It's also got to do with how hilly and bumpy Sydney's topography is near the coast. The roads have to follow the terrain. Melbourne for example is a lot more grid like because it was built on a flat plain.
I love the idea of some eshay trying to roll this guy and him just having no clue what's happening "Oi nice shoes bruv, reckon they'd look better on my feet though ay"
Built the houses first, then thought about the road second. Yep, you got it in one. That's actually exactly what happened. Brisbane is the same - it has a long street called Creek Street. Why? Well, it used to be a creek. The street runs exactly where the creek used to be.
Love living in Australia -- Brisbane here --- I wasn't impressed with Sydney much -- too big, too expensive, too crowded. People in Australia are so friendly --- even to American accents lol. Americans don't have a very good reputation on the whole, just glad they seem to go on a case by case basis Will be a citizen soon so looking forward to that :)
@@Glenn-ei3xp What attitude? I am just not a big city girl thats all ---- I prefer smaller towns. Just so you know, I have never once been ill-=treated because I am American - not once in 10 years. I find people here to be a lot more tolerant and welcoming than many Americans atm ~
Krispy 503 i recommend Brisbane because it’s close to the Gold Coast with theme parks and also the Sunshine Coast with Noosa and beautiful beaches and wildlife. And an hour or two flight away is Sydney if and Canberra if you want to see the capital and the city.
@@krispy503 it depends on what you like If it's food go to Melbourne If it's beautiful beaches, theme parks and recreation go to Brisbane / gold cost ( say hi as your going through as I work in the airport) If you want bad road and rude people go to Sydney If you want worse roads and 10x worse driver Melbourne (Victoria)
There is a lot more to Australia that the East coast, i'm from Alice Springs , smack dab in the middle , it is well worth the time ,spent my life as a long haul driver, been all over this great land of ours but love the desert , A city anywhere is a city , nice places to visit ,
Sydney's roads are a result of being the first colony in Australia, so they were not planned out like in most cities. That is why the roads are confusing in Sydney. Not like Melbourne, we planned ours😜
When the English arrived in Australia, Sydney was where they first settled. It was just a settlement with convicts from England. So there wasn't really any planning of roads. It was just people living and building what they could, then as more and more convicts and eventually free settlers arrived from England, Sydney grew with no real planning. Just adding streets here and there when ever it was needed. That's why to this day, the closer U get to downtown, the more chaotic the roads are. Theres no gridded streets. Streets end suddenly or cut across other streets diagonally in random places. Other major cities in Australia were more planned which is why when U look at maps of Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth, the streets are gridded.
Melbourne owes it all to the wise men from Sydney who the earlier days thought it was just going to be a small cattle town and made the streets wide enough to turn a big horse drawn wagon around in one go.
Canberra was actually an afterthought as it's made based on parliament house. The first parliament building was in Melbourne, but Sydney thought it should be there instead - I don't remember why - but because of that feud, we're just like: Let's put parliament in the middle BAM, ACT.
As an Aussie who has lived in Sydney for over fifty years, I found your appraisal very fair. I felt you was VERY kind in describing our drivers though. And yes, we tend to build housing first and think about infrastructure later - that's what we mean by ''She'll Be Right, Mate'' or ''No Wuckas''.
Sydney just blew up from a penal colony and then all the older nicer looking buildings and houses were torn down to satisfy real estate czars. I'm from Sydney but I like Melbourne better.
Mate what happened a lot in the older cities in Australia is that they started out as separate townships that grew until they collided. I live in Newcastle, New South Wales it is very much a case in point. Newcastle was settled by us white people because of coal. Initially the coal was mined by convicts but later by free miners. They would find coal and establish a coal mine. A township would grow around the mine. Over the years the townships expanded until the space between them was gone. Each township became a municipality with its own council. It was not until 1938 that all the municipalities were amalgamated to form The City of Greater Newcastle. There are a number of long roads that change their name as you drive from one of the old municipalities into the next.
If you only went to Sydney...you didn't experience Australia...you experienced Sydney. Down here in Victoria our housing prices are much lower, different states, different rates. But you really need to tour the entire country before opining about it. Oh and Pavlova...is meringue.
This was a great review actually. I find it funny that he found the people in Sydney friendly- they're actually known to not be as friendly as other states in NSW. I've experienced this personally. Also shocked that he thought the City people in Sydney were laid back- No hate on NSW- but come up north and you'll see laid back haha
Lol they're a big spider that like to hide from the rain in cars and they pop out of nowhere all of a sudden and run around the car like crazy. It probably went up his pants and he was trying to get it out. They have big fangs lol.
They let you in and out when driving in Sydney. I find that to be unique to Sydney. Good luck with that in Adelaide. They’d rather cause a 10 car pile up than let you in
1 pavlova ( pav) is from new Zealand ( well it's really from England but I've never been there so... 2 meat pies in New Zealand are better, I've been flat out like a lizard drinking to find a good pie in Australia 3 your 100% right about Tim tams, But they are as good as slims or chocolate fish
0:26 That is thanks to the Sentient Potato known as John Howard introducing negative gearing (look it up I cbf explaining it) far too much of our economy is now tied into housing to the point where should the housing market collapse the recession we'd sink into would be worse than the great depression 0:43 Well yeah it was a colonial city that formed mostly organically rather than preplanned 0:55 Did you mean the other side of the road we are driving on what is the correct side of the road for us 2:05 God Damn if you think Sydney is laidback you need to see the rest of the state as we think they are all up tight in Sydney
This is from the ABC What is negative gearing? Negative gearing has been available in Australia for much of the last century, but only widely used by property investors since the 1980s. It enables investors to deduct property expenses from their taxable income where they add up to more than is earned from rent.Dec 11, 2018 Negative gearing changes 'could tip Australia into recession ... www.abc.net.au › news › housing-industry-insiders-issue-negative-ge... So yet again another know all knows little
@@paulclarke4571 Yes making it a direct benefit for people who own multiple houses creating an artificial scarcity of houses and an increase in empty properties and only a few houses for sale making them far more valuable than they are worth pouring more money into housing which simply stagnates rather than stimulate the economy so sure if you own 4+ properties Negative Gearing is great for you but most Australian don't own multiple properties and a majority of my generation will never be able to afford a property so long as negative gearing is in place So do not throw some ABC news article at me warning how bad it would be when the person saying that (John Symond) directly benefits from it as the Chairman of a Home Loan company
If you have worked hard and put away enough money to buy an investment property then negative gearing helps you keep it. Despite what you might think, renting domestically is a real gamble. Some tenants are great and some will squeeze the life out of you and then do a moonlight fling. After expenses like landlord insurance (insanely expensive) there's not much profit in it apart from the capital gain on the property itself, which is taxed up sale anyway. I have one investment property which I worked hard for (two jobs). I view it this way. The investment property will finance part of my retirement...thereby negating the need for me to access the pension so that money can go to someone that needs it. I think there should be a cap on negative gearing once someone owns four properties but in many ways these mum and dad investors are keeping the stock of housing up (shielding taxpayers from the expense of state housing).
@@tripsadelica I'm not really against one investment property more how the system is abused when people own multiple investment properties if there was a cap at two properties I'd like to say we'd see some benefit but I simply don't know
Cap overseas investment. Property can and is bought online by Chinese investors. All those high rise towers in the city are left empty, not even rented out.
Sydney traffic's okay at 6 am and yes we have the best Thai food in the world because we have the best Thai chefs and the best produce. And yes I've been to Thailand many times.
Pavlova is is found throughout the world. The roads and streets are also this way throughout most of Europe and the U.K as well as Australia. Thai food is readily available in many countries. The car related words are the same in the U.K.
I am reliably informed that when Pavlova came from Europe on her tour many years ago, her first concert stops were in Perth Western Australia. Then to the eastern states. By the time she got to NZ (later) a beautiful dish for Pavlova had been invented at her hotel in Perth by an admiring chef made from egg whites sugar and fruit and had been fully acclaimed long before she left for the eastern states and much later for NZ...sorry no second or third prizes.
@@youngsavagefury7138 there's good parts of every state, in NSW visit the north coast, In Victoria visit Melbourne and the Great Ocean Road, QLD The gold coast, NT Kakadu
@@sacrament182 So Sydney isn’t an accurate measure of being in Australia because it’s for tourists yet you just listed touristy places in other states 🙄
yeh, sydney is horrible to drive through, and more expensive than the other cities, they have a pretty good public transport system though, come to Brisbane someday
At first I thought you were talking rubbish. However, a little way into the video I thought you were summing things up as they are here. Thanks for your thoughts.
Sydney roads are probably the worst of any city in Australia, haha. Melbourne roads are not bad but the cities population is growing faster than they can keep up with building new infrastructure. Everywhere else the roads are pretty cruisy. Driving in the country in Australia is the most relaxing thing ever.
it is nice to hear a "foreigners" view Australia , i think Aussies see American's, Canadians, great Britian's as brothers in a shrinking civilised world (sadly)
Back in the day young fella we use to ride our horse with our left and fight with swords with our right, so you can imagine riding your horse down the road on right hand side of the street and dueling with someone on a horse coming the other way
True and then Napoleon changed it for Europeans while the Americans changed because they drove so many horse driven carts and the driver mounted on the left and passed traffic on the right. Funny how Americans are so perplexed at the differences of culture not understanding so much history and how they are often the odd ones out. Eg the Imperial system is only used in three countries today.
This man detailed the aspects of Australia very well in 4 minutes. You can tell he truly understands.
He’s right about the roads in Sydney haha
Sydney's roads are narrow and weird because of how Sydney was set up without any planning during the colonial era.
Yet they somehow managed to replicate that poor planning for the next 200 years. :)
I like Sydney. It has character. Other cities might be easier to get around, but they're all kind of soulless. Sydney has spunk. :D
It's also got to do with how hilly and bumpy Sydney's topography is near the coast. The roads have to follow the terrain.
Melbourne for example is a lot more grid like because it was built on a flat plain.
@@pieman2906 Melbourne was built by experts from Sydney.
How do you plan for a city of 5 million 240 years ago?
I love the idea of some eshay trying to roll this guy and him just having no clue what's happening
"Oi nice shoes bruv, reckon they'd look better on my feet though ay"
🤣
Not really
Lmaoooo him seeing a group of eshays for the first time would be the funniest
LOL
That was a very charming review of Australia .. and I'm glad everyone was kind and gracious to you!
I was in Sydney and Brisbane ported on the USS WASP as a Marine and they were the two best weekends of my life so far.
You are the first person I have seen to review Australia and be so accurate. Your personality would have fit in very well. You are most welcome back..
House prices here are INSANE, you got that right.
you're dreaming to get a house for 1 million in a good location
Not really
Have a 3.6 million house and I’m 28 worked very hard and it has payed off
Henry Tyrrell awesome congrats
If you are a house owner prices and price increases are great.
What an impressive young man, good take on Oz, come back soon.
Built the houses first, then thought about the road second. Yep, you got it in one. That's actually exactly what happened. Brisbane is the same - it has a long street called Creek Street. Why? Well, it used to be a creek. The street runs exactly where the creek used to be.
Love living in Australia -- Brisbane here --- I wasn't impressed with Sydney much -- too big, too expensive, too crowded. People in Australia are so friendly --- even to American accents lol. Americans don't have a very good reputation on the whole, just glad they seem to go on a case by case basis Will be a citizen soon so looking forward to that :)
Brisbane is much better than Sydney honestly. A much more beautiful place
There are other states besides the east coast Tassie is beautiful so is SA and WA
Come back to the Northern Territory and the Kimberleys in our winter. It's stunning. High praise as I live in Brisbane.
Dee Pryor find Sydney the friendliest of all. Very multicultural, very open. Maybe it was your attitude ?
@@Glenn-ei3xp What attitude? I am just not a big city girl thats all ---- I prefer smaller towns. Just so you know, I have never once been ill-=treated because I am American - not once in 10 years. I find people here to be a lot more tolerant and welcoming than many Americans atm ~
Shouldn't really compare Australia from Sydney.
Ikr
Definitely
what city should they do? Ive always wondered that. I want to go over there. Where do you recommend?
Krispy 503 i recommend Brisbane because it’s close to the Gold Coast with theme parks and also the Sunshine Coast with Noosa and beautiful beaches and wildlife. And an hour or two flight away is Sydney if and Canberra if you want to see the capital and the city.
@@krispy503 it depends on what you like
If it's food go to Melbourne
If it's beautiful beaches, theme parks and recreation go to Brisbane / gold cost ( say hi as your going through as I work in the airport)
If you want bad road and rude people go to Sydney
If you want worse roads and 10x worse driver Melbourne (Victoria)
Well spoken. Very nice. Glad you loved our country.
Wow, he seems like a really nice young man
Yeah very respectable and seemed quite intelligent
I would argue that we’re only patriotic on Australia Day. Other than that, Footy takes all the Australian energy.
CARN DA PIES
No murders every 18 seconds
This man likes Tim Tams? He's alright in my book.
ill admit when he said coffs harbour, I jumped in joy, its always great to hear peoples opinions on my home town.
I LOVE that place! Went back to visit shortly after my mission.
he did make it sound like it's an outer suburb of Sydney though - not 8 hours by car
There is a lot more to Australia that the East coast, i'm from Alice Springs , smack dab in the middle , it is well worth the time ,spent my life as a long haul driver, been all over this great land of ours but love the desert , A city anywhere is a city , nice places to visit ,
I've been dying to travel the northern territory but I can't find a group of friends to travel with me! :( I am too scared to travel alone
Sydney's roads are a result of being the first colony in Australia, so they were not planned out like in most cities. That is why the roads are confusing in Sydney. Not like Melbourne, we planned ours😜
When the English arrived in Australia, Sydney was where they first settled. It was just a settlement with convicts from England. So there wasn't really any planning of roads. It was just people living and building what they could, then as more and more convicts and eventually free settlers arrived from England, Sydney grew with no real planning. Just adding streets here and there when ever it was needed.
That's why to this day, the closer U get to downtown, the more chaotic the roads are. Theres no gridded streets. Streets end suddenly or cut across other streets diagonally in random places.
Other major cities in Australia were more planned which is why when U look at maps of Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth, the streets are gridded.
Another reason for the layout of the streets/roads is that a lot of Sydney is built on hills and ridges especially the north side of the harbour .
Canberra is the only place that was planned properly. The rest of Sydney, your right, built buildings first and realise we need roads.
Adelaide is a planned city as well.
ADELAIDE
Melbourne owes it all to the wise men from Sydney who the earlier days thought it was just going to be a small cattle town and made the streets wide enough to turn a big horse drawn wagon around in one go.
Melbourne kinda was too. A lot of it is grid like, the older parts at least.
Canberra was actually an afterthought as it's made based on parliament house. The first parliament building was in Melbourne, but Sydney thought it should be there instead - I don't remember why - but because of that feud, we're just like: Let's put parliament in the middle BAM, ACT.
As an Aussie who has lived in Sydney for over fifty years, I found your appraisal very fair. I felt you was VERY kind in describing our drivers though. And yes, we tend to build housing first and think about infrastructure later - that's what we mean by ''She'll Be Right, Mate'' or ''No Wuckas''.
Sydney was just built; no thought and i love it.
@Nati man yeah i was born here...
Sydney just blew up from a penal colony and then all the older nicer looking buildings and houses were torn down to satisfy real estate czars. I'm from Sydney but I like Melbourne better.
2:47 not used to having that? The US has 4th July. so... surely.
Mate what happened a lot in the older cities in Australia is that they started out as separate townships that grew until they collided. I live in Newcastle, New South Wales it is very much a case in point. Newcastle was settled by us white people because of coal. Initially the coal was mined by convicts but later by free miners. They would find coal and establish a coal mine. A township would grow around the mine. Over the years the townships expanded until the space between them was gone. Each township became a municipality with its own council. It was not until 1938 that all the municipalities were amalgamated to form The City of Greater Newcastle. There are a number of long roads that change their name as you drive from one of the old municipalities into the next.
This bloke is very switched on and observant, thanks for the very complimentary review of the country. Would buy you a beer anytime mate cheers.
Funny’ bonnet, boot & Tea’ (for a meal) are ALL English expressions. Glad to see you enjoyed you visit. NSW in Oz
Yeah Sydney wasn’t really planned hahaha. It was kind just built out from the Harbour randomly 😂
If you only went to Sydney...you didn't experience Australia...you experienced Sydney. Down here in Victoria our housing prices are much lower, different states, different rates. But you really need to tour the entire country before opining about it. Oh and Pavlova...is meringue.
I’m glad you liked Coffs Harbour ..it is beautiful 🌴
Inner city areas were made for horses and carts, so the roads are old cart tracks, basically.
I've been to Sydney and I know the experience of the roads and narrow come to Perth the roads are wider and the house is a cheaper
Visit Brisbane one day. Sydney is beautiful, Brisbane is friendlier imo :-) I have family in both places.
I agree
Nice shout out to Coffs Harbour. Very close to where I am 😃
Im from Coffs Harbour. Pretty small place surprised you came here.
Loved it too!
Relatively accurate, would I agree, uuhh, yeah nah nah yeah nah yeah. 😅😅
Bit surprised he didn’t go any further into our slang.
"Teatime". We got it from the British. You can blame them.
This was a great review actually. I find it funny that he found the people in Sydney friendly- they're actually known to not be as friendly as other states in NSW. I've experienced this personally. Also shocked that he thought the City people in Sydney were laid back- No hate on NSW- but come up north and you'll see laid back haha
My oldest son lives in Melbourne I went to visit him I had a wonderful time
He probably had a huntsman on his leg!
Lol they're a big spider that like to hide from the rain in cars and they pop out of nowhere all of a sudden and run around the car like crazy. It probably went up his pants and he was trying to get it out. They have big fangs lol.
Huntsperson
@@mollymuch2808 so whattdyuh call an ottoman?
As an Australian I can tell you now we have road rage, all of us. We ain't calm 🤣
Thanks mate 😊😀
Honest and unbiased view of Australia - I can affirm 👍🏽
What a beautiful young man he is going places. Best of luck from Australia 😊
They let you in and out when driving in Sydney. I find that to be unique to Sydney. Good luck with that in Adelaide. They’d rather cause a 10 car pile up than let you in
I live in Coffs Harbour it’s beautiful
Yep same
Are there Asians in Coffs Harbour by any chance through your observations?
Penrith by the sea ;)
1 pavlova ( pav) is from new Zealand ( well it's really from England but I've never been there so...
2 meat pies in New Zealand are better, I've been flat out like a lizard drinking to find a good pie in Australia
3 your 100% right about Tim tams,
But they are as good as slims or chocolate fish
He sounds like he picked up a bit of an accent.
So amazing sharing. Keep going on
I love the way he speaks smiling, it's so cute 😂
How ya go'n?
0:26
That is thanks to the Sentient Potato known as John Howard introducing negative gearing (look it up I cbf explaining it) far too much of our economy is now tied into housing to the point where should the housing market collapse the recession we'd sink into would be worse than the great depression
0:43
Well yeah it was a colonial city that formed mostly organically rather than preplanned
0:55
Did you mean the other side of the road we are driving on what is the correct side of the road for us
2:05
God Damn if you think Sydney is laidback you need to see the rest of the state as we think they are all up tight in Sydney
This is from the ABC
What is negative gearing? Negative gearing has been available in Australia for much of the last century, but only widely used by property investors since the 1980s. It enables investors to deduct property expenses from their taxable income where they add up to more than is earned from rent.Dec 11, 2018
Negative gearing changes 'could tip Australia into recession ...
www.abc.net.au › news › housing-industry-insiders-issue-negative-ge...
So yet again another know all knows little
@@paulclarke4571
Yes making it a direct benefit for people who own multiple houses creating an artificial scarcity of houses and an increase in empty properties and only a few houses for sale making them far more valuable than they are worth pouring more money into housing which simply stagnates rather than stimulate the economy so sure if you own 4+ properties Negative Gearing is great for you but most Australian don't own multiple properties and a majority of my generation will never be able to afford a property so long as negative gearing is in place
So do not throw some ABC news article at me warning how bad it would be when the person saying that (John Symond) directly benefits from it as the Chairman of a Home Loan company
If you have worked hard and put away enough money to buy an investment property then negative gearing helps you keep it. Despite what you might think, renting domestically is a real gamble. Some tenants are great and some will squeeze the life out of you and then do a moonlight fling. After expenses like landlord insurance (insanely expensive) there's not much profit in it apart from the capital gain on the property itself, which is taxed up sale anyway.
I have one investment property which I worked hard for (two jobs). I view it this way. The investment property will finance part of my retirement...thereby negating the need for me to access the pension so that money can go to someone that needs it. I think there should be a cap on negative gearing once someone owns four properties but in many ways these mum and dad investors are keeping the stock of housing up (shielding taxpayers from the expense of state housing).
@@tripsadelica
I'm not really against one investment property more how the system is abused when people own multiple investment properties if there was a cap at two properties I'd like to say we'd see some benefit but I simply don't know
Cap overseas investment. Property can and is bought online by Chinese investors. All those high rise towers in the city are left empty, not even rented out.
She'll be Right.
Sydney traffic's okay at 6 am and yes we have the best Thai food in the world because we have the best Thai chefs and the best produce. And yes I've been to Thailand many times.
What a gentleman.
i am Aussie living in Sydney and I say Dinner, if someone wants a cup of tea i will call that tea. Yes more in the country they call dinner tea.
Pavlova is is found throughout the world. The roads and streets are also this way throughout most of Europe and the U.K as well as Australia. Thai food is readily available in many countries. The car related words are the same in the U.K.
I am reliably informed that when Pavlova came from Europe on her tour many years ago, her first concert stops were in Perth Western Australia. Then to the eastern states. By the time she got to NZ (later) a beautiful dish for Pavlova had been invented at her hotel in Perth by an admiring chef made from egg whites sugar and fruit and had been fully acclaimed long before she left for the eastern states and much later for NZ...sorry no second or third prizes.
Thanks for the kind review.
Thank you
Loved the video.
With your great attitude mate the US and AUS will be mates forever👍
Sydney roads are nuts.
Your talking about Aussie food!, it sure is the best
I thought you had been to Australia. Sydney is not a good representation of Australia, it's for tourists.
Well, over 5 million people live there
@@shaungordon9737 yeah and there are millions of people living elsewhere in Australia
What areas are best in Australia?
@@youngsavagefury7138 there's good parts of every state, in NSW visit the north coast, In Victoria visit Melbourne and the Great Ocean Road, QLD The gold coast, NT Kakadu
@@sacrament182 So Sydney isn’t an accurate measure of being in Australia because it’s for tourists yet you just listed touristy places in other states 🙄
this guy talking bout tim tams on spirit level which none can comprehend
Sweet. Thanks!
been here for 9 years, love it.
How did you become a citizen?
Good man, well said mate
Awww thx America guy. We are nice people.
What a lovely young guy. I'm glad he managed to leave Sydney and the th e true Australia.
Coffs harbour my home town
👍 Top interview
yeh, sydney is horrible to drive through, and more expensive than the other cities, they have a pretty good public transport system though, come to Brisbane someday
At first I thought you were talking rubbish. However, a little way into the video I thought you were summing things up as they are here. Thanks for your thoughts.
Sydney roads are probably the worst of any city in Australia, haha. Melbourne roads are not bad but the cities population is growing faster than they can keep up with building new infrastructure. Everywhere else the roads are pretty cruisy. Driving in the country in Australia is the most relaxing thing ever.
Note to all Americans do a crash course on Australian animals and slang
Greetings from Kenya Nairobi city and AM watching from Santa Monica's California USA # Habari yako kaka?
Lived in Coffs Harbour for 35 yrs and even though it is lovely I was glad to leave....
'She'll be right mate. Have another schooner. She'll be right.'😎
Glad you enjoyed your stay mate :-)
Pavlova is made with egg-whites.
It's not unusual for people to ride around with there feet out the window. We are a pretty laid back lot mate.
it is nice to hear a "foreigners" view Australia , i think Aussies see American's, Canadians, great Britian's as brothers in a shrinking civilised world (sadly)
Sydney is not the only place in Australia and the highest crime rate in aus is in Sydney
Jellyfish tentacles = kind of like eating rubber bands with flavour. lol.
She'll be right
Awww cheers mate.
“She’ll be right”
Funny how Australians are the only people who watch these videos.
😅😅 right
I think he thinks we’re saying “should be alright” but it’s she’ll be right
Sydney is one of the first established cities in Australia and the buildings and streets are just built up on itself
When they built Sydney they did not think a family would have two horse and carts never mind having to vehicles
Back then there were no cars
Ok he can visit us. He likes Tim tams
Back in the day young fella we use to ride our horse with our left and fight with swords with our right, so you can imagine riding your horse down the road on right hand side of the street and dueling with someone on a horse coming the other way
True and then Napoleon changed it for Europeans while the Americans changed because they drove so many horse driven carts and the driver mounted on the left and passed traffic on the right.
Funny how Americans are so perplexed at the differences of culture not understanding so much history and how they are often the odd ones out. Eg the Imperial system is only used in three countries today.
Do Americans not have pavlova????!!!!
Cheers mate ❤
Australia has the largest average houses though..
American houses are bigger
@@shaungordon9737 no aussie houses on average are at least 100 square feet larger
cheers mate
Sydney is the most stressed of all our cities imo