Ikr Yorkshire Pudding is batter, and if he thinks they are soggy then he clearly has never tried a Wiltshire Popover, which is basically a thicker and soggier version of a Yorkshire pudding.
It's a typically American approach, unfortunately. Britain: We call them profiteroles because they are a type of fine French patisserie which were named profiteroles by their French inventors. America: Is called Cream Puff 'cause puffy and cream.
Although the profiterole has connected its history with France, the original recipe is the invention of an Italian chef named Panterelli. This chef was part of the escort of Catherine de Medici, who arrived at the French royal court around 1530, intended to become the wife of Henry of Valois, known as King Henry II.
My mum would make loads of profiteroles for parties, pile them up and spin caramalised sugar web around... and then carry the whole lot into the adults never to be seen again. Torture
USA: people very commonly call stainless flatware "silverware", and most people don't own any actual silverware. The word "flatware" is not even used that much, and "cutlery" hardly ever. Martha Stewart types know the difference.
As a French person who lived in the UK for several years, I feel offended as the comment on British cheese. I mean it is better than the US one, but that isn't difficult. Also why would you call it cider if there isn't alcohol in it??
The French are so anti about other people's cheeses. Sorry France but most other people don't think yours are the best, I prefer British and Italian cheeses. PS I don't want my whole fridge to smell like something died in it thank you very much!
I don't like French cheese sorry but I totally agree about the cider. It's not cider if it's not alcoholic. Theirs seems to just be mulled apple juice.
It might come from the prohibition era. When the federal government bans alcohol but you still want your apple juice to have a kick, what else can you do but add spices?
Lmao I was wondering what that meant as well - turns out that in Europe and GB its common to eat with the rounded side of the fork facing out- but in the US we tend to transfer the fork from the left hand to the right hand and then eat. So when he says upside down he isn’t meaning handle vs prongs but which direction the prongs are facing. Lols at least I think that’s what he meant
brumav you know I have no idea- I honestly had no clue we did do it until I looked it up, and now I’m incredibly conscious of it. I only switch the fork if I’m using a knife tho. Pretty sure it’s just something that you see growing up and unconsciously do. My grandfather was English and my dad eats the European way- but my mom eats the American style- probably why I do both. It’s very odd
Brigister first pizzeria was opened up here in NYC by an italian immigrant and so was born the pizza the world knows and loves today. Before that, in Italy pizza was more like flat bread with oil, later on bruschetta etc. But as said the World-Wide regonized pizza pie with triangle slices of dough, marinara sauce and mozzarella cheese that the world calls now pizza, originated from NYC America. Other countries even other american states try their hardest to copy NYC Pizza and fail miserably.
The most British thing has to be when I was younger, I watched my little pony, and there was one episode themed around them all drinking cider, and as a child in England, I only knew cider to be an alcoholic drink. I think spent the next three years like “why are applejack and pinkie pie drinking cider” and from that moment my friend and I were certain the ponies were 18+. Fun times
I honestly refuse to let someone say that American bacon is better than the British stuff. Food in the states is just generally worse than what we have over here
I literally had no clue either. And I lived 12yrs 5months of my life thinking biscuits and gravy were literally chocolate digestives and custard creams and bourbons in gravy. I always wondered how people could eat that.
They ate at a chain restaurant that's supposed to have Southern US type food. It's chicken 'n biscuits. Also biscuits 'n gravy, which is totally Southern and not allowed in the North under any circumstances. "Biscuits" are NOT cookies. More like scones made without sugar.
dale Simpson I'v seen places in Europe that cut it with scissors, haha. Most people don't do it though, I know lots of people who own the pizza roller cutter
You cannot look disgusted with our pizza, Yorkshire puddings AND our cereal and expect us to not get offended and cry a little. These things are the reason I'm staying in Britain, they're too good
@@jewel7784 when did we brag??!?!!!!? The thing we have better than America is healthy foods. I'll rather live longer and eat nice and good food than live short and eat the most tastiest food ever. Come at me on that!
@@megacontroller2657 lmao did I ever even argue over which country has healthier food? Everyone in the world knows the U.S has unhealthy food, it's like one of the defining parts of their culture. But the girl in the video defended British pizza as if it's sooo good and I just think that's a joke. Not to mention, if you think dominos is good pizza, I mean....that speaks for itself.
Unless they are American originated words _OR_ They are other language words which just aren’t being pronounced authentically. But I pronounce some words differently than most even though I am American.
***** I don't think its a British thing, but more out of convenience. Pizza rollers require so much more work than simply cutting with scissors! I don't understand the use of them aha
Americans say filet mignon and buffet the French way were as British people say filet steak and buffeT reading it as English. Does this make Americans more right with the pronunciation of those words? According to your logic it does.
Brawler197 I’m English and I’ve never once heard buffet pronounced any way but the French way so I’m not sure that’s true. Not as sure regarding either way with fillet mignon versus fillet steak on how often either is used but but I agree fillet is pronounced the French way also. If that’s the way Americans pronounce those words then I agree that’s correct, but not so sure your assumption that British people pronounce those incorrectly is true.
British school packed lunches were awesome!! The babybels that no one liked but unwrapping it made it pleasurable. Those yogurts shaped like fruits that you used to shake before asking a dinner lady to open it so it explodes on them. Trading food cause genuinely your mum is a shit lunch maker. Using the number on the back of string cheese packets to determine how powerful you are (like trading cards). Fruit winders would give you your daily dose of cartoons and it was rebellious to eat both of the flavours at once :'D
we have koolaid and :sqaush: but we call it frozen concentrate. I hate how most Americans think that we don't have it just because we call it something different
I live in the UK and I’ve never seen any one eat pizza with a knife and fork or even cut it up with scissors! Like that’s just so wrong on so many levels And NEVER come for Yorkshire puddings... you will not win...
That's not representative. I think you just visited a restaurant run by idiots. Most American households, and virtually all restaurants have Tea Bags. What's often lacking is variety. And they won't prepare it for you--they just hand you hot water, a teacup, the teabag and some sugar and lemon.
+Ava Mallen I'm American who pronounced it Nut-ella my whole life and it wasn't until about a year ago that I learned that it's actually New-tella. So this is exactly what I think of whenever I hear Nutella.
BipolarSunshine galaxy bar is the superior chocolate bar if you want smooth milky-ness, yorkie is for the classic bar, along with milybars. Green and blacks is for a quality mint dark or dark chilli.
+Maxwell Edison Yeah! I've used it to dye my own hair. I just think it's funny that she knew it for that, even though it clearly wasn't its original purpose.
The definition of “pudding” was the main problem. The immediate thought is of sweet desserts. However, originally, pudding was a meat based, sausage-like food in Britain; for example, black and white puddings. However by the late 18th Century, the contemporary puddings were no longer meat based and this change incidentally coincided with the first published mention of the batter pudding. Not only is the traditional Yorkshire pudding a savoury dish, but it is also served with or before the main course, not as a “pudding” or dessert
Yorkshire pudding is made out of pancake mix that’s why pudding is a desert and the fact you don’t have curry in America makes me extremely sad 😂🤦♀️🇬🇧🇬🇧
I know this is late but we do have curry. Its not something typically served in regular restraunts though. youd have to go to one that specializes in that type of food, which there are plenty of depending on where you are.
I'm not sure what you're disagreeing to. :P I'm saying in the US, we DO have curry, but in the US it seems to be a culture thing and white people are less likely to be exposed to it. They have curry(usually with oxtail or chicken) in the Jamaican restaurants here. Not sure what Asian food has to do with it. Do the Asian places serve curry in England? I haven't seen them serve it in the US.
@@susie2251 NO IT IS NOT. I KNOW YOU'RE TALKING ABOUT WORDS LIKE FAUCET BUT YOUR ENGLISH IS SIMPLIFIED. LITERALLY. A MAN MADE AN AMERICAN DICTIONARY BECAUSE CHILDREN WERE STRUGGLING TO LEARN BRITISH ENGLISH. I AM NOT LETTING YOU CONTINUE YOUR EXISTENCE THINKING YOU SPEAK PROPER ENGLISH. YOU MADE ME CAPS-LOCK. I AM SO ANGRY.
You think our peanut butter is gross because your peanut butter is full of sugar and ours is actually peanut butter. Reese's is good though. Edit: don't you Diss the Earl Grey tea. It's AMAZING!!
The oldest version of something is not always the best version of it... :O Just sayin'... I mean, the original mince pies had actual chunks of mutton mixed in with the fruit and spices, so...
Have you ever been to a wawa it is heavenly (wawa is a convenience store mixed with a sandwich shop and is found in some parts of the east coast of the US) also Philadelphia cheese steaks
But have you tried Black Pudding? You have it with a Full English Breakfast (the has our, the proper, form of bacon in it - ideally smoked) and it is a delicacy that has to be tried.
As a Brit: Pizza rollers are posh. Peanut butter isn’t very popular. We need donuts in our McDonald’s. Our tea is AMAZING. sprite is lemonade. Mince pies are the best thing ever. It’s 100% not peter bread it’s pitta bread. It’s Nutella because it has nuts in it. Silverware sounds so posh and more fancy than cutlery. Pudding is dessert but idk why we call Yorkshires Yorkshire puddings. Sparkling water is disgusting, except elderflower sparkling water that’s ok. Squash (or cordial) is like a really sweet thick syrupy water that u mix with water to make juice. Kebabs meat on a stick. Tea sounds really sophisticated, it’s dinner tbh 😂 Fizzy drinks is just what it is a drink that fizzes 😂I wish McFlurrys were mixed. Our cereals bad?! Um weetabix, coco pops, cornflakes, crunchy nut clusters?!
Okay, so it’s always spelt doughnut and not donut, it’s pronounced peet-a not pit-a, and it’s supposed to be new-tell-a (but I say nut-ella anyways). I totally agree with you on everything else though😊
+Emily Raine technically, only with roast beef. lamb - mint sauce pork - apple sauce poultry - cranberry sauce beef - Yorkshire pudding. they're the property ways, but...I have Yorkshire puddings with all roast dinners!
Coolfred: We didn’t make it simpler. If anything we made it harder. When all of the different countries, races and cultures settled to America, we mixed the languages together and modified it. Modifying a language is much more difficult than keeping the same one for hundreds of years.
rose& lotus - You did, your spellings are simpler, you got rid of certain grammar rules, and your pronunciations are easier to understand for foreign non-native English speakers.
As an American, you cannot tell English people that we are saying/spelling words incorrectly when the language is ENGLISH if you are going to change words don't call it ENGLISH and tell ENGLISH people they're saying it wrong
But the words they're arguing about aren't originally English words. From what I can find, the only one the English "pronounce more correctly" is basil.
The difference in pronunciation is based on the rules we were taught. For sure in America we were taught the one vowel double consonants short/long vowel spiel. If a vowel is followed by double consonants, pronounce it as a short vowel. If basil was spelled bassil (double consonants "ss") we'd go soft on the "a" and say bah-sil. But since basil has only one consonant after the vowel we pronounce the "a" harder and say bay-sil. Sorry to get all technically lol but I was just waiting for that to be mentioned.
+its gem i agree the clues in the name "ENGLISH" language and the black country is one of the oldest forms of english in the entire world as the accent has some very germanic words going back to the days when the saxons and anglo's came over so technically the black country dialect is one of the most correct forms of speaking english
Why do people have to moan about us British people about how we pronounce things we say it the way we want to say things and they say it the way they want to say it and when you think about it the americans use the British language but they just have an accent and say a few things differently, we should also be very thankful to the Americans because I'm ww2 the American s would bring the British items that were hard to get because of the Germans so we shouldn't really have to fight over which country's better we should be prepared to help each other for life ahead
This entire time, every time Dodie said squash in one of her videos, I always just assumed she meant vegetable juice made from squashes. I thought it was odd but never questioned it. This just blew my mind a bit.
Oh, also! One thing that I missed when I lived in London were ice cream flavors! In the US, you have an entire aisle devoted to ice cream. In London, I feel like I only ever got to choose from like 4 flavors: chocolate, vanilla, chocolate/vanilla, and banoffee.
+shemightbemonica What's the name of the concentrated flavouring that you get in those little squeezy bottles and squirt into water to make a drink? That's basically squash, it tastes exactly the same. The only difference is that squash is a bit less concentrated so you usually use 1/4 squash, 3/4 water. I'm pretty sure squash started out as a sneeky way to get little kids to drink more water. You always have it in primary (elementary) schools. Personally, I think it tastes disgusting but it's very popular...
all we have in our fridge is squash we just call it regular orange juice or Ribena and actual orange juice to Americans to us would be Tropicana IM IRISH I'D LIKE TO SAY BUT TECHNICALLY HALF OF US WERE BRITISH SO
I was here looking for a good comparison but all i hear is british food this british food that.. I was hoping for a more non biased argument and I was kinda offended especially since being british myself. I mean.. The food here isn't bad at all... Right?
I'm American and honestly I'm just so confused with your food like can someone explain? Beans for breakfast? You don't have iced tea? Why do you call fries chips and chips crisps and hold your forks upside down? And also do you guys eat snow cream?
@@snapdragonzoroark Really? Have you tried it in the UK? When I tried it in Canada, it tasted pretty much the same as Pizza Hut. In the UK, it tastes significantly better and they charge more. I saw a bunch of people on some Irish react channel also say that the Dominos there is really good. The only problem I have with my local shop is that they are not very consistent with quality. Sometimes they load on the toppings. Other times the toppings are more sparse so the pizza is dry and there is a lot of crust.
No good cereal???! I don't believe it. Golden nuggets, honey Cheerios, cookie crisp, krave!!, wheetos, I could go on. You take that statement back, sir!
As a brit, we love to hate our country but when others attack us, we get all defensive 😂😂
Couldn't be more accurate to be honest ahahaha well said
mcdreamy’s babe -
deep down we love our country, we just like complaining/moaning/whinging/criticising etc.
Same with Spanish people, lol
Sofía/Chie -sama - lol i think it’s a European thing in general, complaining/critiquing is ingrained in many European countries’ cultures.
This is the literal truth
I just love Dodie's really offended "SORRY???"
That's the tone I take for most of day.
TBF Britain doesn't have summers her reaction was just so funny
first of all...Yorkshire puddings are NOT soggy bread. And roast dinner is NOT greasy
Milly xx he didn’t say it was greasy he said he also likes greasy food BUT roast dinner is better
Milly xx if toast dinner is greasy you are making it incorrectly
I thought he said that the roast dinners in the US were greasy. Not the ones here.
yorkshire pudding is sacred
Ikr Yorkshire Pudding is batter, and if he thinks they are soggy then he clearly has never tried a Wiltshire Popover, which is basically a thicker and soggier version of a Yorkshire pudding.
You can’t argue to a British about tea it is something you don’t do
Joshua Ryde it’s the unspoken law that you NEVER argue us Brits over tea. Tbh I don’t like tea but I know it’s what we’re famous for
Ya but you stole it from the Chinese originally sooo
@@blackbird3847 but we didn't dump it in the ocean now you wanker
Um excuse me, but y'all don't have sweet tea.
@@madisonotken1310 you get tea, you put sugar in = sweet tea
16:19 **Dodie looks around for support among all of these crazy Americans**
dodie getting offended throughout this video is me 😂♥️
Same.
Meee!
mhm
Profiterole = french word, the one that was first used to describe that magnificent creation so dodie is freaking right
Yeah it is literally the name of the desert and the French have been making them since before the USA was even a thing never mind creme pufds
My french soul cried from the disrespect you give to profiteroles 😭 cream puffs are Bad spin-offs of the marvellous art of patisserie
It's a typically American approach, unfortunately.
Britain: We call them profiteroles because they are a type of fine French patisserie which were named profiteroles by their French inventors.
America: Is called Cream Puff 'cause puffy and cream.
Omg I love profiteroles. They’re amazing
Although the profiterole has connected its history with France, the original recipe is the invention of an Italian chef named Panterelli. This chef was part of the escort of Catherine de Medici, who arrived at the French royal court around 1530, intended to become the wife of Henry of Valois, known as King Henry II.
My mum would make loads of profiteroles for parties, pile them up and spin caramalised sugar web around... and then carry the whole lot into the adults never to be seen again.
Torture
EXCUSE ME MINCE PIES ARE KING
apple pies are the queen
+doddleoddle YES!!!!!
yes dodie
JOIN THE ARMY
+doddleoddle i wholeheartedly agree.
YOU DO NOT GET TO SLAG OF YORKSHIRE PUDDINGS! IM SORRY YOU HAVE CROSSED THE LINE!!
I KBOW RIGHT YORKSHIRE PUDDINGS ARE SO GOOD THERE A PERFECT MIX OF CRUNCHY AND SOFT ESPECIALLY WHEN THERE DROWNDED IN GRAVY
Pudding is a sweet dessert
Cosima Batteson-Greenwood yesyesyesyesyes
YORKSHIRE PUDDINGS
Yorkshire’s are the best
Dodie's face at the whole"Crepe" thing was literally me!! My french Grandma would be a-raging! :P
GS 1.0 totally, I live in Americans everyone yes crepe like CRAPE and it annoys me so much!
I speak French though and my teacher who is french taught us to pronounce it the way they said it as opposed to Dodie but with the ‘r’ accent
This is soooooo annoying. I'm French and I say crepe (the right way ) but my teacher says crape and every time he says it my fist curls up
My dad told me that ‘American’ pancakes are actually Scottish so I have come to the conclusion that Americans are pancake thieves.
I'm French and every time someone pronounces it "crape" I die a little bit inside haha
I've lived in England all my 16 years and I've never seen pizza cut with scissors.
Same (except for 15 years)
Same here apart from at my friends house who is french
I'm 15 that's how I cut pizza!! Its easy and simple
I use pizza cutter
I'm Italian and my mum cuts pizza with scissors all the time!
It's the opposite in England. Silverware is the posh version.
Yeah, it makes me think of all the billions of different sized knifes and forks!
Yeah. You only get the silverware out for special occasions. Otherwise, it's just cutlery.
Yeah, because it's made of silver... (at least the posh ones are)
i'm from the usa and i agree w that
USA: people very commonly call stainless flatware "silverware", and most people don't own any actual silverware. The word "flatware" is not even used that much, and "cutlery" hardly ever. Martha Stewart types know the difference.
I am British and have never seen a person cut pizza with scissors.
Ikr wtf
?
Charlotte C. same
same
Same
As a French person who lived in the UK for several years, I feel offended as the comment on British cheese. I mean it is better than the US one, but that isn't difficult.
Also why would you call it cider if there isn't alcohol in it??
The French are so anti about other people's cheeses. Sorry France but most other people don't think yours are the best, I prefer British and Italian cheeses.
PS I don't want my whole fridge to smell like something died in it thank you very much!
I don't like French cheese sorry but I totally agree about the cider. It's not cider if it's not alcoholic. Theirs seems to just be mulled apple juice.
It might come from the prohibition era. When the federal government bans alcohol but you still want your apple juice to have a kick, what else can you do but add spices?
Actually, I think British is really famous for cheese and is often compared to as good as, if even better than french cheese sooo
@Karen1Nicola america has alcoholic cider its just not as common
We have our fork upside down?
So you eat with the end that doesnt have the prongs?
What I was thinking
Lmao I was wondering what that meant as well - turns out that in Europe and GB its common to eat with the rounded side of the fork facing out- but in the US we tend to transfer the fork from the left hand to the right hand and then eat. So when he says upside down he isn’t meaning handle vs prongs but which direction the prongs are facing. Lols at least I think that’s what he meant
Yeah what was he talking about
G gaffgaff What you eat like that? That’s more effort 😂
brumav you know I have no idea- I honestly had no clue we did do it until I looked it up, and now I’m incredibly conscious of it. I only switch the fork if I’m using a knife tho. Pretty sure it’s just something that you see growing up and unconsciously do. My grandfather was English and my dad eats the European way- but my mom eats the American style- probably why I do both. It’s very odd
as an italian i find brits and americans arguing over who has the best pizza immensely amusing
Brigister Same
Brigister We have pretty bad pizza I'm a Brit btw
Those must be the Turks :D
Just kidding, a good Italian pizza is heaven.
Brigister first pizzeria was opened up here in NYC by an italian immigrant and so was born the pizza the world knows and loves today. Before that, in Italy pizza was more like flat bread with oil, later on bruschetta etc. But as said the World-Wide regonized pizza pie with triangle slices of dough, marinara sauce and mozzarella cheese that the world calls now pizza, originated from NYC America. Other countries even other american states try their hardest to copy NYC Pizza and fail miserably.
jay bird the way you call pizza a pie is plain wrong. It's not a pie
The most British thing has to be when I was younger, I watched my little pony, and there was one episode themed around them all drinking cider, and as a child in England, I only knew cider to be an alcoholic drink. I think spent the next three years like “why are applejack and pinkie pie drinking cider” and from that moment my friend and I were certain the ponies were 18+. Fun times
Oh my God! sweet child was corrupted by my little pony. 😆
😂😂😂😂😂😂 also confused me when Charlie Brown drank “root beer”
Only alcoholic cider foams that much. So yeah it didn't take too much scrutiny to figure out that Rainbow Dash got fucking shitfaced.
wait what? I'm from the uk and I've never heard of cutting pizza with scissors, what is this madness?!?!?!
+Mollie Green It's called common sense. Clearly you have never worked in a kitchen. Efficiency is key.
Same
Same 😂.
I do that if I've lost the pizza roller
Same
Asking for a salad in McDonald’s is like asking for a hug in a brothal
Amanda Kissnhug yup
But that would be a good hug especially if you’re asexual.
forest gump
One that was forced to go there while in the closet.
brothel no brothal (sorry)
American McDonald’s is literally cardboard it’s shit uk 100% better
near me in England what Americans call lemonade is called cloudy lemonade
Did you really say there's no fat on American bacon? It's all fat, it's just cooked so much you can't tell 😂
ThatRomyKate there's no meat
Its mostly fat, but the small bits of meat clinging to the strip of fat are amazing
It's meat that gets grease on it when you cook it
i'm from america and i have no comeback for this
I honestly refuse to let someone say that American bacon is better than the British stuff. Food in the states is just generally worse than what we have over here
*me:* I don't have an opinion
**reads angry comments**
*me:* I now have an opinion
but what is your opinion? lol
I'm british so when he said "CHICKEN BISCUITS AND GRAVY AND CORNBREAD" so casually, and I was like WHAT the heck
I literally had no clue either. And I lived 12yrs 5months of my life thinking biscuits and gravy were literally chocolate digestives and custard creams and bourbons in gravy. I always wondered how people could eat that.
I now want to come up to an American and rattle off my top ten favourite Greggs items just to confuse them.
Maddie Smith nooo
It sounds like the description on the side of a tin of dog food.
They ate at a chain restaurant that's supposed to have Southern US type food. It's chicken 'n biscuits. Also biscuits 'n gravy, which is totally Southern and not allowed in the North under any circumstances. "Biscuits" are NOT cookies. More like scones made without sugar.
I have lived in England for 22 years never seen or heard of pizza scissors
dale Simpson I'v seen places in Europe that cut it with scissors, haha. Most people don't do it though, I know lots of people who own the pizza roller cutter
You cannot look disgusted with our pizza, Yorkshire puddings AND our cereal and expect us to not get offended and cry a little. These things are the reason I'm staying in Britain, they're too good
But you can't really brag about your pizza, it really pales in comparison to New York pizza...also, you know. Italy.
@@jewel7784 when did we brag??!?!!!!?
The thing we have better than America is healthy foods.
I'll rather live longer and eat nice and good food than live short and eat the most tastiest food ever.
Come at me on that!
@@megacontroller2657 lmao did I ever even argue over which country has healthier food? Everyone in the world knows the U.S has unhealthy food, it's like one of the defining parts of their culture. But the girl in the video defended British pizza as if it's sooo good and I just think that's a joke. Not to mention, if you think dominos is good pizza, I mean....that speaks for itself.
@@jewel7784 YES as someone who was born and raised in New York, nothing beats NY pizza.
@@GhosttisCooll man, I'm English
What's your point?
YOU DO NOT DISRESPECT yorkshire pudding
"British people say words weird"...
ExCuSe Me We OrIgInAtEd tHe LaNgUaGe
Unless they are American originated words
_OR_
They are other language words which just aren’t being pronounced authentically. But I pronounce some words differently than most even though I am American.
Sorry it was a ru pauls drag race reference ahah
if anyone didn’t say this in Delas english accent they’re lying
america came from britain in the first place anyway
SuperT but America has Americans you’re technically not English you are American. You can’t argue about the way ENGLISH PEOPLE SPEAK ENGLISH
I'm British and i have NEVER used scisors to cut my pizza
I also get my mcfluffry's mixed
I'm British and i have NEVER considered Pizza Hut to be a good pizza chain.
+FaithsStardust but it did have an ice cream factory! So many times I made an ice cream mountain and hid it in two cups.
oliver dibbs Ohhhhhhhh, that brings back memories. XD
Same
I'm British and have never seen anyone cut a pizza with scissors
Sammeeee
+connie greig I have never cut pizza without scissors
***** I don't think its a British thing, but more out of convenience. Pizza rollers require so much more work than simply cutting with scissors! I don't understand the use of them aha
It's like the super simple solution
Bridget Harvey
Precisely
COMMON IN KIDDOS GET YER SUN TEA
+Savannah Brown no but i'm actually drinking sun tea right now
🍶
+Savannah Brown im crying adklj
MY FAVES
sav's Texas accent is gold
It's pronounced crep not crayp, its a French word and that's the reason why it's spelled crépe
Arctic Sunrize I agree with the pronunciation but it’s spelt Crêpe. The é is pronounced ‘ay’ whilst ê or è is pronounced ‘eh’ I believe.
It is spelled crêpe
Americans say filet mignon and buffet the French way were as British people say filet steak and buffeT reading it as English. Does this make Americans more right with the pronunciation of those words? According to your logic it does.
Brawler197 I’m English and I’ve never once heard buffet pronounced any way but the French way so I’m not sure that’s true. Not as sure regarding either way with fillet mignon versus fillet steak on how often either is used but but I agree fillet is pronounced the French way also. If that’s the way Americans pronounce those words then I agree that’s correct, but not so sure your assumption that British people pronounce those incorrectly is true.
Brawler197 No one pronounces yeh ‘T’ in buffet
If I tried to make a lemonade stand where I live I’d probably get mugged
😂😂😂😂😂 I know right, people would literally laugh in your face, but in America its wow 😂😂
I used to watch American films and shows and see them doing that and I used to be so upset I couldn't do that here😭
You probably could where I live (it a fairly nice place!) but you get shut down by the authorities within the month.
tbh I'm British and I use a pizza roller. why would you use scissors?
+Chloe Allen because they like being wrong
+Evan Edinger I've never even heard of using scissors on a pizza - totally weird!
+Chloe Allen You don't just use any old scissors, you use pizza scissors and they make cutting uniform pieces so much easier
+Chloe Allen i use a pizza slicer as well, but now to think of it, why not use scissors? it literally sounds ingenius
I've always use a knife I've never used scissors or roller and I'm from UK
I’m from America and even I think that places should have hot tea for breakfast. It’s the best.
Same, I love hot tea
what they do?? literally my mom always orders hot tea at breakfast places including ihop???
i love dodie’s anger throughout this video and every time she says “wHaT?!”
British school packed lunches were awesome!!
The babybels that no one liked but unwrapping it made it pleasurable. Those yogurts shaped like fruits that you used to shake before asking a dinner lady to open it so it explodes on them. Trading food cause genuinely your mum is a shit lunch maker. Using the number on the back of string cheese packets to determine how powerful you are (like trading cards). Fruit winders would give you your daily dose of cartoons and it was rebellious to eat both of the flavours at once :'D
This was so nostalgic, omg, English food is amazing.
Omg this describes my old lunch
Nostalgia
And the Wagon Wheels, the Frubes, DairyLea crackers, Capri-Sun, Penguin Bars... Rice Crispies Marshmallow Squares!
Emily Mitchell munch bunch 😍
omg that was like a description onf my school lunchdayyyy
I'm British and I agree with everything Dodie said HOW DO YOU NOT HAVE SQUASH?!
Jodie Leigh what's squash 😂
Jodie Leigh we have squash.... the vegetable
Cooper James It's just freezer juice then? Or KoolAid powder? Huh.
Amanda the Panda Not a powder though, just very concentrated juice syrup, with lower sugar content.
we have koolaid and :sqaush: but we call it frozen concentrate. I hate how most Americans think that we don't have it just because we call it something different
born and raised in the uk. I've never heard of anyone cutting a pizza with scissors.
i almost started crying when he said a yorkshire pudding is soggy bread
*THEY DONT HAVE SQUASH???*
_spits out my squash and screams_
satans neice what squash haha? 😅
We do have squash. I used to play all the time!
@@Chilukar I like squash and squash, but I'm not a big fan of squash.
@@Pretency me too, although not necessarily in the same order 😜
*HOW DOES YOU LIVE WITHOUT SQUASH!? I LIVE ON SQUASH!*
american portion sizes are madness
American portion sizes are huge 😂
Because we are fat 😂.
E McCreanor - and sadly we’re catching onto them :( we’re getting obese too
Innit
America:
We ArE kOoL
bIg Is KoOl
“Why can’t I live in a place that has both apple cider and alcoholic cider”
C o m e
T o
C a n a d a
Yesssss. Downside though, I never know whether I'll be hammered or not.
But cold
He's nuts! We totally have both in America.
C o m e
T o
T h e U K
I was unaware of a non-alcoholic cider. Like, cider *is* an alcoholic beverage?
its called apple juice, lol.
Americans : Your saying it wrong ( omg I’m getting Hermione Granger vibes )
English ( British ) : We created the bloody language mate!!!
"The British pronounce words incorrectly" EXCUSE YOU WHO INVENTED THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE?
OKAY IM AMERICAN AND I WAS THINKING "Well they created the English language so we're technically the wrong ones here." AHHH
I was thinking this the whole video!
+AbiSaysThings literally my thoughts the whole video
+Jailene isaTimeLord No worries, I only meant it as a joke anyway! I'm not serious it's just banter 😄
+AbiSaysThings Germans
I've never used scissors to cut pizza but tbh it sounds genius and I might try that next time
It's so much easier than a pizza roller
I've been using scissors to cut my frozen pizzas since I was 4.
+noname noname I'm a genius.
+Jess McDermid it is genius
+Jess McDermid Neither have I! Is it an English thing I've somehow missed?
i aGree with dodie on most of these especially on the crepe thing and yorkshire pudding,,
I love Yorkshire puddings sooooo much. Not going to lie they are so good with golden syrup as a pudding. 😂
she actually said crepe wrong as it is a French word the Americans said it correctly
I 100% like American pancakes better but you can never go wrong with a Yorkshire pudding.
@@The_Le_Page_Workshop Duolingo says Dodie said it right
Crèpe is pronounced crehp not crayp. That's why there is an è
I've always thought it pronounced crep-ay
I pronounce it both ways 😆 depends on how I feel on the day
@@Anna_D_Addams if it were pronounced like that it'd be spelt crèpé
YES
Isn’t that the same e as in fiance and pokemon, both of which make an ay sound.
I live in the UK and I’ve never seen any one eat pizza with a knife and fork or even cut it up with scissors! Like that’s just so wrong on so many levels
And NEVER come for Yorkshire puddings... you will not win...
when I asked for tea in America the heated up ice tea and put it in a mug 😂
There's America for you
Oh god that's awful 😭
That's not representative. I think you just visited a restaurant run by idiots.
Most American households, and virtually all restaurants have Tea Bags. What's often lacking is variety. And they won't prepare it for you--they just hand you hot water, a teacup, the teabag and some sugar and lemon.
Oh god eww haha wtf
We have normal tea here?
What's pingu's favourite spread? NOOTella😏 I'll let myself out..
XD
Exactly what i was thinking 😂😂
+Ava Mallen I'm American who pronounced it Nut-ella my whole life and it wasn't until about a year ago that I learned that it's actually New-tella. So this is exactly what I think of whenever I hear Nutella.
Omg 😂😂😂
Eheheh....leave...😑
I’m half French and I can confirm that crêpe sounds more like crep than crayp.
Who in their right mind would pronounce a crepe as crayp. That's just wrong.
whats the point of the e at the end?
@@juanramon2790 French... French is the point
Isn’t crayp paper?
Lol no France I thought you were on our side you gave us the statue of liberty and shit
Literally no one cuts pizza with scissors in the UK it’s not a thing
Cordy AndYeh either use a knife or one of those circular saw type things
Thank god, I was worried.
Cordy AndYeh you don't with dominoes but my family do if it's a home pizza
@@siloPIRATE its called a pizza cutter
@@jackharan3791 I couldn't remember its name
“Do you have good cheese in America?”
“NO BUT WE GOT CHEESE WHIZ”
Thankyou for your contribution, thANK YOU
We have cheese, it's just expensive.
i was looking for this comment
You have cheese in a can....how?
YES NOW THIS IS THE CONTRIBUTION IM LOOKIN FOR
Not only do they eat thin pancakes
They eat
FREAKIN DELIA SMITH PANCAKES
ALL HAIL DELIA
ALL HAIL LORD DELIA
+Phanic! At The BlurryFace all hail your username
Phandom located
You just made me spit out my water X'DD Delia Smith... our hero...
Evan: You have no good cereal.
*Cries in Nestle and Kellogg's *
Nestlé is a Swis company and Kellogg's is American. They do make cereal for the UK that they don't seem to sell in America and other countries though.
Wheatabix and quakers oat pots are unrivalled
Shreddies and cheerios too
Poor Dodie! 😁
I'm just here in Australia like "I can't relate..." I can relate to some of the British food though.
Melody Cutie Cupcakes dude I live in Australia but I’m from England and things are like hell when we start to talk about culture
Since we are talking about food I’m like okay so Hershey’s tastes like vomit and Cadbury’s and galaxy is much better
BipolarSunshine galaxy bar is the superior chocolate bar if you want smooth milky-ness, yorkie is for the classic bar, along with milybars. Green and blacks is for a quality mint dark or dark chilli.
爪丨乙卂 that's the tea
British chocolate has a higher cocoa content which is why it tastes better
Herseys taste like vomit because it contains the same chemicals as vomit
Wispa is king
Dodie: "Isn't that the stuff you dye your hair with?"
Kool-Aid has officially left the drink aisle 😂😂
Haha!
+Melanie Anne Ahern This is unrelated to your comment but I had a teacher with the same name as you
When I was in high school girls would dye their hair with it. :)
You probably could use it to dye your hair tbh.
+Maxwell Edison Yeah! I've used it to dye my own hair. I just think it's funny that she knew it for that, even though it clearly wasn't its original purpose.
The definition of “pudding” was the main problem. The immediate thought is of sweet desserts. However, originally, pudding was a meat based, sausage-like food in Britain; for example, black and white puddings. However by the late 18th Century, the contemporary puddings were no longer meat based and this change incidentally coincided with the first published mention of the batter pudding. Not only is the traditional Yorkshire pudding a savoury dish, but it is also served with or before the main course, not as a “pudding” or dessert
Not usually sausage-like. More like meat in suet pastry lined and lidded bowl, steamed to perfection
Yorkshire pudding is made out of pancake mix that’s why pudding is a desert and the fact you don’t have curry in America makes me extremely sad 😂🤦♀️🇬🇧🇬🇧
I know this is late but we do have curry. Its not something typically served in regular restraunts though. youd have to go to one that specializes in that type of food, which there are plenty of depending on where you are.
YOU DON'T HAVE CURRY IN AMERICA YOU'RE MISSING OUT!💛💛💛💛💛⚡⚡⚡⚡⚡
Ella Peartree
Haha. We do, but I think it's a black/white thing. Many Jamaican restaurants have them.
We do but it’s not as popular
Noodles4Anime I disagree, since there are more Asian takeaways in England.
Ella Peartree we have curry in America
I'm not sure what you're disagreeing to. :P
I'm saying in the US, we DO have curry, but in the US it seems to be a culture thing and white people are less likely to be exposed to it. They have curry(usually with oxtail or chicken) in the Jamaican restaurants here. Not sure what Asian food has to do with it. Do the Asian places serve curry in England? I haven't seen them serve it in the US.
The language is English
How can the English be saying it wrong
lolo xoxo well u have British English and American English which r obviously very different
@@sophiatucker04 I get that but the origin of any type of English is from English English
Many differences in English and American words are because Americans still use the original English word and modern Brits use a recently changed word.
@@susie2251 NO IT IS NOT. I KNOW YOU'RE TALKING ABOUT WORDS LIKE FAUCET BUT YOUR ENGLISH IS SIMPLIFIED. LITERALLY. A MAN MADE AN AMERICAN DICTIONARY BECAUSE CHILDREN WERE STRUGGLING TO LEARN BRITISH ENGLISH. I AM NOT LETTING YOU CONTINUE YOUR EXISTENCE THINKING YOU SPEAK PROPER ENGLISH. YOU MADE ME CAPS-LOCK. I AM SO ANGRY.
Millicent Bowers chill the fuck out. You’re a nut.
So glad the pronunciation of Caramel wasn’t brought up. “Kaaarrmel” isn’t a thing!
"I've seen people here, eating pizza with a fork, and that is against my religon.." wtf 😂
TheSpiderYou ThoughtYouKilled yah. In America, if u eat pizza with a fork then everyone around you will secretly judge u
Sophia Tucker it’s true tho
Even British people find it weird. My cousin does it and I find it so weird
American chocolate is the reason I have trust issues
Olivia Holden Right?! Hershey's Kisses taste like little drops of shit
JP BLACK so true
Hershey's have the after taste of vomit
girlwiththespecs yup
Olivia Holden IKR! It's so artificial. It legit tastes like plastic!
You think our peanut butter is gross because your peanut butter is full of sugar and ours is actually peanut butter.
Reese's is good though.
Edit: don't you Diss the Earl Grey tea. It's AMAZING!!
Eleanor Dalton shut up USA has better peanut butter
Eleanor Dalton ya it’s gross, that’s why brits don’t like peanut butter until they go to America.
So true, the companies that make food just add a lot of sugar so the Americans will like it.
Ikr. American peanut butter is gross and so bad for you but yet again so is most of the stuff in America lol
England wins 😂
Respect to Dodie because I would have fliPPED OUT WITH THEM INSULTING MY CULTURE AHAHDBSJNSKFJRNS
Yeah they were literally insulting I was so offended
Same profile
She is flipping out. She's such a cool cucumber, such a peaceful person. This video is Dodie's version of flipping shit.
IKR they were really irritating , I like his videos but not this
Arun Salwan But even the French are sticking up for us Brits 😭
Evan: with sandwiches you’re severely lacking
Me: WE INVENTED IT! -history nerd anger- :o
Really wow idk that
My thougts exactly.
The oldest version of something is not always the best version of it... :O Just sayin'... I mean, the original mince pies had actual chunks of mutton mixed in with the fruit and spices, so...
Have you ever been to a wawa it is heavenly (wawa is a convenience store mixed with a sandwich shop and is found in some parts of the east coast of the US) also Philadelphia cheese steaks
@@senajabeen1076 Lord Sandwich developed it so he could eat and play cards at the same time.
i'm british and i have never cut pizza with scissors what even
SAME !!!!!!!!!!!!!! 😱
I thought the same thing!!!
I'm British and I cut pizza with scissors
we don't cut them we order them from a takeaway
You can cut pizza with food scissors, cause my nan does it all the time
as an american i can relate to evan and sam but uhh yorkshire pudding is amaaaaazzzzinngggg
But have you tried Black Pudding? You have it with a Full English Breakfast (the has our, the proper, form of bacon in it - ideally smoked) and it is a delicacy that has to be tried.
You're welcome for Yorkshire puddings (I live in Yorkshire)
+Jade same
David Wallin isn't black pudding pig's blood?
yeah you cant diss a Yorkshire pudding
Me: hears Baysel brush
Also me: -dies-
listening to all this arguing is hilarious because I'm Canadian and we have everything the Americans and British have
Kaitlyn Rosa *AMERICAN BACON BEATS CANADAS ROUND HAM SLICES, ANYYYY DAY*
jay bird they have both
Kaitlyn Rosa Yeah, but you guys still pronounce everything wrong
Yes, but you have Vegemite instead of Marmite and that's sad. Or, do you have Marmite as well?
Kaitlyn Rosa And we have both bacon okay!!!
As a Brit: Pizza rollers are posh. Peanut butter isn’t very popular. We need donuts in our McDonald’s. Our tea is AMAZING. sprite is lemonade. Mince pies are the best thing ever. It’s 100% not peter bread it’s pitta bread. It’s Nutella because it has nuts in it. Silverware sounds so posh and more fancy than cutlery. Pudding is dessert but idk why we call Yorkshires Yorkshire puddings. Sparkling water is disgusting, except elderflower sparkling water that’s ok. Squash (or cordial) is like a really sweet thick syrupy water that u mix with water to make juice. Kebabs meat on a stick. Tea sounds really sophisticated, it’s dinner tbh 😂 Fizzy drinks is just what it is a drink that fizzes 😂I wish McFlurrys were mixed. Our cereals bad?! Um weetabix, coco pops, cornflakes, crunchy nut clusters?!
TJC Liu ok what is a crunchy nut cluster
Elizabeth LeBeau cereal
Depends on the tea....English afternoon tea is gross 😂
Okay, so it’s always spelt doughnut and not donut, it’s pronounced peet-a not pit-a, and it’s supposed to be new-tell-a (but I say nut-ella anyways). I totally agree with you on everything else though😊
Wait! Sprite and lemonade are most definitely not the same.
why do homework when Evan just uploaded ❤️❤️
Literally me right now
🙌
"English people pronounce food wrong."
????
We made the language?????
They spell things wrong because capitalism
Yorkshire puddings were originally eaten as a desert hence the 'pudding'.....
+Emily Raine worst dessert ever
+Evan Edinger totally! They are only to be eaten with gravy and a roast dinner 😊🍴
+Emily Raine technically, only with roast beef.
lamb - mint sauce
pork - apple sauce
poultry - cranberry sauce
beef - Yorkshire pudding.
they're the property ways, but...I have Yorkshire puddings with all roast dinners!
Sam Mason technicalities.... Yorkshire puddings are suited to all roast dinners :)
Emily Raine suitable... Yes
Correct... No
Do I care?... No
Dodie is so passionate I love it
hahahah did you hear it at 3.36 where Evan said "Make out" hes so funny, i love him
+Vina Mistry
oh my god you replied
+Evan Edinger omfg XD
Oh my god I've only just realised haha, gotta get those views
Im starting a youtube channel soon, i'd love it if you would subscribe to me and i'll do the same for you? xx thanks! x
Excuse me our language is the correct one 😂 we’re the ones who invented the bloody language 😂
Yeah, but we made it better. 😆
@@madisonotken1310 no.
@@madisonotken1310 no, you made it simpler, which for me is worse.
Coolfred: We didn’t make it simpler. If anything we made it harder. When all of the different countries, races and cultures settled to America, we mixed the languages together and modified it. Modifying a language is much more difficult than keeping the same one for hundreds of years.
rose& lotus - You did, your spellings are simpler, you got rid of certain grammar rules, and your pronunciations are easier to understand for foreign non-native English speakers.
evan: "you guys are lacking in sandwich"
WE MADE SANDWICHES
scarlett amelia WE DID, I went on a school trip once and stopped in the place sandwitches were invented
scarlett amelia You do realise that the chicken sandwich was invented in America, right?
Matter of Purple except we still invented the sandwich Americans just put chicken in the middle
Anya Berry アンヤ べリ Fair point.
Naked Pickle Would that mean that if I put some cabbage or something in a sandwhich, would you call it a salad sandwhich?
samantha is beginning to catch on with the british accent ⭐️❤️
Her name is savanah.
"Strawberries the size of apples"
A bit of an exaggeration but... accurate... kinda
Lily Host 101 the best thing about GMO strawberries is the legendary quadruple strawberry
I bet they don't taste good though. Local British strawberries definitely have the best flavour.
What?!?!?!
As a Brit I love Yorkshire puddings and was highly offended when they called it soggy bread
As an American, you cannot tell English people that we are saying/spelling words incorrectly when the language is ENGLISH if you are going to change words don't call it ENGLISH and tell ENGLISH people they're saying it wrong
THANK YOU
But the words they're arguing about aren't originally English words. From what I can find, the only one the English "pronounce more correctly" is basil.
As somebody who is English, i appreciate this comment.
that awkward moment when most of the words they were pronouncing originated in different countries...
Keegan Welp, the language English still came from England, whether we were influenced by other languages or not.
The difference in pronunciation is based on the rules we were taught. For sure in America we were taught the one vowel double consonants short/long vowel spiel. If a vowel is followed by double consonants, pronounce it as a short vowel. If basil was spelled bassil (double consonants "ss") we'd go soft on the "a" and say bah-sil. But since basil has only one consonant after the vowel we pronounce the "a" harder and say bay-sil. Sorry to get all technically lol but I was just waiting for that to be mentioned.
****technical
You should do a words edition of British VS American because of different pronunciation of words.
+Abby Bowling Plus different words for the same things : )
yeah that too
+Abby Bowling Just remember the way the English person says it is most probably right - ENGLISH language
+its gem i agree the clues in the name "ENGLISH" language and the black country is one of the oldest forms of english in the entire world as the accent has some very germanic words going back to the days when the saxons and anglo's came over so technically the black country dialect is one of the most correct forms of speaking english
+Elizabeth Andrews Americans don't have a word for fortnight D:
My Italian flatmate pronounces Nutella like Dodie so I’d say that way is correct
It’s literally only pronounced that way in America but peanut butter was so popular having it say but tanked the sales
The trio from the gods
yeesss🙌🙌🙌
I neeeeeeed more of these collabs
Ikr! I love these three together :3
Britain doesn’t say it wrong, it’s our language! 😂❤️
Poppy Simpson Actually its a conglomeration of multiple Latin languages all formed into words that we understand.
TheBoyInBlue Which leads to it being the creation of the English language.
Poppy Simpson and plus it’s our language the Americans adapted it so they are wrong
Poppy Simpson JDHFURNEVDOEBGEIEBWBEUW triggering spam of how english is a Germanic/danish lanugage
It’s the language of anyone who wishes to use it.
Crepe comes from the French word so it's pronounced how we british said it. Ha! 🌈 crêpe
But you do use a pizza roller, I'm British and I know the proper way to cut pizza 😂
Fluff is the best
eww I'm american and i hate fluff it is just mush
lucas McGuirk crepe is also not a pancake. A pancake is a cake made in a pan soooo... 🥞
Why do people have to moan about us British people about how we pronounce things we say it the way we want to say things and they say it the way they want to say it and when you think about it the americans use the British language but they just have an accent and say a few things differently, we should also be very thankful to the Americans because I'm ww2 the American s would bring the British items that were hard to get because of the Germans so we shouldn't really have to fight over which country's better we should be prepared to help each other for life ahead
5:42 - 6:20
Is just Savannah and Evan bulling dodie for a minute!😂😂😂
This entire time, every time Dodie said squash in one of her videos, I always just assumed she meant vegetable juice made from squashes. I thought it was odd but never questioned it. This just blew my mind a bit.
Oh, also! One thing that I missed when I lived in London were ice cream flavors! In the US, you have an entire aisle devoted to ice cream. In London, I feel like I only ever got to choose from like 4 flavors: chocolate, vanilla, chocolate/vanilla, and banoffee.
+shemightbemonica What's the name of the concentrated flavouring that you get in those little squeezy bottles and squirt into water to make a drink? That's basically squash, it tastes exactly the same. The only difference is that squash is a bit less concentrated so you usually use 1/4 squash, 3/4 water.
I'm pretty sure squash started out as a sneeky way to get little kids to drink more water. You always have it in primary (elementary) schools. Personally, I think it tastes disgusting but it's very popular...
all we have in our fridge is squash
we just call it regular orange juice or Ribena
and actual orange juice to Americans to us would be Tropicana
IM IRISH I'D LIKE TO SAY BUT TECHNICALLY HALF OF US WERE BRITISH SO
+Sarah Daly well, we use the same words for the most part, but let's be real, Irish and English people have pretty different cultures
Aaron Ryan sort of, but everyone makes British vs American
so i just sort of take the side of Britain
Evan: "We drink cool aid."Dodie: "Isn't that the stuff you dye your hair with?"LOL
It's strange how much this offends me.
Agreed lol
Right.. Like I love them, but damn
I was here looking for a good comparison but all i hear is british food this british food that.. I was hoping for a more non biased argument and I was kinda offended especially since being british myself. I mean.. The food here isn't bad at all... Right?
I'm American and honestly I'm just so confused with your food like can someone explain? Beans for breakfast? You don't have iced tea? Why do you call fries chips and chips crisps and hold your forks upside down? And also do you guys eat snow cream?
what is that
18 minutes of Evan sitting on my childhood
This made me laugh so much. Being British, it's really funny listening to both sides hahaha xo
I know it's kind of interesting
definitely
definitely
Domino's is so lit in England.
Kate _ I’m in the US and I personally love Dominos
Domino's in the UK is way better than any other of the big pizza chains. I tried it in Canada and was disappointed.
Dominos blows in both places
@@snapdragonzoroark Really? Have you tried it in the UK? When I tried it in Canada, it tasted pretty much the same as Pizza Hut. In the UK, it tastes significantly better and they charge more. I saw a bunch of people on some Irish react channel also say that the Dominos there is really good.
The only problem I have with my local shop is that they are not very consistent with quality. Sometimes they load on the toppings. Other times the toppings are more sparse so the pizza is dry and there is a lot of crust.
@@SarthorS must've just been the pan pIzza but dominos is extremely overrated (from my experience)
No good cereal???! I don't believe it. Golden nuggets, honey Cheerios, cookie crisp, krave!!, wheetos, I could go on. You take that statement back, sir!
We already have krave
We have Pops, Honey Nut Cheerios, Cookie Crisp and krave
Yep. Take your comment back miss!
+Amazing Turtle yep my nigga😂
+brobeans 21 Yas my nigga😂
Normally I'm fine with these kind of videos, but, as an English person, this one pissed me off so much!😂