Great video guys. To go there into the community is truly what travel is all about. You guys do that well in every way. What a joy to see you meet up with Niko's 92 year old grandmother. Just a slice of life in Beijing , a wonderful slice. Change is hard. Hopefully , some traditions remain. Sending you much love❤❤ from Harriet, Jim and Yuki Happy Holidays ! 🎄
What an "intimate" visit to a Hutong. It's as if we are walking and visiting with you. Merci Matt and Julia for another inside view of Beijing and China. Fascinating! What a privilege to have a "tour" inside Niko's grandmother's home. Thanks for the visit!
Wow! What an interesting video! It’s such a blessing that grandma is so able bodied and living at her home! I love that he shares all his childhood memories with us
Thank you for sharing this adventure. I love that they kept the homes and his gran looks amazing for 92. Thank you for giving us all a bit of the history, the life that many lived that is slowly changing. Yet, they kept these awesome homes for historic reasons. Thank you! Have an awesome weekend and stay warm! Have an amazing holiday.
Thank you both for the Tour, you brought back many memories of when i would visit my Grandma, in Ireland who lived in a small village and cooked on the fireplace and washed clothes using a dolly in a wooden tub, and dry them using a wringer. My gran would place the towels and such into it, and i would turn the handle, as the two rollers met together to squeeze the water out, so it wouldn't take so long to dry them, in the summer we had are baths outside in a tin bath, but in winter we brought it in by the fire. And i would walk down to the end of the road with two Pails (buckets) to get water from the hand pump. Those were the days my friends. Ah reminds me of song we used to sing.
I just found you guys a couple months ago....I have so much to go back and watch! I appreciate the respect you show to the people and places you film. You are showing us places that we will never be able to go. After watching this episode I am reminded of the episode when Julia went to visit her grandmother and how important my grandma was as well! The similarities in all our lives are comforting and your style of filming allows time for us to connect with people we would never have known:) Thanks form California!
Don’t you just love how the Chinese look after their elderly parents. You don’t see that very much in our country. Not to that extent at least. This was a fascinating look into old China. I wonder how many of our modern buildings will have such appeal in a hundred years or more. Who knows. I’m watching so much about China lately and starting to love it so much. The food the culture the people are all amazing to me. I’m so glad the country has opened up so we can experience it all as well. Thanks guys for taking us along. ❤😘
Wow, what beautiful experience. I am grateful you take us all to experience little of what life used to be twenty-five years ago. What an amazing place. There is no comparison with the west. I am from Peru, and we still maintain our traditions here in the old USA. We take care of our older folk. Love the video. Take care.Thanks 😊
The Chinese seem to be very adaptable to change but don't forget their family roots. Its interesting that the elderly and children are very well looked after by their extended families even when they live long distances apart. Niko said the secret to his Grandmothers long life was lack of stress - all credit to his family for creating that environment for her, even though her home lacks some modern amenities.
On seeing these old houses, it always come with reminiscence of the past, its brillance, recaps the childhood lives there and the departure of grand parents, etc. All interweaving a net of happiness and sadness. It rewrites why we ought to treasure our relationship with who raised us up, and most important of all, not to lose it but treats it as a fortune inherited. If these old buildings could remind you of anything, treat it is as a reward of your life with a value. Sad to say but dare to say.❤
Hutong is one of the cultural reservation of Beijing. Lots of district were torn down for preparation of the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. It's a bitter and sweet of evolution of an old traditional city into a modern one. However, as Chinese people recognize cultural traditions are treasure they will try to preserve them. Matt and Julia must really love China to be concern about it.
I live in Shenzhen, but back in my hometown, about a decade ago, there were some really really old residential houses just like Beijing's Hutong, but much older, built in Qing Dynasty, conditions were really bad for living there as a modern citizen, no room for private toilet, no room for air-con, no way to replace the dead old water & electricity supply, and very easy to get a fire or even crumbling down. So the government wanted to build a whole new block full of high rise residential buildings, a mall and a park-plaza for them, on one hand people get to live more proper and safe, on the other hand those were heritage buildings, so reinforcing and redecorating them for tourism and cultural teaching is a good idea, and people who lived there all were happy and agreed to move out because they don't need to pay a cent for all these. Then drama started, we got some people on the internet saying that this kind of old buildings should be kept as what they had always been and it was good to have people living in it, while themselves were living in modern ones, enjoying AC in the summer, trolling around with their smartphones had WIFI connected on their comfort sofas and didn't need to worry about whether their houses would be crushed by a typhoon in the next day.
Change, whether good or bad, always makes some happy and others not. Interesting how we, as humans, embrace certain types of change with open arms, and others with contempt.
@@MattandJuliaWho is unhappy when the government tries to provide better living conditions for hutong residents? Your argument is difficult to understand!!
@@chybk007 I think they both need to look into the prices of these Hutongs to realize the people living there are sitting on a fair bit of value lol. Additionally it seems Westerners love to travel to global south countries to romanticize a way of life they themselves would never want. Expressing faux “concern” to push their brand of soft imperialism
It's pretty deep-seated in their DNA. Go all over the world and project their own values on how others ought to live their lives to please these people. One way or another, they'll find something to pick on. When you see a guy sporting a ponytail or some silly bun in 2024, you're usually half right to be suspicious.
The oldest Hutongs were built in the Yuan Dynasty. The rest were built in the Ming and Qing dynasties. I don't see how Shenzhen's historic streets are older than hutongs...
Have you read, The Last Days of Old Beijing by Michael Meyer? He talks about this issue back in 2008. He was a peace corp volunteer , now at a college in the States. Excellent read.
It is a very interesting video! I had read about the hutongs in National Geographic years ago. So I found this video to feel as if I was actually visiting there! Thank you for sharing!
Lots of ruddown Hutongs are fun to visit but not that much for living. They lack basic infrastructure such as plumbing and public spaces. Sometimes they even still need to rely on communal bathrooms.
“Pushed aside” is a weird label to put on progress and improved standard of living. The romantic concept of china keeps you from appreciating the effort by the Chinese people to look forward and improve the lives of the residents. Run down buildings which are mostly unsafe and unfit to live in don’t feed people, no matter how sentimental.
Yes foreigners need to keep their orientalist and romanticized view of China (and other Asian countries) in check. What you view as romantic and “authentic” may not be what the actual people on the ground desire nor is it practical for the modern living standards.
It’s so very hard to imagine that people live like this while the majority of us live in luxury. Thanks for always showing us the different aspects of where you are in the world. It is indeed fascinating. Stay safe. ❤️❤️
Do you know how much these houses are worth per unit? Twenty million dollars per set! They are not unable to live a luxurious life, they just like simplicity.
From what I heard, these people were offered to move to modern apartments but most elderly people chose to stay there since it’s the world they have known all their lives. Some families also choose to live there since the best public schools are located in the central Beijing district. It’s quite difficult to modernize such medieval buildings in narrow alleys but for sure it has advantages for people who choose to live there.
I so appreciate getting to see the remnants of the old systems. Imagine. Housing provided to your family without charge for as long as you want to stay! I'm not sure the tradeoff of being strapped with debt and forced to work too many hours for too little pay to have all of the modern conveniences of the west, and in recent times, it seems, the whole world, is worth it.
What a wonderful way of living. Everyone looking after each other is as it should be. The Hutongs are a good thing so let's hope they don't disappear completely.
The gated condo communities are now the modern day equivalents of the Hutongs ! Most tourists don't know that a Hutong today costs over $1.5+ million usd !
In the past, people used coal for heating, which produced thick smoke in the winter. Now they can’t burn coal anymore and basically use electricity instead.
Quite fascinating being able to see how ppl live in Beijing & not just the touristy places. Gives one a real feel for the REAL Beijing 😊. Thank u Matt & Julia & a special thanks to ur friend & his Grandmother for allowing us a peek into her world ❤️🥰
I could be way off (just started learning mandarin, lol) but was the grandma saying kě'ài? That you're cute? But also sounded like it had 'le' after it so maybe not. 😂
Its so nice to see you both became patient, respectful, interested and sometimes quiet nearly whispering when you share time and space with people who invited you - you show interest and respect ..... and thats a sign of well education and civilisation. That´s the difference between the normal european and the migrant muslims over here - they allways have to put themselves in the middle of everything, whether is it appropriate or not .... mostly not but they don´t care. They even cannot recognize their misbehaviour. At the moment china isn´t confrontated with them, but i ask myself how it will react when they comming for china. I assume they will have contact with the police the first day they arrive - and after a while the chinese government will react in contrast to our government. Time will tell ..... but the most of my assumptions came true till now.
Filial piety in China society is one culture westerners could never understand. Younger generations prioritize self instead of elderly family is a way of life for westerners.
Take a visit to Ghana, India, Brazil, South Africa, Somalia, Bangladesh....and so many more places to see poverty that will make your heart sink. Absolutely not "unimaginable poverty" where Niko's grandmother lives in my humble opinion.
@@QuintaJoryal this “horrible country” lifted 800 million of its people out of poverty whilst the collective West with their invasions, proxy wars, and regime changes not only killed entire generations but put at least that many into poverty. The people living in their multi million dollar Hutongs are there to live their lives, not for misery-porn addicts to project the horrors of western society onto them.
聽你在胡說八道...多的美得令人驚豔的自然景色....它們被維護得非常好.... Nonsense...so many stunning natural scenery...they are very well maintained by the local governments and the people .....
This was an incredibly interesting video to film! 😍Hope you enjoyed it! 🙌🏼
*PROVERTY = CHINA PROVERTY PROVERTY PROVERTY*
*TAIWAN #1*
Great video guys. To go there into the community is truly what travel is all about. You guys do that well in every way. What a joy to see you meet up with Niko's 92 year old grandmother.
Just a slice of life in Beijing , a wonderful slice. Change is hard. Hopefully , some traditions remain. Sending you much love❤❤ from Harriet, Jim and Yuki Happy Holidays ! 🎄
What an "intimate" visit to a Hutong. It's as if we are walking and visiting with you. Merci Matt and Julia for another inside view of Beijing and China. Fascinating! What a privilege to have a "tour" inside Niko's grandmother's home. Thanks for the visit!
I so enjoyed seeing the Hutongs and what a sweet lady his grandmother is. This was a great video.
Wow! What an interesting video! It’s such a blessing that grandma is so able bodied and living at her home! I love that he shares all his childhood memories with us
Thank you Niko, your kindness and honesty produced a wonderful episode.
Thank you for sharing this adventure. I love that they kept the homes and his gran looks amazing for 92. Thank you for giving us all a bit of the history, the life that many lived that is slowly changing. Yet, they kept these awesome homes for historic reasons. Thank you! Have an awesome weekend and stay warm! Have an amazing holiday.
Thank you both for the Tour, you brought back many memories of when i would visit my Grandma, in Ireland who lived in a small village and cooked on the fireplace and washed clothes using a dolly in a wooden tub, and dry them using a wringer. My gran would place the towels and such into it, and i would turn the handle, as the two rollers met together to squeeze the water out, so it wouldn't take so long to dry them, in the summer we had are baths outside in a tin bath, but in winter we brought it in by the fire. And i would walk down to the end of the road with two Pails (buckets) to get water from the hand pump. Those were the days my friends. Ah reminds me of song we used to sing.
I just found you guys a couple months ago....I have so much to go back and watch! I appreciate the respect you show to the people and places you film. You are showing us places that we will never be able to go. After watching this episode I am reminded of the episode when Julia went to visit her grandmother and how important my grandma was as well! The similarities in all our lives are comforting and your style of filming allows time for us to connect with people we would never have known:) Thanks form California!
Thank you so much, really appreciate it! 🥰 Really glad you found our channel! ❤️
@@MattandJulia And see what I mean..the connection! I am drinking coffee in the US talking to you in China!! At the same moment! Thanks!
Don’t you just love how the Chinese look after their elderly parents. You don’t see that very much in our country. Not to that extent at least. This was a fascinating look into old China. I wonder how many of our modern buildings will have such appeal in a hundred years or more. Who knows. I’m watching so much about China lately and starting to love it so much. The food the culture the people are all amazing to me. I’m so glad the country has opened up so we can experience it all as well. Thanks guys for taking us along. ❤😘
Wow, what beautiful experience. I am grateful you take us all to experience little of what life used to be twenty-five years ago. What an amazing place. There is no comparison with the west. I am from Peru, and we still maintain our traditions here in the old USA. We take care of our older folk. Love the video. Take care.Thanks 😊
Thanks for the insight interesting how all families over the world have a different view in life.
So glad you enjoyed it Donovan ❤️🙌🏼
Thank you friends for the interesting video. Very nice.
What an amazing experience. I did laugh when you were both whispering 😂. You always seem to find the best places to eat! ❤❤
The Chinese seem to be very adaptable to change but don't forget their family roots.
Its interesting that the elderly and children are very well looked after by their extended families even when they live long distances apart.
Niko said the secret to his Grandmothers long life was lack of stress - all credit to his family for creating that environment for her, even though her home lacks some modern amenities.
On seeing these old houses, it always come with reminiscence of the past, its brillance, recaps the childhood lives there and the departure of grand parents, etc. All interweaving a net of happiness and sadness. It rewrites why we ought to treasure our relationship with who raised us up, and most important of all, not to lose it but treats it as a fortune inherited. If these old buildings could remind you of anything, treat it is as a reward of your life with a value. Sad to say but dare to say.❤
This was so wonderful. Niko seems very kind. ❤
Your videos are so interesting and always inspiring! ❤
Hutong is one of the cultural reservation of Beijing. Lots of district were torn down for preparation of the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. It's a bitter and sweet of evolution of an old traditional city into a modern one. However, as Chinese people recognize cultural traditions are treasure they will try to preserve them.
Matt and Julia must really love China to be concern about it.
I live in Shenzhen, but back in my hometown, about a decade ago, there were some really really old residential houses just like Beijing's Hutong, but much older, built in Qing Dynasty, conditions were really bad for living there as a modern citizen, no room for private toilet, no room for air-con, no way to replace the dead old water & electricity supply, and very easy to get a fire or even crumbling down. So the government wanted to build a whole new block full of high rise residential buildings, a mall and a park-plaza for them, on one hand people get to live more proper and safe, on the other hand those were heritage buildings, so reinforcing and redecorating them for tourism and cultural teaching is a good idea, and people who lived there all were happy and agreed to move out because they don't need to pay a cent for all these. Then drama started, we got some people on the internet saying that this kind of old buildings should be kept as what they had always been and it was good to have people living in it, while themselves were living in modern ones, enjoying AC in the summer, trolling around with their smartphones had WIFI connected on their comfort sofas and didn't need to worry about whether their houses would be crushed by a typhoon in the next day.
Change, whether good or bad, always makes some happy and others not. Interesting how we, as humans, embrace certain types of change with open arms, and others with contempt.
@@MattandJuliaWho is unhappy when the government tries to provide better living conditions for hutong residents? Your argument is difficult to understand!!
@@chybk007 I think they both need to look into the prices of these Hutongs to realize the people living there are sitting on a fair bit of value lol. Additionally it seems Westerners love to travel to global south countries to romanticize a way of life they themselves would never want. Expressing faux “concern” to push their brand of soft imperialism
It's pretty deep-seated in their DNA. Go all over the world and project their own values on how others ought to live their lives to please these people. One way or another, they'll find something to pick on. When you see a guy sporting a ponytail or some silly bun in 2024, you're usually half right to be suspicious.
The oldest Hutongs were built in the Yuan Dynasty. The rest were built in the Ming and Qing dynasties. I don't see how Shenzhen's historic streets are older than hutongs...
Have you read, The Last Days of Old Beijing by Michael Meyer? He talks about this issue back in 2008. He was a peace corp volunteer , now at a college in the States. Excellent read.
US NGO is a color revolution machine...
Fascinating insights.. Thanks
🙌🏼🙌🏼🙌🏼❤️
I like visiting the Hutong in Beijing. Hope they will be preserved and enjoyed by people all over the World!
Love the spirit thank you.
It is a very interesting video! I had read about the hutongs in National Geographic years ago. So I found this video to feel as if I was actually visiting there! Thank you for sharing!
Fascinating glimpse into The Hutong - I thought they'd all been cleared. Great Vlog guys
Lots of ruddown Hutongs are fun to visit but not that much for living. They lack basic infrastructure such as plumbing and public spaces. Sometimes they even still need to rely on communal bathrooms.
For sure, it is a tight squeeze with so many people in one building and only a select number of communal bathrooms ❤️
“Pushed aside” is a weird label to put on progress and improved standard of living. The romantic concept of china keeps you from appreciating the effort by the Chinese people to look forward and improve the lives of the residents. Run down buildings which are mostly unsafe and unfit to live in don’t feed people, no matter how sentimental.
Yes foreigners need to keep their orientalist and romanticized view of China (and other Asian countries) in check. What you view as romantic and “authentic” may not be what the actual people on the ground desire nor is it practical for the modern living standards.
I stopped watching at that point - "pushed aside" - very bbc : (
Loved the video ❤
Enjoyed this video very much!! Thank you❤❤❤❤ I love to see different cultures!!❤❤❤❤❤
Balance is big issue for to keep old Hutong and prove local people life
Hutong is Landed Property you know ?😊 Wonderful video. Greetings from S'pore 🍻 干杯 !!!
It’s so very hard to imagine that people live like this while the majority of us live in luxury. Thanks for always showing us the different aspects of where you are in the world. It is indeed fascinating. Stay safe. ❤️❤️
Do you know how much these houses are worth per unit? Twenty million dollars per set! They are not unable to live a luxurious life, they just like simplicity.
From what I heard, these people were offered to move to modern apartments but most elderly people chose to stay there since it’s the world they have known all their lives. Some families also choose to live there since the best public schools are located in the central Beijing district. It’s quite difficult to modernize such medieval buildings in narrow alleys but for sure it has advantages for people who choose to live there.
I really enjoyed meeting Niko and his family. That was so very kind of him to invite us all into his grandmother’s home.
I so appreciate getting to see the remnants of the old systems. Imagine. Housing provided to your family without charge for as long as you want to stay! I'm not sure the tradeoff of being strapped with debt and forced to work too many hours for too little pay to have all of the modern conveniences of the west, and in recent times, it seems, the whole world, is worth it.
What a wonderful way of living. Everyone looking after each other is as it should be. The Hutongs are a good thing so let's hope they don't disappear completely.
Nice video,
Like it
Thank you 😌❤️
Goes to say that we are not so different. Thank you for the tour!
The gated condo communities are now the modern day equivalents of the Hutongs !
Most tourists don't know that a Hutong today costs over $1.5+ million usd !
In the past, people used coal for heating, which produced thick smoke in the winter. Now they can’t burn coal anymore and basically use electricity instead.
Beautiful ❤️
Quite fascinating being able to see how ppl live in Beijing & not just the touristy places. Gives one a real feel for the REAL Beijing 😊. Thank u Matt & Julia & a special thanks to ur friend & his Grandmother for allowing us a peek into her world ❤️🥰
I could be way off (just started learning mandarin, lol) but was the grandma saying kě'ài? That you're cute? But also sounded like it had 'le' after it so maybe not. 😂
3:35 six restaurants, not steak
Thank you for the clarification 👍🏻
The grandmother was asking if something was open and for you guys to go and sit 11:22
Its so nice to see you both became patient, respectful, interested and sometimes quiet nearly whispering when you share time and space with people who invited you - you show interest and respect ..... and thats a sign of well education and civilisation. That´s the difference between the normal european and the migrant muslims over here - they allways have to put themselves in the middle of everything, whether is it appropriate or not .... mostly not but they don´t care. They even cannot recognize their misbehaviour.
At the moment china isn´t confrontated with them, but i ask myself how it will react when they comming for china. I assume they will have contact with the police the first day they arrive - and after a while the chinese government will react in contrast to our government. Time will tell ..... but the most of my assumptions came true till now.
That’s why the most people live hutong want to government Demolition old house to prove their life
nice..
🙌🏼❤️
Filial piety in China society is one culture westerners could never understand. Younger generations prioritize self instead of elderly family is a way of life for westerners.
Try Lanzhou hand pulled noodles and sushi
Thanks! Sushi, from Lanzhou? 😅
@ no sushi is popular in China
@ and try pizza
欢迎你们到广东玩,广州 深圳 珠海
We would love to ❤️
Yuan is pronounced "yuen" single syllable
Thanks 😌
Your wife should be model she is Beautiful
Unimaginable poverty!
Do you know how much these houses are worth per unit? Twenty million dollars per set! You are too ignorant!
Take a visit to Ghana, India, Brazil, South Africa, Somalia, Bangladesh....and so many more places to see poverty that will make your heart sink. Absolutely not "unimaginable poverty" where Niko's grandmother lives in my humble opinion.
This horrible country destroyed so much of its natural treasures. Such a boring mentality
@@QuintaJoryal this “horrible country” lifted 800 million of its people out of poverty whilst the collective West with their invasions, proxy wars, and regime changes not only killed entire generations but put at least that many into poverty. The people living in their multi million dollar Hutongs are there to live their lives, not for misery-porn addicts to project the horrors of western society onto them.
聽你在胡說八道...多的美得令人驚豔的自然景色....它們被維護得非常好....
Nonsense...so many stunning natural scenery...they are very well maintained by the local governments and the people .....
哇塞 如果这个房产是这位兄弟的 至少值一千多万美元吧