangan sabihin na pinoy ka llol
Omg I'm so triggered lol
@@jae_. atsaka hindi ko natandaan nag comment dito lol
I think that Chicken Sandwich is exclusive only to USA or NY...I don't see that in the Menu here in the PH
Because that's American food I keep seeing that here in every restaurant like Jack in the box, Burger King and etc.
Maybe you should mix the halo-halo sundae..😉
it's literally called "mix-mix"
It's a direct translation lol
nopeeee
Uhmmm I attempted to... But there's a reason why Jollibee called it Halo-Halo "Sundae" and not just Halo-Halo 😂
"Halo-halo" means "all mixed up"
That's not the right ice cream it should use because Filipino knows what kind an ice it uses.
Does jolibee in NYC also.serves YumBurgers? Because here in the Philippines Jolibee serves Yumburgers(basically beef burgers)
I love jolibee, been to that Manhattan location twice already, I like you're live vids on fb
Manny! Thanks for following me on TH-cam too! Yea, I'm addicted to that chicken sandwich
Wow. I agree the interior is so great.
Oh men proud Filipino here and I really 💙😍💙 Jollibee actually I almost grow up in their eating there delightful super yummy meals from breakfast, lunch snack & dinner when I was a kid and until now w/my💙ones.. my god I reminisce the moments.. #JustSharingMyJolliestDaysWithJollibee💙
Ps: Nice choice of music
Wow! I did not know that they have JOLIBEE right in Times Square! The rent must be really expensive to set up a fast food chain there. We finally have one here in Toronto too but unfortunately it is not located downtown, its in the suburbs of Scarborough. You guys ordered so much.. lol..
Do we have Chicken Sandwich here in Jollibee Philippines?....
Sheree Mi Amour dati meron pero limited time lng....
Its Yum Jollibee Chicken. Meron yan sa Ph
Great Job covering Jollibee! You guys should come and visit Urban Jungle Manila, specifically Binondo and try the Filipino + Chinese dishes.
what the heck why is the peach mango pie in nyc bigger than the one here in ph
Neneyuu american size
Yeah..same with the chicken sandwich.
Whoah I didn’t know there was one in Manhattan? I was just there last month, too! I remember there is one in Queens and that’s the one I’ve been to yrs ago. Now I gotta go to this one next time I go to NYC!
It has the name halo-halo(Mix-Mix)for a reason
Before you eat halo halo u need to mix all ingredients before eat
Hahahaha exactly
Halo halo no mi
@@angpangamo9673 I'd eat that devil fruit xD
it's not mix-mix
The reason why Jolibee's logo looks cute and adorable, is b'coz jolibee was intended mainly for kids to always make them happy.
that intro music got me. subscribed!
can't beat old school Filipino ballads
those were the days, man.
@Jalan Cordero 'Sorry Na, Pwede Ba?' by Rey Valera. Title literally means 'I'm sorry, please?'
Wow I did'nt expect to see Yusuf in your video. Great to see you guys eating Jollibee.
*Time* *Square* *Be* *Like*
Wtf Jollibee, why did you hit me?!?!?!
When did Jollibee opened in that area?
The 3 mix of culture you have mentioned is so on point. Although, Filipino culture is fundamentally Hispanic-Asian with a touch of Americanization.
You can see this even in architecture, tradition, arts, literature, music, and as mentioned, culinary arts.
I was surprised you have noticed that because some people regard The Philippines as not asian enough or not hispanic enough, hence the confusion.
Very good video! Cheers from The Philippines.
Nope you guys ain’t hispanic in the slightest because 1. Filipino culture is still dominantly Asian 2. You guys don’t speak Spanish and number 3. The majority of the population in the Philippines aren’t mixed and don’t carry any Spanish ancestry. * claiming that Filipinos are "Hispanic" because of religion, Spanish loanwords and surnames is like claiming that Malaysians are Arabs… because they're mostly Muslim, with Islamic names and surnames and their language had also adopted a lot of Arabic loanwords.
These kinds of arguments just don't make any sense at all.
@@racooncity3325 @Racoon City You clearly don't know much about Philippine pre-colonial, colonial, and post-colonial history and heritage don't you? Moreso about the more than 400 years history of Filipino-Spanish language. As well as the relativity of the definition of the term "hispanic" as applied by the Latin Union and other statistics agencies. I bet not even customs, traditions, arts, music, literature and the distinct arquitectura mestiza.
All your arguments, I assume were probably based solely on stereotypical connotations of what Filipinos are and what their culture is.
You even put words into my mouth and made assumptions on the rationale of my argument not to mention your usage of strawman fallacy.
Now on your claim:
1. An oversimplification. Hispanic culture here is not deemed foreign by Filipinos themselves, by that, I mean they practice such without even knowing it's from Spain. From Misa de Gallo, siesta, fiestas, day of the dead, aguinaldo, semana santa, expressions or even the cuisine and pastries. Not even the architecture as mentioned. A typical contemporary Filipino (subject to certain exceptions) will feel both comfortable with both southeast asian cultures and hispanic american nations. But on my experience, a catholic Filipino will have a hard time relating to the likes of Thais, not their architecture which we find exotic and their buddhist customs and traditions. To summarize, please research and study more. We share the same cultural pattern with Mexico where they merge pre-colonial and colonial culture together. Our Fiestas here are usually a merger of both indigenous and spanish culture which makes it uniquely Filipino. It is hispano-asiatico.
2. Again, debatable and oversimplified. I am basing my definition of the term "Hispanic" on the now defunct Latin Union's standards. If you studied more, you'll realize that Spanish language was taught and stopped here only in 1987. It's decline began in the early 1902 to 1945 when the US colonized the nation and banned the usage of Spanish with the goal of replacing it with english. According to statistics back then by the US soldiers, 70% of Filipinos speak Spanish and growing. It is the language of business, law, and recreation. The Spanish language severly dwindled during the occupation and massacre by Japan in 1945. Being said. In 1988, there were only 1.8 million Spanish speakers in The Philippines but the numbers are growing.
3. Again, seriously? The term Hispanic is a very relative term. The Latin Union standards, Hispanic african nations, and indigenous hispanic american communities would disagree with you. The Philippines don't consider race in their statistics. But I believe (despite the lack of stats) we are predominantly austronesian. With significant numbers of mestizo de sangley, mestizo de españa, negritos and tornatrás.
I could continue but my argument would be a thesis-long. Trust me, you don't know much about our history and culture than you think despite your pedantic attitude. And I understand that your sentiments may come from Filipinos who love kissing Spain's ass and using the same illogical oversimplifications like what you used to rebut just to boost their pathetic ego.
@@hijodelsoldeoriente You’re wring
When the Philippines had a population of just a little over four million and a half (4,500,000 persons), Agustín de la Cavada y Méndez de Vigo pointed out that those who spoke Spanish did not exceed 2.8% of the cited population and by the early 1900s it was less than 10% of the population, Spanish was never widespread spoken. The Spanish language itself was never sufficiently established as a lingua franca. This was because:
- It was limited to the educated minority in the Philippines, and generally not taught to the masses
- Many Hispanophile loyalists were wiped out in the Philippine American war; decimating the already low number of speakers
- American occupation for the first 50 years of the 20th century saw a great expansion of the Philippine Public School system, thanks to the efforts of the US Military, and a group of colonisers called the Thomasites. The revamped system was now anchored in English, and taught not just students, but natives who became teachers
Latin American colonies were often "settler" colonies to where spaniards migrated (think USA, Canada, Australia-style colonies, made up mostly of migrants who didn't originate from there).
Philippines was an "extractive" colony, there for trade. More like the African colonies or the British in India. Spaniards didn't migrate there in large numbers, they traded and opened plantations.
As a general rule, when I'm teaching colonial history, I explain that these are the two main types of colonies to the kids. It's fairly easy to understand and is broadly accurate, though on a micro level it's always more complicated than that.
@@hijodelsoldeoriente The philippines is a homogenous country . The majority of the people are from Austronesian and Chinese stock. Filipinos with Spanish ancestry are a minority and at 0.5-1%.
@@hijodelsoldeoriente Despite the Spanish's long period of rule there were tons of foreign intervention and eventually, the United States. In fact, today's Philippines honestly has more similarity to the South East Asia and the U.S than Spain at this point. But Spain at that point in time very much had ultimately sovereignty over the Philippines - the Philippines' name refers to King Philip. Geographically, though it still very much is part of Asia. So I'm still partially confused by your question - imperialism doesn't automatically completely changing the culture and ethnic makeup, but rather utilizing the place for resources - which is still exactly what happened. The Philippines was very much a Spanish colony, but as far as what we consider to be "Latin" country that doesn't apply.
Again, Consider it like Britain's relationship to India. There are just numerous bubbles of resistance and self-preservation that prevented a complete takeover, but the influence still clearly remains in both respective cultures. But that wouldn't make India a legitimate British state, would it? Also consider modern day colonies, like the Virgin Islands. They have a weird relationship when it comes to their rights as to who "owns" them, like when it comes to voting in elections, etc, but they aren't inherently recognized as say, another state for the United States.
Filipinos very much identify distinctly as Asian . Some minority people have Spanish blood, but the populations carrying indigenous or other Asian ancestries still far outweigh that by atleast 95%. A lot of nomenclature may have Spanish to it; Tagalog, the most common Filipino language is distinctive of this, but this is the only dialect to have these traces. Knowing Spanish is definitely not going to help you at all if you seek to learn Filipino. Tons of other dialects are inherently unique in structure and are still Malay-inspired
Nice research/choice of song! I immediately subscribe!!! ❤️❤️
Ohh and Try putting French Fries in a CheeseBurger it's really good
Damn, i do that to and it feels like it's the best thing.i ever tasted.hahaha
dipping the the fries in sundae is great too
@@eefinrs_2066 I did fries in chocolate but i did'nt like it,maybe ice cream will work.
Usually you mix all the toppings together on the halo-halo
Halo-halo actually means "mix-mix" in Filipino so before you eat the halo-halo you mix everything first
How is 8th ave and 40th st the center of times square
Now there is another in Times Square
Im pretty sure that the people are watching this is mostly Filipinos👀
Musta brad👊
AnuGinagawaMu (👁w👁)
Ginagamue?! Hahahahaha
Valerie T_T magstastalk sayu
yata pero hindi lahat-we're regular schmegular anglosajones & WE NEED THAT CHIKKENJOY NOWW!!!
Natatakam
Ayos man tol ah
Before you eat halo-halo you have to mix it first....thanks for promoting our food in Phil.👍✌️✌️
Halo halo means mix mix..mix all the ingredients and eat it..thats how it goes
Assortment **
Saba
It's assorted
@@jeongin006 variety/assorted engredients.
PROUD FILIPINO!!! WE HOPE TO HAVE IT HERE IN GERMANY!!!
The intro music omg . 😍
Playing a Manila Classic song and promoting Jollibee. I love you already.
Subscribed!
You missed the chicken joy bro!
this channel deserves a million followers man!!!! good content!
chinese, japanese, malay Polynesian cultures.
multi cultural a very diverse country
Jollibee mascot is the most adorable mascot you'll ever see. And they are good dancers too! They know how to entertain customers 😊
There's rice?! :O what the world. I wanna eat there lol
Lol you'll die of deliciousness there tbh 😌😌
ofc! it's asia so rice lol
Well said! I appreciate how you guys love Jollibee.
Saying greetings from Ph.
1:25 look at the wall- *bend your knees* insert lenny face
Before way back in the 90's I ate mango pie in jollibee here in the Philippines it waz just the same size as ur mango pie there bro, but now it's just half of that size... there's some sort cost cutting here so sad...
the background music tho. 😂
01:07
I'm very impressed of how he knows very well of our mixed Filipino culture. Bravo to him! 🙂👍
2:37 JESSICA SOHO SPOTTED AT JOLLIBEE NYC!! 🇵🇭🤣
Eh. Layo bro
@@死辜 😂😂😂
I was drinking milk
what is the title of the into music and who sings it in the intro song please reply please
Sorry Na, Pwede ba by Rey Valera
Sorry Na Pwede ba. By Rey Valera
What a disappointment when they go to the Philippines, eat on a Jollibee anywhere else and realize the big difference of JB NY and JB PH.
I love how you put Filipino song in the background 💕
jollibee now is very famous proud filipino🇵🇭❤️❤️i want to hug you this vlogger❤️❤️
Do they have Palabok there?
Why put gravy on the rice?
It should be with the chicken.
We only put gravy on KFC chicken with rice. Hahaha
you miss the infamous Coke Float.. you must try it. but idk if that thing is available in NY.
Wala namang chicken samdwich samin? 😭
Madaya nga eh
It's an American food hello
@@loyddaez2146 kaya nga
I appreciate the effort of this vlogger,, thanks bro
Actually filipino has a mix of chinese and japanese culture i think
CHINESE, MALAY, AMERICAN, LATIN, SPANISH, Polynesian...... NO REALLY JAPANESE CULTURE.....
Every country
The intro music tho, So classic dude appreciated
my pleasure! Love old school filipino ballads!
You should've mixed the Halo-halo before eating it.
it's not halo-halo, it's sundae halo-halo. Parang flavoring lang sa sundae.
@@trydrinkpineapplejuice5911 and?
I always eat at jollibee every week but seeing this vlog makes me hungry
halo-halo means mix-mix. u should mix it first before eating it.
It is a sundae. Not the normal halo-halo lol. So you eat it anyway you want.
I can't wait to open a jollibee store also here in Parish France I Love jollibee I'm big fanatic of jollibee since I'm a kid until now I missed it so much the chicken joy And the spaghetti 👍👌😋😋😋😍♥️
They eat halo - halo incorrectly .
But still they satisfied for the taste without mixing it 😱
Wow! Im glad you guys like Filipino food. You should try Adobo and Lumpia.
Lumpia!!!!!!