@@とくめい-h5vI did google it too 😂😂 but when I heard her say it, I first thought about the word ‘boisterous’ so I figured it they might have similar meanings. They basically do
I lived long time in Korea and visited Japan twice until now. I think japan is way louder in the bars/pubs. They are literally screaming, while koreans just talk loudly with rather a deepper voice. So for me its definitely more enjoyable in a korean bar. Just my experience 😅
Nobody is literally forced, but if you don't drink and have fun then there might be consequences of not getting promoted because you're not a "team player"
i've lived in japan and visited korea and both places they really, really pressure you to drink in certain settings lol. i think it's just the expectation to go with the group. also in terms of getting rowdy, if you think japanese people are calm and controlled, go to a bonenkai haha
Wow, I'm Japanese in Germany and I had to learn how not to be 'drunk' or 'loud' in Japanese style when drinking. If she says Koreans are wilder, I need to visit and experience it once 😂 sounds like a lot of fun!
Why did that take you a long time to realize? You can see her tattoos very clearly. And it’s kinda obvious that those types of tattoos aren’t “common” in K/J.
@@user-dj9iu2et3rMaybe not “common” .. but, on a female ? Whether Korean or Japanese, both unusual & uncommon (at least when it comes to exposing the tattoos)
Pretty sure her tattoos are way over the top anywhere on earth. Pretty sure a lot of Koreans and Japanese would think she should be ashamed of herself.
After living in both places for a number of years, it is definitely more intense in Korea. Not to mention, so many factors can go into whether or not you get a job or promotion there. Even saw a few bar fights break out. Japan’s enkai and izakaya culture is milder on average compared to Korea. Not to mention more 24/7 places than what I have experienced in Tokyo.
Korea's drinking culture is changing with the MZ generation. Nowadays if you force someone to drink alcohol, you will be criticized. + But it is true that Korea is very tolerant of alcohol culture in many ways. The more conservative the company group, the more alcohol they have to drink. And some people think that drinking a lot together is a requisite to being friends.
@@글루미갓데이what are you talking about? In my experience, people with tattoos tend to have lived MORE social lives as they are usually “looser” and care less about societal standards. It seems like, in YOUR mind, a “social life” means working a 9-5 office job and going out to drink with coworkers after? Otherwise, I don’t understand your point. Maybe the translation was off.
It's very interesting because as a non-drinker, I will never understand the social pressure for "drinking". Never been interested in it never have. I suppose it also depends on the individual and its resistance to influences.
In the german speaking regions it's a huge part of the culture, as a kid you get some sips from your fathers beer, most teens start drinking with friends and a beer with your colleges after work is not a must but a nice way to just have a chat about whats going on, and of course at birthday parties or if you just visit a friend, the first thing they ask is: Do you want a beer?
It’s a way to relax yourself… you don’t stress over social interaction as much and it’s nice to know your drinking comrades are on the same wavelength, so both of you have let loose a little. It’s not much fun to be the only one drunk as you can feel embarrassed by the sober person’s presence.
@@cameronleach5902 Very true. I drink socially, only with friends that do drink, and not often. Maybe every 3-4 months on average. I'm also keenly aware of the damage drinking does to our health, but the pressure to drink is real, and so are the benefits of it with regards to connecting with people and breaking the ice, especially when one or both are a little awkward.
People like me from Indian subcontinent will nevef understand this 😅 After office hour we go straight to home..The boss will run before the employees though😂
In Japan, you're also forced to drink. Its getting better, but it's definitely still prominent. Koreans are louder. It's fun to drink with Japanese and Korean people when they want to be there. Company outings are often times only fun for some and not others.
What I noticed about drinking culture in Japan is they like to go out for a DRINK defo, but they tend to have food dishes at the same time. Whereas in UK people just go out for a DRINK. I think the food makes people less drunk, more in control and more sleepy in my opinion aha. The drinking culture in Japan makes more sense though all in all. I'd rather live somewhere where people pass out than starting fights and getting aggressive.
Same for The States. We usually just go out to drink, although I’ve never seen a fight break out. Where I would occasionally go, it’s lots of laughter and people singing (no karaoke machines).
Everything she says about Korea sounds just like what I saw of my Japanese roommate and friends in college! The drinking chants and games were definitely a thing. To my eyes at the time, it was unbelievably wild. That's what it looked like on the office-focused Japanese TV dramas then, too... but that was 20 years ago. Maybe Japan mellowed out a lot in the past couple of decades.
Japan's drinking culture is not as bad as people think. Drinking parties were common more than a decade ago. Statistics show that the average frequency of drinking parties in Japan is now about twice a year. because of the labor shortage in Japan today, no one wants to work for a black company that has frequent drinking parties. And the amount of alcohol consumption by the Japanese is decreasing year by year, and except for Muslim countries that have banned alcohol, Japan's current alcohol consumption is much lower than the rest of the world. Less than half the amount of alcohol consumed in the West and Korea. Therefore, the stereotype that many Japanese are alcoholics, as often seen on social media, is a stereotype. The reason why this stereotype still exists is probably because many foreign tourists visiting Japan come to Shinjuku's Golden Gai and Shibuya's drinking spots. Upon seeing such sights, foreigners assume "wow, Japanese drinking culture is so intense, most Japanese must be alcoholics". The Japanese who visit these places are basically all corrupted, and they do not represent the Japanese people.
True. Japan and Korea are actually quite different countries, but people, especially Westerners, think arr rook same. They just like to generalize about East Asians.
I taught English in Korea back in the late 90s, and I had never observed so many drunks vomiting in public. I counted 3 people one day. One guy hurled a red stream of puke in a bar. Frozen barf or street pizza is found outside bars. The blokes at Monty Python would have been impressed! 😅
Im from the U.S., and Ive never had alcohol, for the reason that Im just entirely uninterested in drinking. Most places here dont really have an in-your-face drinking culture like a lot of the world (unless youre a college kid), and its really seen as a personal choice. Even for me coming from a Catholic family, I never felt any pressure to drink at all, so hearing so many cultures around the world essentially forcing people to drink kinda pisses me off.
In Korea 2024, if your co-workers or seniors force you to drink, they can be reported for something like abuse or harassment. But plz cheer together and just sip a drop or pretend to put your lips on glass. No one will force you to drink.
Hell bro, Im not going to pretend Im a seasoned traveler, but man I gotta say when it comes to drinking, I gotta give it to my friends in Scotland! Those fuckers drink like the world is coming to an end! Specially during the Celtic- Ranger derby. Dude! That was awesome, yes intense, but the coolest most laid back humble people at those pubs before the match. I just couldnt keep up 😂
Same in China, it’s almost expected in work environments. It’s also why Sotheby’s record breaking alcohol auctions are always by Asian buyers who want to flex.
So honest question. I don’t drink, haven’t had a drink in 10 years. Later this year I have a business trip scheduled to go to Korea as one of our partner companies is there. Will they honor my need to not partake? Will they think I am being disrespectful when I only order a soda?
What good does alcohol do? Waste of money, causing health issues, higher chance to get into troubles, make you feel sick, and it does not even taste good. It is also considered as a sin in almost every religion. Love drinking yourself is cool, it’s your choice, but forcing others to drink is absolutely unacceptable.
In the Netherlands we drink for the culture rather than for the sake of getting drunk (however there are people who do that and get loud at parties, but I’m not sure if that’s cultural/typical for the Netherlands). Because alcohol is seen as cultural, many people start drinking at age 14/15
I feel like France is similar to Korea on that : I'm french and I don't drink, and almost everytime people try to convince me, and when I refuse they say I'm boring
That's what happens when you have some of the strictest drug laws in the world. People will just go as hard as they can with what they can, instead of doing things that could maybe get you to that same place but a bit safer and calmer
@@NoNumbersAtTheEnding But statistically speaking, both Korea and Japan have low numbers of actual alcoholics. I mean alcoholism, not drinking simply to appease your peers or bosses. When you NEED to drink every day just to feel normal and you're going through gallons of alcohol in a single week. Japan has a low number of alcoholics which I find fascinating.
Even the west has a alcohol problem. What are you talking about? I would say this stuff is universal. Drinking has been part of human culture for years even as far back as Ancient Rome and Greece.
@@NoNumbersAtTheEnding So its better if they become like the US and allow the drug laws to be more flexible? Clamer and safer you say, but just like drinking, you'll want to do harder stuff.
Watching this from Ireland 🇮🇪 Here you have to beat your manager in a potato peeling contest, a turf cutting contest, a sheep sheering contest, and then a physical "royale rumble" brawl involving the whole company. All while completely shitfaced drunk..... and that's just to get the job interview. Dont get me started on trying to get a promotion!!
Lived in Korea for a year. Was "introduced" to Soju the 1st week I was there. OB beer was a standard, daily. They had an Initiation rite of Green Been then Brown Been parties for your arrival then departure. I left Korea w/ a PhD in drinking y'all!
No one is forcing to drink nowadays. It was like 15 years ago she is talking. People usually get loud when drinking is right. Yakuza tattooed girls usually mean she has boyfriend or boyfriends who are doing something illegal business.
The passing out thing is in part probably due to the size of people, larger people can absorb more alcohol content with less effect. East Asians however are among the smallest people due to things like food insecurity and the food itself wasn’t calorie intense for most of human existence
Growing up with my crew in Hells kitchen nyc not drinking will be very very difficult and it wont be controlled exactly like Japan but all respect to them
I have to disagree a little, some Japanese salary man. Here in Dublin we're singing and they were loud and I know the difference between Korean and spoken Japanese.😅 But they were happy and loud it's ok so are Irish too 😊
One thing I've noticed about drinking in japan, the very first drink is a chug, never a sip, especially if its beer. They cheers, then the first drink finishes half the glass.
It's known that a large share of Koreans and Japanese have the kind of genetics that makes their alcohol metabolism very different compared to that of people in other countries. I've always wondered if it's a topic that people in Japan and Korea talk about. Is it something they take into account when they drink, or if it affects their decision to drink. And if the people are not aware of this, then why is that?
Korea is not for the faint of liver. I saw a guy (not Korean) in Korea passed out, snoring, and he'd thrown up all over himself. It was the most profound "thank God that's not me moment" I'd ever had lol
It's still like that in Japan. The difference is drinking with your normal co-workers or drinking with new people. Japan parties with friends or co-workers are often just like in Korea, with games and forced drinking...they just have more filter with people they feel a responsibility to "host".
The sickest I’ve ever been is drinking all night with my Korean brother in law. And I’m a Navy vet whose tore up bars around the world lol. Koreans are on another level. The end.
I think her opinion is partially correct but not valid at all. She has seen a very small and specific part of both cultures. Both drinking cultures are actually quite similar.
TH-camrs "interviewing" other TH-camrs. Why pretend like this is a random stranger on the street? Just introduce and plug the other TH-camr and have a discussion.
Perhaps he doesn't know and she saw him on the street and approached him? Does he plug her channel? I have seen the first part where she introduces herself as Korean and talks about speaking English in Korea V Japan, but really sounds like she was raised in the US.
Walking home at sunrise in Tokyo and seeing businessman casually passed out on the sidewalk was always wild to me.
Same in Sapporo.
No trains to go home. They know they will sleep in the street.
@@s.at1978they do at 5am
In Tokyo, I saw a business man getting in a cab at 2 am after throwing out just next to the vehicle. Amazing lmao
@@kerdart351 amazing lmao what how is that funny? are you viewing japan as some sort of circus or sth?
Rambunctious. Excellent word
100% Takashii had to google that word after this interview.
@@egolayer13 I googled calmer and Rumbunctious
Exuberant is another excellent word as w ll, lol 😁
@@とくめい-h5vI did google it too 😂😂 but when I heard her say it, I first thought about the word ‘boisterous’ so I figured it they might have similar meanings. They basically do
I dig the way she speaks. Makes her hotter.
In India if you don’t drink, then they will give you promotion 😂
The Indians say something wise. This is how it works...
Thats Us😂❤
Ahahah my Indian co worker even in Europe was a bit a shame other people from India would see him drink with us.
Plus you won't even get a job in a franchise owned by the government if you have a single tattoo on any part of your body. 😂
Classic India W
I lived long time in Korea and visited Japan twice until now.
I think japan is way louder in the bars/pubs. They are literally screaming, while koreans just talk loudly with rather a deepper voice. So for me its definitely more enjoyable in a korean bar.
Just my experience 😅
Why you drink 😅
I agree with Tokashi. They force you to drink. She says there a societal pressure to drink. 😅
That's just a way to say "forced to drink"
Bruh the name
Nobody is literally forced, but if you don't drink and have fun then there might be consequences of not getting promoted because you're not a "team player"
thats in the old days these days nobody forces you to drink
@@nomomania6827Wow that's messed up
i've lived in japan and visited korea and both places they really, really pressure you to drink in certain settings lol. i think it's just the expectation to go with the group. also in terms of getting rowdy, if you think japanese people are calm and controlled, go to a bonenkai haha
I think as foreigner they don't rly pressure you.
But if you are japanese, they do.
Wow, I'm Japanese in Germany and I had to learn how not to be 'drunk' or 'loud' in Japanese style when drinking. If she says Koreans are wilder, I need to visit and experience it once 😂 sounds like a lot of fun!
Not if youre sitting on the next table 😂 Koreans can get very loud
@@lenkadobranska1863 and if there are two tables of Korean men next to each other for long enough, someone will start a fight
It took me very long to realize that she is *heavily* tattooed in both Korean and Japanese standards
Why did that take you a long time to realize? You can see her tattoos very clearly. And it’s kinda obvious that those types of tattoos aren’t “common” in K/J.
@@user-dj9iu2et3rMaybe not “common” .. but, on a female ? Whether Korean or Japanese, both unusual & uncommon (at least when it comes to exposing the tattoos)
she's heavily tatted for everywhere, wdym?
Yes it’s not common and I think she is not afraid
Her sleeves are all up
Looks very cool
Pretty sure her tattoos are way over the top anywhere on earth. Pretty sure a lot of Koreans and Japanese would think she should be ashamed of herself.
After living in both places for a number of years, it is definitely more intense in Korea. Not to mention, so many factors can go into whether or not you get a job or promotion there. Even saw a few bar fights break out. Japan’s enkai and izakaya culture is milder on average compared to Korea. Not to mention more 24/7 places than what I have experienced in Tokyo.
Korea's drinking culture is changing with the MZ generation. Nowadays if you force someone to drink alcohol, you will be criticized.
+ But it is true that Korea is very tolerant of alcohol culture in many ways. The more conservative the company group, the more alcohol they have to drink. And some people think that drinking a lot together is a requisite to being friends.
그러게. 무슨 2~30년전 얘기하고 있네😅😅
문신보니 사회 생활도 안해봤을거 같은데
상사한테 욕만들어도 커뮤니티에 쫙퍼져서 다음날 뉴스에 나오는 피곤한 나라에서ㅋㅋㅋ
@@글루미갓데이what are you talking about? In my experience, people with tattoos tend to have lived MORE social lives as they are usually “looser” and care less about societal standards.
It seems like, in YOUR mind, a “social life” means working a 9-5 office job and going out to drink with coworkers after? Otherwise, I don’t understand your point. Maybe the translation was off.
@@user-dj9iu2et3rTranslation is indeed off. "Social life" actually does mean having a proper job in Korean.
@@글루미갓데이그정도는 아니고요.. 바뀌기 시작한건 10년 정도 되지않을까요 ㅎㅎ 그리고 인터뷰 하는 분 문신 멋있기만 한데, 그걸 사회생활이랑 엮는건 좀 아닌 것 같네요~
MZ?
It's the first time I'm seeing someone use the word "rambunctious "
Glad to increase my vocabulary from youtube!
Really?
Yeah I have only seen it used as a word given for freestyles hahaha
I too🙌😸😅
It's very interesting because as a non-drinker, I will never understand the social pressure for "drinking". Never been interested in it never have.
I suppose it also depends on the individual and its resistance to influences.
In the german speaking regions it's a huge part of the culture, as a kid you get some sips from your fathers beer, most teens start drinking with friends and a beer with your colleges after work is not a must but a nice way to just have a chat about whats going on, and of course at birthday parties or if you just visit a friend, the first thing they ask is: Do you want a beer?
It’s a way to relax yourself… you don’t stress over social interaction as much and it’s nice to know your drinking comrades are on the same wavelength, so both of you have let loose a little. It’s not much fun to be the only one drunk as you can feel embarrassed by the sober person’s presence.
@@cameronleach5902 Very true. I drink socially, only with friends that do drink, and not often. Maybe every 3-4 months on average. I'm also keenly aware of the damage drinking does to our health, but the pressure to drink is real, and so are the benefits of it with regards to connecting with people and breaking the ice, especially when one or both are a little awkward.
I live in Finland where drinking culture is very commonplace. Never touched alcohol though.
Same, its just never gave me pleasure, so choose to not drink.
I love her voice and the way she speaks I could hear her all day
People like me from Indian subcontinent will nevef understand this 😅 After office hour we go straight to home..The boss will run before the employees though😂
Asian people need alcohol in order to be honest with each other
In Japan, you're also forced to drink. Its getting better, but it's definitely still prominent.
Koreans are louder.
It's fun to drink with Japanese and Korean people when they want to be there. Company outings are often times only fun for some and not others.
What I noticed about drinking culture in Japan is they like to go out for a DRINK defo, but they tend to have food dishes at the same time. Whereas in UK people just go out for a DRINK. I think the food makes people less drunk, more in control and more sleepy in my opinion aha. The drinking culture in Japan makes more sense though all in all. I'd rather live somewhere where people pass out than starting fights and getting aggressive.
Same for The States. We usually just go out to drink, although I’ve never seen a fight break out. Where I would occasionally go, it’s lots of laughter and people singing (no karaoke machines).
I can't drink with no food!!! I always crave something greasy while drunk
Drinking culture in Korea is also to eat while drinking too.
Everything she says about Korea sounds just like what I saw of my Japanese roommate and friends in college! The drinking chants and games were definitely a thing. To my eyes at the time, it was unbelievably wild. That's what it looked like on the office-focused Japanese TV dramas then, too... but that was 20 years ago. Maybe Japan mellowed out a lot in the past couple of decades.
Maybe in Tokyo they aren't rambunctious, but in Osaka they definitely are.
Korean and Japanese people sound like my kind of people 😂😮❤
Japan's drinking culture is not as bad as people think. Drinking parties were common more than a decade ago. Statistics show that the average frequency of drinking parties in Japan is now about twice a year. because of the labor shortage in Japan today, no one wants to work for a black company that has frequent drinking parties. And the amount of alcohol consumption by the Japanese is decreasing year by year, and except for Muslim countries that have banned alcohol, Japan's current alcohol consumption is much lower than the rest of the world. Less than half the amount of alcohol consumed in the West and Korea. Therefore, the stereotype that many Japanese are alcoholics, as often seen on social media, is a stereotype. The reason why this stereotype still exists is probably because many foreign tourists visiting Japan come to Shinjuku's Golden Gai and Shibuya's drinking spots. Upon seeing such sights, foreigners assume "wow, Japanese drinking culture is so intense, most Japanese must be alcoholics". The Japanese who visit these places are basically all corrupted, and they do not represent the Japanese people.
True.
Japan and Korea are actually quite different countries, but people, especially Westerners, think arr rook same. They just like to generalize about East Asians.
Do you live in Japan? I did and drinking culture is insane. I'm Irish and it's 100x more intense.
So true
They have more of a binge drinking culture and less overall daily drinking.
@@AIIIAKS-vn4co arr rook? racist fuck
I taught English in Korea back in the late 90s, and I had never observed so many drunks vomiting in public. I counted 3 people one day. One guy hurled a red stream of puke in a bar. Frozen barf or street pizza is found outside bars. The blokes at Monty Python would have been impressed! 😅
Im from the U.S., and Ive never had alcohol, for the reason that Im just entirely uninterested in drinking. Most places here dont really have an in-your-face drinking culture like a lot of the world (unless youre a college kid), and its really seen as a personal choice. Even for me coming from a Catholic family, I never felt any pressure to drink at all, so hearing so many cultures around the world essentially forcing people to drink kinda pisses me off.
In Korea 2024, if your co-workers or seniors force you to drink, they can be reported for something like abuse or harassment. But plz cheer together and just sip a drop or pretend to put your lips on glass. No one will force you to drink.
Chants not chance. Great interview by the way.
Hell bro, Im not going to pretend Im a seasoned traveler, but man I gotta say when it comes to drinking, I gotta give it to my friends in Scotland! Those fuckers drink like the world is coming to an end! Specially during the Celtic- Ranger derby. Dude! That was awesome, yes intense, but the coolest most laid back humble people at those pubs before the match. I just couldnt keep up 😂
I’d be curious to know more about her experience in Japan with so many visible tattoos.
Same in China, it’s almost expected in work environments. It’s also why Sotheby’s record breaking alcohol auctions are always by Asian buyers who want to flex.
So honest question. I don’t drink, haven’t had a drink in 10 years. Later this year I have a business trip scheduled to go to Korea as one of our partner companies is there.
Will they honor my need to not partake? Will they think I am being disrespectful when I only order a soda?
I do not think so.
What good does alcohol do? Waste of money, causing health issues, higher chance to get into troubles, make you feel sick, and it does not even taste good. It is also considered as a sin in almost every religion.
Love drinking yourself is cool, it’s your choice, but forcing others to drink is absolutely unacceptable.
Wow she is gorgeous.
You should try some of the soju pizzas on the morning streets of Seoul. Enjoy!
I love Miyashita Park! It’s the mall in the background
Thanks. Bless you
In the Netherlands we drink for the culture rather than for the sake of getting drunk (however there are people who do that and get loud at parties, but I’m not sure if that’s cultural/typical for the Netherlands). Because alcohol is seen as cultural, many people start drinking at age 14/15
I had some of the best times in my life in Korea! Some I can’t remember! 😂
I feel like France is similar to Korea on that : I'm french and I don't drink, and almost everytime people try to convince me, and when I refuse they say I'm boring
Both countries have an alcohol problem it's insane .
That's what happens when you have some of the strictest drug laws in the world. People will just go as hard as they can with what they can, instead of doing things that could maybe get you to that same place but a bit safer and calmer
@@NoNumbersAtTheEnding But statistically speaking, both Korea and Japan have low numbers of actual alcoholics. I mean alcoholism, not drinking simply to appease your peers or bosses. When you NEED to drink every day just to feel normal and you're going through gallons of alcohol in a single week. Japan has a low number of alcoholics which I find fascinating.
@@wombat5252interesting data.
Even the west has a alcohol problem. What are you talking about? I would say this stuff is universal. Drinking has been part of human culture for years even as far back as Ancient Rome and Greece.
@@NoNumbersAtTheEnding So its better if they become like the US and allow the drug laws to be more flexible? Clamer and safer you say, but just like drinking, you'll want to do harder stuff.
I love her tattoos
She is hiding so how could you see🙂 creep
🤨Fr, you can barely see them
Nothing more unattractive than tattoos on a women
@@a9f9ytyou can see her arms. so hostile 😂
I don't like black boring tatoos. Ugly
It sounds like paradise
I'd love a Korean to meet a Kenyan for a conversation about drinking.
Japan is for an introvert person like me, love JAPAN 🙏🏻🪷🇮🇳🇯🇵🪷🙏🏻
I worked in japan, went out with collegues and don't drink. Never felt pressure
Same in Russia. There's definitely pressure to drink.
Russian drinking problems are their owns things considering that the government essentially forced its citizens into alcoholism for hundreds of years
Yeh the fact that Korea has so many drinking games that is played on non-drinking reality shows, that makes sense 😂
Japan drinking culture suits me.😊
Where s the place ? Looks incredible.
Australia definitely has a bit of drinking pressure too
Watching this from Ireland 🇮🇪 Here you have to beat your manager in a potato peeling contest, a turf cutting contest, a sheep sheering contest, and then a physical "royale rumble" brawl involving the whole company. All while completely shitfaced drunk..... and that's just to get the job interview. Dont get me started on trying to get a promotion!!
I don't drink, cose make distance with your higher self!
And I've learned with ancient Mongolians culture!
I love your tattoos❤
Lived in Korea for a year. Was "introduced" to Soju the 1st week I was there. OB beer was a standard, daily. They had an Initiation rite of Green Been then Brown Been parties for your arrival then departure. I left Korea w/ a PhD in drinking y'all!
When you said phD i wasn't expecting "drinking" 😂
She chooses her words so carefully omg
She's a cool Asian girl
She is American.
@@brucef310 Asian Americans exist.
Clearly not raised in Asia from her accent. Only a gangster in Asia would have tattoos, and she isn't gangsta 😅
@@brucef310you don’t know the difference between race and nationality do you? 😂 that’s embarrassing
@@onesolopolo4194 English is also my third language so I don't understand at the same level as a native speaker.
She's so pretty.
Wait, that’s the girl who does interviews in @mojiverse ! ❤
No one is forcing to drink nowadays. It was like 15 years ago she is talking. People usually get loud when drinking is right. Yakuza tattooed girls usually mean she has boyfriend or boyfriends who are doing something illegal business.
You are a good interviewer
You oh attention yo the people
U interview 👍🏿
True, my bro worked with koreans and like it or not he had to drink when going to dinner with them
Lived in Korea for 2 years and she aint lying some of the best nights i cant remember 🥴
The passing out thing is in part probably due to the size of people, larger people can absorb more alcohol content with less effect. East Asians however are among the smallest people due to things like food insecurity and the food itself wasn’t calorie intense for most of human existence
I’m usually not a tattoo person, but her arms look so cool to me.
Flashbacks to camping with the girls from Korea at my uni and thinking, "Wow, they just fit right into Wisconsin."
It used to be like that in Japan
So Japan improved? How is that possible nowadays?
Growing up with my crew in Hells kitchen nyc not drinking will be very very difficult and it wont be controlled exactly like Japan but all respect to them
Smart interview ❤
I have to disagree a little, some Japanese salary man. Here in Dublin we're singing and they were loud and I know the difference between Korean and spoken Japanese.😅
But they were happy and loud it's ok so are Irish too 😊
One thing I've noticed about drinking in japan, the very first drink is a chug, never a sip, especially if its beer. They cheers, then the first drink finishes half the glass.
(laughs in American) "wild" she says
Her spoken English is very good!😮Does she a English native speaker?
learnt a new word today "rambunctious "
It's known that a large share of Koreans and Japanese have the kind of genetics that makes their alcohol metabolism very different compared to that of people in other countries. I've always wondered if it's a topic that people in Japan and Korea talk about. Is it something they take into account when they drink, or if it affects their decision to drink. And if the people are not aware of this, then why is that?
Every kdrama I watch there's alcohol in every single episode. What a public health problem.
I remember being at an izakaya in Tokyo and yelling, "Would you guys shut the hell up!!!" Nobody heard me...
😂💀
There is a tone of young people almost drunk on sidewalk and in chillin in groups at night through early morning when I was in shibuya
her tattoos are so coollllll
I never met a korean going crazy with drinks. Sounds like a fun drinking culture
The best countries have a good drinking culture 🎉
Very informative
Bruh koreans did force me to drink but this was a party in europe
Korea: Drinking for extroverts
Japan: Drinking for introverts
❤ குடிபோதை நல்ல வாழ்வில், கேடுகளை விளைவிக்கும் 🎉
❤ வாழ்க ஜப்பான் ❤
Her tattoos are beautiful 😍
Someone hire this woman for a media job... she's good.
What a beautiful girl.
Her English is very strong
Soju. You can DOOOOIT!
Proverbs 20:1 "Wine is a mocker, strong drink is raging: and whoever is deceived thereby is not wise."
Korea is like Poland. Similar history and families stuff and drinking stuff
Come to south africa 🇿🇦 😂😂😂😂😂
Korea is not for the faint of liver. I saw a guy (not Korean) in Korea passed out, snoring, and he'd thrown up all over himself. It was the most profound "thank God that's not me moment" I'd ever had lol
"I wouldn't say force but there's unspoken/spoken societal pressure to drink" What do you think forcing is, honey!!? 😂
Hola hermano japonés a mi me parecen interesante las orientales Fernando de San Luis argentina❤
Everytime I see this building, I miss the park
She is so beautiful. Geez.. ❤
She replied to a comment a while back asking me questions and I can’t find her comment anymore, as in it got lost in my history 😢. Anyone know her @?
It's still like that in Japan. The difference is drinking with your normal co-workers or drinking with new people. Japan parties with friends or co-workers are often just like in Korea, with games and forced drinking...they just have more filter with people they feel a responsibility to "host".
The world’s never been so connecte
The sickest I’ve ever been is drinking all night with my Korean brother in law. And I’m a Navy vet whose tore up bars around the world lol. Koreans are on another level. The end.
I think her opinion is partially correct but not valid at all. She has seen a very small and specific part of both cultures. Both drinking cultures are actually quite similar.
Someone hasn't flirted with a Korean MARINE!
TH-camrs "interviewing" other TH-camrs. Why pretend like this is a random stranger on the street? Just introduce and plug the other TH-camr and have a discussion.
exactly.. and the funny part is they copy each other! 😂
Perhaps he doesn't know and she saw him on the street and approached him?
Does he plug her channel?
I have seen the first part where she introduces herself as Korean and talks about speaking English in Korea V Japan, but really sounds like she was raised in the US.
@@Cheepchipsable Clearly you haven't been paying attention if you think all these TH-camrs are meeting each other by chance. It happens constantly.
What's her channel name?
@@ShiningBlastoise thanks!