@@theynotcatchingamongusis it really that bad there? My grandma lives in north Miami and I’ve never had that problem visiting her. She’s just north of Palm beach and we’ve never had a problem with only being English speakers 🤷♂️
I remember going to Miami from Latin America all excited to be able to use my English skills for once, just to find out that everyone there speaks Spanish with the thickest Cuban / Colombian accent you're going to ever hear.
As a white American born in Miami, i had a decision to make in 2016. I could continue to not speak spanish and eventually resent my city and move, or i could engulf myself in spanish and really learn the language leading me to love my city even more. 7 years later i am fluent and probably speak spanish 35-40% of the time. Although Miami has its flaws like any other city, i will live no where else and my kids will be bilingual from Miami as well.
Historical fact: the entire FLORIDA state was a Spanish colony. Saint Augustin, FL is the oldest town in the USA, making SPANISH the FIRST European language spoken in the US.
Historical Fact: Spain lost and every country they founded is a cleptocratic one party state that is doomed to fail from the start. we might as well make a giant pit along the border.
In Argentina, everyone who is upper middle class (and higher) has been at least once to Florida. Its very very common here for people to go to Miami, do some shopping and go to the beach, and then go to Orlando to all the theme parks (Disney World, Universal, etc). Sometimes they also go on a cruise too. Some people only go once in their life, but many do it regularly, maybe once every one or two years. Also, a lot of people have bank accounts in the US, usually through Miami, because of how unstable everything is in Argentina. And the most wealthy Argentinians, usually celebrities or business owners, own houses or condos there and live seasonally between Miami and Argentina. The video was spot on, most people choose Miami because number one, they know everyone speaks Spanish and so they feel more comfortable traveling there and being able to communicate themselves flawlessly. And number 2, the weather. The weather in Argentina is shit, and we have terrible beaches. People love the Florida weather. Also, it has become a sort of aspirational thing. All the rich and famous from here love Miami, thus going to Miami makes you cool. That’s more like the nouveau rich tho. There’s a complete different group of wealthy Argentinians who LOVE Europe and they go there all the time.
@@kaiserteddie9564 Argentina is weird, all of latam is like it to a degree, but culturally there’s a ton of self hatred towards Latin America as a whole by everyone middle class and above.
Yes it's like the closest thing to a capitalist liberal Hispanic nation, most of latin America and Spain are quite leftist social-democratic countries.
I’m a Russian-Texan who learned Spanish through working in construction and skilled trades, moved to Miami to be the maintenance and renovation director for a real estate company and lo and behold felt right at home surrounded by Russians and Spanish speakers again lol. I feel like a solid 60-70% of clients, tenants, contractors, and employees I work with every day speak either Spanish or Russian
I know, it's complicated, but Americans also have "invaded" latín American towns and cities, as Acapulco or Punta Cana. Neighborhoods in the centers of our main cities, forcing gentrification and making people who was born in those areas to move. I'm not saying that is good or even that is bad. It's happening in both sides, for different reasons, but is happening...at the end is normal to happen, I accept American living in my country, cabarete for example, a town in the beach in the north part of DR is full of immigrants from the us and Europe, for me is not a problem if they respect the locals and pay their taxes. I'm not trying to convince you that you should be happy with the Florida situation, but to see the whole picture. Illegal immigrants should be deported, of course, but once you are legal you are protected by the law, winning rights and also acquiring responsibilities. Not only the US is made by immigrants, also the whole Latin America continent, so, since our foundation this is happening.@@MA-cs2ty
@@MA-cs2ty That's too bad. You're going to have to assimilate and learn to speak Spanish, or Portuguese if you're going to do business with Brazilians.
@@carlosmante Let me guess, judging by your statement that Brazil is "Hispanic", I guess it's safe to say that you're an American who doesn't know much.
Interesting Miami facts: Miami was named after the Miami River, derived from Mayaimi, the historic name of Lake Okeechobee and the Native Americans who lived around it. Mayaimi means "big water". The roosters found in South Florida like in Miami and Key West are descendants of Cuban ones bred for fighting. Doing that isn't legal in the US anymore, hence why a lot were released and now roam the region. Little Havana has big rooster statues to honor these Cuban roosters, installed back in 2002 when there was a craze to put animal sculptures up in US cities. They're based on a model sculpted by Tony Lopez who had a pet rooster named Pepe who followed him around. Miami Beach holds the largest collection of Art Deco buildings in the world, and Miami Beach's embrace of Art Deco was a perfect storm of circumstances. The city needed buildings to accommodate all the people (their population inflated to roughly 28,000 by 1940), it had the space to do so, and Art Deco was the style at the time of the 1930s and 1940s. Dozens of architects, like Albert Anis, L. Murray Dixon, and Henry Hohauser, took their talents to South Beach. The Tequesta tribe occupied the Miami area for around 2,000 years before contact with Europeans. A village of hundreds of people, dating to 500 to 600 BCE, was located at the mouth of the Miami River. It is believed that the entire tribe migrated to Cuba by the mid-1700s. Miami is noted as the only major city in the United States founded by a woman. Julia Tuttle, a local citrus grower and a wealthy Cleveland native, was the original owner of the land upon which the city was built. Tuttle was the one who convinced railroad tycoon Henry Flagler to extend his Florida East Coast Railway to the region. Miami was officially incorporated as a city on July 28, 1896, with a population of just over 300. Incredible growth since then!
A great example of Miami culture is "¿Qué Pasa, USA?" which was a sitcom produced for PBS by WPBT in Miami from the late 1970s. The sitcom was monumental because not only was it the first sitcom produced for PBS, but it was the country's first bilingual sitcom too (and one of the first bilingual shows in general)! It's about a Cuban family called the Peñas living in Miami's Little Havana facing an identity crisis. On one side, the elders are trying to preserve their Cuban values and traditions, and on the other, the domination and pressure of Anglo-American society. Or conflict within Cuban values itself as there was once an episode about Catholicism versus the Afro-Cuban religion Santería. As I've mentioned, the show was very much bilingual, with Miami accent (or Cubonics) influence. Switching from Spanish at home to English while out and about. The younger family members and their friends speaking English while the elders spoke just Spanish and were reluctant to learn English showed the generational differences of both the show and the struggle of living a Latino lifestyle in the US in general. And a running gag of the show was the younger members butchering their Spanish grammar or vocabulary. The show's mixing of the two languages is reflected in the name of the show. ¿Qué Pasa, USA? is grammatically incorrect in Spanish since USA in Spanish is EE UU or Estados Unidos. But that's how Cubonics became a thing
At least those were decent Cubans. And not the trash we have today. 1960s cubans were decent, from then on it’s all trash…Hialeah Ghetto Spanish is spoken in Miami, most can’t even write or read it. Miami ghetto Spanish is the Laughing stock of all Latin America and Spain.
Those were decent Cubans from the 1960s and not the trash that comes today that won’t learn a word of English and all they do is talk about trips to communist Cuba in their Hialeah ghetto Spanish, mostly screaming and bad words… shameful!!!
Ye It may be grammatically incorrect but I do hear for example Mexicans, Argentinians, Chileans and Colombians use “USA” instead of “EUA” very frequently. I think we might got used to the American culture and language and USA is shorter than EEUU who knows?
Why don't cuban people go back to cuba and preserve their culture? Why bring your culture to somewhere that already has culture? cubans should just go back to their homelands and fix their country.
the first time i visited miami i was surprised by the influence of latin america on the city... after few days i embraced it and it's one of the best things about miami in my eyes.
People don't realize how important Miami is as a cultural, economic, and political hub for Latin America-US relations. Its known as the "capital of Latin America" lmao
I was born in Latin America, but lived in Miami almost all my life. I can attest this video is accurate and succinct in its description of Miami, it's people and history.
They missed that flights are typically quite expensive from two Latin American countries, but can be quite cheap to Miami. Sometimes it's the cheapest place for two businessmen to meet.
Watching this while living in the Miami area all my life & you did a good job explaining our demographics & history. But you should also do one of the entire South Florida area: Broward County/Ft. Lauderdale area & their mostly Caribbean culture (Jamaica, Haiti, etc.) & large Brazilian communities, as well as Palm Beach County & its large Jewish & Central American population (especially Guatemala).
@@saltamonte305 don’t be a hater, bro. If you’re gonna hate on another Florida region north Florida & the Panhandle are better targets. Broward & Palm Beach are like Miami-Dade’s siblings. And Monroe County/The Keys is like the cool older cousin
Monroe County too. It's full of Latin life style and with the Cuban hats, cigars, boat life and all that. The only thing that reminds me of mexico are the wild roosters 🐓
Growing up in Miami I had a classmate from literally every single country & Latin America & most of the Caribbean as well. The school papers & letters for home in Mdpcs were written in 4 different languages that just shows the diversity of the population of Dade county & it’s students
Florida was under colonial rule by Spain from the 16th century to the 19th century, and briefly by Great Britain during the 18th century (1763-1783) Florida means flowery in Spanish
@martincito1662 Most people don't know the real history. The natives of FL are Pensacola, Apalachee, Guale, Timucua, Potano, Ocale, Tocobaga, Mayaimi, Ais, Calusa, Jeaga, Tequesta and Matecumbe.. Europeans stole many lands in America's. It's all reality. History doesn't offend me. But it does some people because most people can't handle the truth
Another thing is Haiti. Although they don’t speak Spanish they still influenced parts of Miami. Same for Brazilians, and Caribbeans such as Jamaicans and Guyanese although not as much as Hispanics
Brazil is still apart of us they have indigenous and Spanish/portugues blood just like us Latinos but Jamaicans Haitians and Caribbeans are their own shxt.
@@cdaloc2701 yeah Brazilians are Latino However Latin America also includes the Caribbean islands since they are also native. But most classify as black or Afro-Caribbean so I get what you’re saying
@@Manueltion15 Not all of the Caribbean is Latin American, and you don't need to have indigenous blood to be Latin American. As defined, Latin America is defined as the region in the Americas where Latin/romance language and culture had an important influence. In contrast to what you say, the more native a person is, the less Latino that person is perceived by other Latin Americans. That is because an indigenous person is not and doesn't want to be considered a latino, ignoring his true origin is an insult to them.
I’m a Coral Gables native of French Canadian descent and I can’t imagine not speaking Spanish in South Florida. Also, compared to French, Spanish is SO easy to learn.
I lived in Miami August 1979 to January 1985, mostly for college at the Univ. of Miami, and the most frequent sentence spoken by Hispanics then was "No peak Ingles" meaning, "I don't speak English."
@@anonymoususer8895what you said made no sense. Hispanic means someone who speaks Spanish an Hispanic region is a region were Spanish is spoken. in canada people don't speak spanish, they speak English and French. making it a Latin region but not an Hispanic one since French is not Spanish. to summarize it. we have 3 term that I believe you are confusing. Latin: "a region or a person who speaks a language that was born from Latin" Latin American: "a region or person inside one of the American continents that speaks a language that was born from Latin" Hispanic: "a region or a person that speaks spanish" by these definitions Miami is a Latin American region and a Hispanic region since people in the area speak a "Latin language" and that language happens to be Spanish. canada is a Latin American region since they are a country in north America that speaks French but they don't use Spanish for that reason they are not Hispanic.
I’m from California an visited Miami with my gf an the coolest thing was that everyone spoke Spanish .. so much that I had to translate for my gf … I like the whole vibe .. would’ve definitely move there
Meh. This video acts as if Miami is so unique. I'd argue Houston now is much more diverse and as heavily Spanish. Switch the Cuban with Mexican (Tejanos have been here since the beginning of Texas statehood). And the HUGE population of Central Americans and incoming Venezuelans and Cubans. The Cuban swell in Houston is making us much more Cuban, and it looks very different than the 60s & 80s era Miami. The amount of business owners that are Colombian and Salvadoran probably rivals Miami.
@@anonymoususer8895Compare the number of flights between Miami and Latin America to those between Latin America and Africa. Count the number of people in Miami who actively maintain their relationships with people in Latin America to those who live in Latin America and maintain an active relationship with someone in Africa. Count the amount of Dollars exchanged between people in Miami and Latin America to that between Latin America and Africa. Things may start to make sense, once you start counting.
Why cannot democratic demand be both pro and anti immigration? Why is pro immigration is seen as liberal and democratic, and anti immigration as authoritarian, even if it is overwhelmngly supported by the resident population?
There are parts of Miami that you would be lost not knowing spanish. I don't mean you won't fit in, you actually might not find a person who speaks english. Being 50/50 American/Colombian from NJ, it was very interesting bouncing around different areas of Miami.
Born and grew up in India, been living in Miami now. Colada and Cortadito have replaced my chai 😂 Empanadas and Arrepas are my new Theplas and Khakharas 😂 One thing I can say for sure is, Hispanics and Latinos are gem of people. Sometimes they may sound little rude in the initial conversation but they have a 24k gold heart
I’ve been wondering for some time as to why southern Indians aren’t moving to coastal FL, the beaches, and weather are much more similar than Kerala/TN and CA.
@@JohnWick-ls7yt I didn’t say that you were from south India, I just stated that south India and coastal FL look similar. Does coastal Gujarat look similar as well?
I am a 22 year old Italian and I have been living in Miami for 2 years. I can speak both English and Spanish quite well but 70% of the conversations I have with people I don't know are in Spanish.
Was born in Jamaica and grew up in Hialeah. Learned to speak Spanish just from living there! Also learned I love reggaeton and Latin food ❤️ God I miss Miami
@@RoCK3rADno illegally. Learn the history first please. Jamaicans working in Panama influenced reggaeton. At first “El General” was the first to come out with something similar to modern day reggaeton, working along side Jamaican producers. Also reggaeton is a sped up beat of Dance hall not reggae.
Come to Kissimmee and it's the same way. The Orlando area is completely repeating Miami history of the 70s and 80s. Kissimmee has so many billboards in Spanish and I would say more than half of the radio stations are in Spanish. My son is in a private school and in 2nd grade there are only 2 white kids in his entire class! Everyone is hispanic in Kissimmee for the most part. Local old boys are moving as fast as they can to Tennessee and the Carolinas. I saw the exact same thing as a kid living in South FL.
Went to Miami/Fort Lauderdale area for a week last year in the summer. Went to numerous convenience stores and gas stations where the cashier barely spoke English. I remember in the liquor store, I asked if they had “flasks” and she said “Uhh we have Tequila?!” only to find out there was a shelf full of flasks right behind her. Though it was pretty ridiculous :P
Lahcsap could you please tell me what is” flasks”? I have been living in a miami for 54 years, working in a customer service departments, dealing with licenses and permits, motor vehicle where the weight of the vehicle and the use or type of transportation or cargo determines the cost. I also needed to explain to customers the legal aspect of owning a motor vehicle and the type of insurance needed for the single vehicle or the a fleet. To make the story short I needed to learn a lot of legal terminology in English and never read that word “ flask” . That is why I needed to know why my English instructor never mentioned to me that in order to be educated and proficient enough to English I needed to use that word. Can anyone tell me please? I do not drink any liquor at all perhaps is this any brand of whiskey? Or wine? Gin? Beer? Bourbon? Scotch? Tequila? Rum?
I found out in internet that “ flasks” is a little container to hold ( or hide) liquor so Nobody will notice you are drinking. In other words the person saying the clerk did not know English for not understanding that word is very close mind. Why he did not change the phrase and asked “ Do you have a small bottle or container to pour liquor inside? Usually cheap people who do not want to pay full price at events and restaurant try to hide those small devices inside their cloth to get in the liquor. I did not know the name of that container and it does not mean I did not know English. In Spanish you do not have a name for it.
I guess some people live under a rock. In America, I can confidently say most people have heard of or know what a flask is… It’s just a small container, typically metal, that is used to hold alcohol. Mainly used if you need to sneak it into an event where they do not allow outside drinks (a concert, a sports game, things of that nature).
don´t forget the amount of ecuadorians that fled their country to the usa during the 1999 crisis, with miami being one of the main destinations after new york. One of my uncles currently lives in Miami as a pensioner, and we have visited the city sometimes, it feels like home
3 million Ecuadorians left and never came back during the decade following 1998. although the vast majority settled around New York and the Northeast US. there's relatively few Ecuadorians in Florida.
In 2001 when i was 5, my parents took a flight from Peru to Miami. In school there where all kinds of people from every country, lots of europeans and south americans and other hispanics. Good childhood, I consider myself Floridian though i dont live there anymore but go every once in a while for business and seeing relatives and friends. Im sure theres plenty like me.
You're not a Floridan. You're an immigrant. Your family isn't from Florida. You cannot trace your lineage back to Florida, so why lie? Stop trying to be something you're not. You're of an immigrant background, you just happen to live here.
Met a group on the Appalachian trail up here in WV. None of them spoke a lick of English. And in my limited Spanish I asked where they were from. They said Miami
This is just a recipe for a balkanized nation where we have no common language. WE need to immediately severely limit all immigration legal and otherwise. Enough is enough. How are these Miami spanish speakers ever going to live outisde their little bubble in south Florida. Imagine if we did this to a city in Spain. Only the US puts up with this crap, but my feeling is people are really getting tired of all immigration legal and illegal.
The Cuban influx into Miami-Dade county turned the greater Miami area from a sleepy retiree heaven into a vibrant, cosmopolitan and world re-known international city.
@@carymarshallfelton9188 The Population of Miami in 1950 was 249,276, and the county 495,084. All things considered, not too small, but what Hispanics created economically in Miami, is beyond trying to minimize. I mean one can try, but the numbers are the numbers. And yes, let us not forget there was a history prior, which many are unaware of and should be.
When people outside of Miami think of Miami it’s an image of Tony Montana. Now it’s insurance fraud, money laundering, scammers, government corruption, only fans, Miami coin 😆 blah blah and in between you have rich foreigners and angry minimum wage survivors. Don’t @ me this is 📠
I saw this coming in 1983 when I was a student at the University of Miami, and went to eighth Street, the center of “Little Havana.” Even back then you could walk into a business like a Franchised gym where the staff did not speak English
Most of El Paso Hispanic population is from Mexico same in Texas California although Texas has some pockets of Central Americans and a small minority of Cubans Venezuelans Colombians
I naturally picked up Spanish in middle school. I was always around Latinos. It also helped that I came from a multi cultural background so I was encouraged to learn about different languages and cultures. I’ve come to learn that speaking multiple languages opens up so many doors and opportunities.
On point. That was a great documentary. I don't think most people understand what makes Miami so different from Los Angeles & some Texas cities because they've never experienced this. Miami-Dade County is literally segregated by language. Those that require Spanish & those that require English & then you have people like me that can speak both & go anywhere because we can speak to any clerk or employee no matter which language but the majority is always those that require one or the other.
Actually since most Hispanics in Texas and California are Mexicans and Mexican Americans and with a minority of Central Americans most Mexicans in Texas that I personally have talked to have never been to Florida alot of Mexicans in Texas California Arizona Nevada have no idea that Miami and Florida has Hispanics or that the Hispanics from Miami are not non-Mexican Hispanics in America Hispanics are portrayed as being all Mexicans for them other Hispanic nationalities don’t exist it’s only Mexicans
Because of all the immigrants going to Florida, in 1982, the United States Border Patrol set up a roadblock and inspection point just south of Florida City. The people of the Keys viewed this as the government effectively viewing them as another nation, and the Key West City Council claimed the roadblock hurt their tourism industry. In response, Mayor Dennis Wardlow and the council declared Key West's independence as the Conch Republic in April of that year. As part of the protest, Mayor Wardlow immediately declared war against the US by symbolically breaking a loaf of stale Cuban bread over the head of a man dressed in a naval uniform, quickly surrendered after one minute, and applied for one billion dollars in foreign aid. Two invasions happened in 1995. In September, it was reported that the 478th Civil Affairs Battalion of the Army Reserve conducted conduct a training exercise simulating an invasion of a foreign island. However, Key West officials weren't notified. Thus, they mobilized, sending a schooner and attacked a Coast Guard cutter with water balloons, conch fritters, and stale Cuban bread. During the government shutdown at the end of that year, Dry Tortugas was closed. The Conch Republic wanted it to remain open, so in protest, they sent a flotilla of Conch Navy, civilian, and fire department boats. And in 2006, the Conch Republic annexed the Seven Mile Bridge because the US claimed it wasn't US territory under "wet feet, dry feet".
Hi I'm a Salvadorian there was something else that you could put is that Miami, and Texas flights are way cheaper than to California and New york, (Example: American airlines flights from Central America are 310 dollars, while an Avianca flight to NYC costs you about 500-600 dollars) Something else, that you said is that they where a lot of Hispanic people before the 1950's families where already there many people quickly became an US citizen since the families already lived there, that's why most of my family is in Miami. And many Hispanic families live there.
Salvadoran from the DMV. Flights from here are $30-$100 since Miami is Americans hub. And it’s like that for the whole northeast which is where most of their tourist come from. It’s easy for us to just say “let’s got to Miami for the weekend” because it’s an hour and a half flight.
@@JhonnyBoi Yes, I never been to Miami actually, I only been to Los Angeles and New York. But generally it's always Miami, from flights to 9:45 AM-2:30PM you'll mostly see flights to Miami. Als
@@yougottagofastwithout yeah probably because America will fly from Miami to basically every city in the US so Salvadorans that live in places where Avianca or Volaris doesn’t go can get there.
@@JhonnyBoi also mostly (All the time) flights to more northern cities, and countries cost way more then flights to miami. I feel like Miami is also just a good place to remember home not only for us, to all Latin Americans.
I recently visit the city and it is true. Languages are so important in Miame, as I also speak french I notice there are a loto of French-Canadians too, if you speak languages I bet your chances for success at work is guaranteed!
The Miami School system asked its Students as to what Languages they can speak or communicate with their friends and/or families either at School / Work or Home. They identified 74 Languages being used to communicate in Miami.
I'm glad you mentioned that Cubans arrived in Florida when Cuba was still a Spanish colony, because it is often perceived that all Cubans came to the US after Fidel's revolution when that isn't true as while a lot did come after the revolution, many were already in what's now the US for far longer than that! Tampa and Key West were already Cuban-American centers before the revolution. Key West used to be known as the cigar capital of the world because of the Cuban presence. Devastating fires in Key West in 1886 and 1896 caused many manufacturers to relocate to Tampa. When Cuban national hero José Martí was gathering support for Cuban independence, he visited Tampa and Key West. When there was an assassination attempt in Tampa, he recovered in Paulina Pedroso's boarding house in what's now Parque José Martí...a piece of land that was given to Cuba in 1956. There have even been Cubans in NYC for just as long. NYC is where the current Cuban flag was designed in 1849, and José Martí stayed in NYC when he was in exile. This is why there is a statue of him on horseback in Central Park, which was given to NYC from Cuba. The iconic word "bodega" to mean a corner store actually comes from the Cubans. In Spain, bodega means "wine cellar" but it became the word for corner shop when the word made it to Cuba. In NYC, the first bodegas appear in the 1920s. Then after WWII when Puerto Ricans opened shops in NYC to sell comfort food to Puerto Rican factory workers, Boricuas adopted the word! My mom's side is Cuban, and her parents came to the NYC metro before the revolution because they were working-class people who hated Batista.
I was wondering if anyone would mention Key West "Cayo Hueso" and Tampa as pre-Castro Cuban cigar industry settlements. But because they don't receive enough injections of new immigrants there are lots of people with Spanish surnames that have no idea how to speak Spanish except maybe a few words. It was too long ago.
Puerto Rican Colombia here from Hollywood, FL. Traveling to other parts of the world were people do not transition between languages makes me feel like an outlier.
Too much traffic, too high property taxes, since the pandemic crime, too much construction, my condo parking garage had lambos, Maseratis, Benz’s and 3 families sharing a one bedroom. Speaking English means jury duty, everyone is exempt, even defendants have translators. I sold my condo in 44 days, moved to small town Central Florida 1/4 acre 3/2 with garage for half the price. No thanks
@@dreadhead5719 They are just not reporting it, shoplifting, property crimes, auto break ins under $1000 swept under the rug, its going to increase with migrants that are chasing a smaller dollar
I was raised in Miami in the 80s in the Cuban exile community. But my family came from Cuba and Nicaragua! This is a great video! I don’t live there now but I miss the culture!
I visited Orlando last week and was blown away at how much Spanish was spoken. I ended up opting for Spanish-first conversation there, in Universal Studios 😂
@versed I wouldve spent more time researching and perhaps contacting Miami historians before publication. Glaring mistakes like interchanging the terms hispanic and latin. Or excluding Haiti from the history. Yes, Haitians are considered latin by definition and their inclusion would've of made your analysis more encompassing of Miami's story, especially when considering the summer that the Mariel boat lift occurred.
I lived in Miami-Dade for 5 of the most formative years of my life, and because of this, a piece of my heart will always live there. My family is from Puerto Rico and we mostly lived in NYC, but later moved to Miami for many years. It truly is a multicultural hub within Florida, and there's very few places like it in the US, imho. My friends and neighbors were majority Black or Latino, and honestly, I remember having more white teachers than classmates, most everyone around our community was non-white (later moving to NC was a major culture shock for me). You can find any type of Carribean or Central American restaurant you can think of, you hear different languages daily depending on where you live- of course English, Haitian, many Spanish dialects (including Spanglish 😂), French from southern creole folks or Africans- you name it. And so much rich Native American history in Florida; in school, we learned about the Miccosukee and Seminole tribes. Many streets, counties, cities, and rivers in Florida are named after native American tribes or words like Okeechobee and Okaloosa counties, the Caloosahatchee river, the city of Kissimmee, etc. But Miami, in particular, is just a colorful place to live in general. It's like NYC with a warmer climate and friendlier neighbors who speak and do business in Spanish. I probably wouldn't live there again because of high rent and overcrowding, but it's a wonderful place to visit and take in Latin American and Carribean culture without leaving the country.
@@joblakelisbon French is derived from latin and creole mostly from french. They got Independence from France which was also one of the countries that derived from the roman empire. So they do count. There's plenty of diversity between latin americans. In fact french speakers are the reason it's called Latin America and not Ibereo America which would far more accurate. The term latino is kinda vague, there's a little bit of latin in all of us after all.
@@joblakelisbonFrench is a latin language and they are in latin American just like how brazil is latin American country. There just not hispanic countries which is a different category which is exclusively Spanish speaking countries.
I was born & raised in South Florida, and privileged enough to have lived in several states but always return to South Florida. South Florida has a diverse culture incredible shopping plenty to do & the food is amazing. When I think melting pot I think South Florida. I don’t enjoy, living in non-culturally diverse regions of the United States.
Feel like youre seeing this everywhere in rhe US. Latino pop growth has been insane and almost everu major city has seen it to varying degreees even away from the border. Rhode Island and the western suburbs of Chicago come to mind as big examples of a big latino pop. My uni is in the Midwest and has a majority Latino pop as well, went to high school in the northeastern suburbs of atlanta and that was also predominantly Hispanic.
@@johnjones3332work to send the money back to their countries. net negative drain on the US economy. teenagers looking for a summer job shouldnt have to compete with 45 year old mexicans.
This is kind of a problem because Hispanics are taking over jobs and businesses that were once dominated by non Hispanic black ppl. That shyt has been going on since my grandfather's time smh we are slowly being phased out 🤦🏾♂️
I love miami. The diversity there left me awestruck when I first visited. Not to mention the infrastructure and beaches. It's a wild and beautiful place ❤
@mixtapemania6769 true those groups are present too, probably a little more than the other groups I mentioned, aside from Ricans ofcoarse, Puerto Ricans dominate the Orlando area
Quite a number of times I've heard from people that went to do tourism on the US that they went to Florida, mostly Miami and Orlando, mainly because they can just speak in Spanish and be understood.
Tampa saw Cuban, Spanish, Italian and even German immigration well before Miami. Most to work in the cigar industries at the hundreds for cigar factories. While Miami is now larger, Tampa is much older of a city.
I went to Florida about 5 or 4 years ago to meet families, and I was surprised that on my trip there was only one occasion when I couldn't talk to someone because they spoke English.
In the southwest specifically South/west Tx to SoCal are heavily Hispanic and almost always have been but it’s mostly Mexican and descendants of Hispanics who settled there when it was apart of Spain/Mexico
California has been Hispanic almost as long as it has been Anglo; the first permanent Spanish settlements were established in the 1770s. Anglos started coming around the 1810s
Texas Hispanics has more influences from North Eastern Mexico and Central Americans, California Hispanics have influences from Northwestern Mexico and Central America as well.
@@2007CamryToyotaActually the first permanent Spanish settlements in the U.S. southwest happened in the 1500s in New Mexico and Texas. Juan de Oñate and other colonists established what eventually became the cities of Santa Fe and Albuquerque New Mexico. They established the Camino Real (Royal Road) which originated in Mexico City, winding north through important Mexican silver cities, and into El Paso and Santa Fe. Even today, many New Mexicans have Spanish Sephardic Jewish genetic ancestry from settlement during that period. After independence Mexico still used this route to send more colonist settlers into its northern territories. The 1700s is when states like today's California first received permanent settlers though.
Makes complete sense, considering the fact that Miami's proximity to Cuba and the rest of Latin America makes up for a strong Latin American presence than any other minority…
I think scarface explained this a bit, It's a multude of different reasons, Started in the 60s and part of me thinks it's because it was the closest place to go
Madrid is also becoming a big latino hub probably on par with Miami in terms of rich latin americans moving to. Would be interested to see a video about Madrid on that topic
10:48 Im from Miami, I went to FIU in Miami and studied linguistics. I was one of few learning French, Japanese, Mandarin while everyone studied this exact phenomenon for their Masters and PhD theses, Miami English. You got it pretty spot on with the Spanish affected vowels and ESPECIALLY rhythym. One guy used the example of these really funny youtube videos from the late 2000s called Pichy films where the creator'd make fun of the Miami accent as an example and jumping off point for the evolution of Spanish inflected English in Miami and was able to create a map showing the further south you go up to about Homestead, the thicker the average accent becomes, and even 2nd and 3rd generation immigrants who might not even speak spanish anymore show the pattern! Even some black and white people living in areas like Kendall and Pinecrest show the accent, it spreads like a plague! I worked really hard to lose any accent, but when you put me with my high school friends, there it is!
i love the accent lol you know your home when you hear it. i love the evolution of language especially in the case of Miami local culture it really is phenomenal.
I left Miami in the mid 1990's . Moved back to the caribbean never spoke a Word of English for like 15yrs, ,Now i came back and have been wondering ever since: did i speak like that back then?? Can't remember
Coral Gables and much of South Florida used solely Spanish and Mediterranean architectural styles developed primarily by George Merrick in the 1920s . This design focus still predominates in much of South Florida.
Raised in Miami as a Cuban American, I can say Miami is the capital of Latin America and Cuban America. It’s the city that welcomed us with open arms. We love Miami Dade- County!
how can these slums be justified? if these people do become business owners and workers they send most of the money back anyway. we probably loose trillions.
@@harrisonc985 I don't know dawg, it's not going anywhere anytime soon. Have you ever traveled to a third world country? Ever experienced anything electric before? Sometimes the suburbs just get bland and mundane. It's different if you're someone who's been sheltered their whole life.
@@p.ipebomb I dunno dawg, everytime i go to new york city, i am confronted with some of the worst of humanity. the suburbs are boring yes but atleast i dont have to navigate the minefield of illegal street vendors, annoying bluetooth speaker music, drug addicts begging me for change, and sometimes even human waste.
i lived in miami for four years for university (go fiu!)! the first time i went was on vacation the year before and i was amazed, it felt like i was in a different country. all the friends i have from there are either latino or afro-caribbean. it is such a beautiful, unique place with incredible, rich history and with so many quirks. it's so cool to see so many different latino cultures together in one area. you can walk into t-mobile or tj maxx and you will be spoken to in spanish first in some areas. the store windows will have discount information in spanish. it's also true about the dialect of english forming there. it's heavily influenced by spanish in it's vowel sounds, inotations and rhythmn. my friends never could hear their 'accents' and i loved it. it was the perfect place to live before i moved to spain lol. lastly extraño pollo tropical.
I read the cigar manufactures didn’t want Cuban government to take their name but sadly it happened anyway which is why you get doubles of cigar brands like Cohiba
Funny that some dude with a foreign accent is acting like Miami being mostly Latino is something new. Like as a Latino myself it's been like this all my life. Many hispanic productions come from Miami this days. Florida itself was a Spanish colony for a long time as well so there was always Hispanic influence. Also not only Miami is that way but Orlando as well. Go to MCO and you realized real quick that Spanish is the language spoken by most people there.
bruh just cuz you’re from a hispanic part of a city doesn’t mean the whole place is hispanic dawg. north miami is ran by blacks and the coast is ran by whites so what u talking about 😹😹😹
Romans 6:23 For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord. Come to Jesus Christ today Jesus Christ is only way to heaven Repent and follow him today seek his heart Jesus Christ can fill the emptiness he can fill the void Heaven and hell is real cone to the loving savior today Today is the day of salvation tomorrow might be to late come to the loving savior today John 3:16-21 16 For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. 17 For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved. 18 He that believeth on him is not condemned: but he that believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God. 19 And this is the condemnation, that light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil. 20 For every one that doeth evil hateth the light, neither cometh to the light, lest his deeds should be reproved. 21 But he that doeth truth cometh to the light, that his deeds may be made manifest, that they are wrought in God. Mark 1.15 15 And saying, The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand: repent ye, and believe the gospel. 2 Peter 3:9 The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness; but is longsuffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance. Hebrews 11:6 6 But without faith it is impossible to please him: for he that cometh to God must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him. JesusRomans 6:23 For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord. Come to Jesus Christ today Jesus Christ is only way to heaven Repent and follow him today seek his heart Jesus Christ can fill the emptiness he can fill the void Heaven and hell is real cone to the loving savior today Today is the day of salvation tomorrow might be to late come to the loving savior today John 3:16-21 16 For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. 17 For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved. 18 He that believeth on him is not condemned: but he that believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God. 19 And this is the condemnation, that light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil. 20 For every one that doeth evil hateth the light, neither cometh to the light, lest his deeds should be reproved. 21 But he that doeth truth cometh to the light, that his deeds may be made manifest, that they are wrought in God. Mark 1.15 15 And saying, The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand: repent ye, and believe the gospel. 2 Peter 3:9 The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness; but is longsuffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance. Hebrews 11:6 6 But without faith it is impossible to please him: for he that cometh to God must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him. Jesus
Maybe he should have picked a different airplane, then one from Swiss, when he says: “With flights to central and South American cities” 😂 (8:17) Great video though 👏🏽
Went to visit the UM campus and check out the area because I wanted to move there. There was a subtle hostility because I didn’t speak Spanish. I remember trying to grab Wendy’s one night and the lady flat out told me “no English. Go” 😂 like wtf. The art distract was nice, music and food amazing, but damn I realized I couldn’t live there
Yeah. Realizing I either have to really invest in learning Spanish or leave. It's a massive culture shock, growing up in central Florida. Like I always grew up around Spanish, but people still overwhelmingly use English there.
@@allydr90 for me it wasn’t that I’d have to learn, I guess it was more the hostility near coral gables and near the old Wyndham walls. We went to this restaurant on the Havana strip and the food was bomb. Waitress was nice, but the regulars kinda glared like wtf was I doing there 😂. Still had a good time, but realized it probably wasn’t an easy move just to go to school there
@@allydr90 And the latinos dont have to learn english? They can just live in america because their countries of origin are way to poor to live in and act like they own the place.
Cool I live in St Augustine but the irony here is that very little of modern day SA is Spanish very few Spanish here who speak it its mostly an historic town with colonial Spanish architecture from 1500s Spain.
Definitely want to go check out Miami now!! I'm Puerto Rican, but I was born, raised, and still I've in Maryland. Its so boring here, there's almost no Latin culture here. I want to move somewhere were there's more Latin culture. I could move to some of the border states near Mexico, but that's too far from my family plus that's more central America Latin culture. I've been to the homeland (US territory) of Puerto Rico and it is a paradise. I'd love to move there, but it seems like big leap because its not technically a part of the US, and when I go there I still feel like an outsider because its very different, I get a culture shock. I've never been to Miami, and from what I've heard from other people, that its an amazing city. And after watching this video, I really want to go check the city out. It can prepare me and be my launching point to move to Puerto Rico, or if I really love the city more than Puerto Rico, then I'll stay.
If you want a more "Boriqua" culture than Miami I would suggest Orlando / Kissimmee instead. It's just more "Suburban" than Miami though but the culture is there.
@xoxxobob61 Yeah, I've been to Orlando, nice city. I'm not really looking for only small Boricua communities, I'd like to live in a big city that just has more latin culture in general. Orlando I didn't see it as like a big latin hub, it was still pretty much a mixed city. Haven't driven around Kissimmee, I should go check that out. But also, I love big cities. What I've heard and seen from the internet and from people I know that have been there, is Miami is a big city, beautiful women, its clean, and some areas feel like your in Puerto Rico. And now, from this video and from people in the comments, hearing that the majority of the demographic is hispanic and Spanish and latin culture is everywhere. Sounds like my kind of city. Also I've heard from other Puerto Ricans that Kissimmee is kinda boring, and that there's a joke that the Chicago and NYC Puerto Rican communities are better than Kissimmee and the other communities. But I also don't want to move up north into the small communities.
@Myhandle718 Nah, I'm not interested going up north and I've been to the Bronx it's not super hispanic, it's still pretty mixed. Plus it's just one community in the city, I'm looking for a city that's entirely dominated with latin culture.
Been to Miami recently and the most common sentence I said was: sorry, I don’t speak Spanish
Well, you gotta learn Spanish to survive there lmao
Why apologise?
@@theynotcatchingamongusis it really that bad there? My grandma lives in north Miami and I’ve never had that problem visiting her. She’s just north of Palm beach and we’ve never had a problem with only being English speakers 🤷♂️
It’s time to assimilate or get out.
I remember going to Miami from Latin America all excited to be able to use my English skills for once, just to find out that everyone there speaks Spanish with the thickest Cuban / Colombian accent you're going to ever hear.
I guess GTA6 default settings be in Spanish 😂
In the trailer the language shown in the news (the joker part) was Spanish!
@@ichbinhier355 That was Montreal. The game is set in Montreal and that’s why there’s Spanish.
Gta6 isn’t set in Montreal. That’s where the Spanish speakers actually are by the way. The Spanish speakers are in Montreal.
@@anonymoususer8895 are you talking to yourself? It's like you have two personality🤦♂️
@@kyleduynguyen2309 are you talking to yourself? It’s like you have two personalities 🤦♂️
As a white American born in Miami, i had a decision to make in 2016. I could continue to not speak spanish and eventually resent my city and move, or i could engulf myself in spanish and really learn the language leading me to love my city even more. 7 years later i am fluent and probably speak spanish 35-40% of the time. Although Miami has its flaws like any other city, i will live no where else and my kids will be bilingual from Miami as well.
That’s just wrong, you got invaded buddy 😂
I can't imagine the shame of giving up my native language because my home got taken over by people from foreign lands without a shot even being fired
@@dariusnicolausheinen6732 Florida was Spanish long before it was Anglo.
@@dariusnicolausheinen6732Florida was Spanish lol
@@mrarticle622Florida was Spanish before my friend!
Historical fact: the entire FLORIDA state was a Spanish colony.
Saint Augustin, FL is the oldest town in the USA, making SPANISH the FIRST European language spoken in the US.
No it’s not. That Spanish colony was NOT a part OF the U.S.
Historical Fact: Spain lost and every country they founded is a cleptocratic one party state that is doomed to fail from the start. we might as well make a giant pit along the border.
let me revise it then, first european language spoken in america@@757CitiesReppa
@@757CitiesReppayou mad, bro?
@@bobby_greene you dumb, bro?
In Argentina, everyone who is upper middle class (and higher) has been at least once to Florida. Its very very common here for people to go to Miami, do some shopping and go to the beach, and then go to Orlando to all the theme parks (Disney World, Universal, etc). Sometimes they also go on a cruise too. Some people only go once in their life, but many do it regularly, maybe once every one or two years.
Also, a lot of people have bank accounts in the US, usually through Miami, because of how unstable everything is in Argentina. And the most wealthy Argentinians, usually celebrities or business owners, own houses or condos there and live seasonally between Miami and Argentina.
The video was spot on, most people choose Miami because number one, they know everyone speaks Spanish and so they feel more comfortable traveling there and being able to communicate themselves flawlessly. And number 2, the weather. The weather in Argentina is shit, and we have terrible beaches. People love the Florida weather. Also, it has become a sort of aspirational thing. All the rich and famous from here love Miami, thus going to Miami makes you cool.
That’s more like the nouveau rich tho. There’s a complete different group of wealthy Argentinians who LOVE Europe and they go there all the time.
Argentines can’t come to the US due to being way too poor.
@@anonymoususer8895You’ve clearly never been to Miami, then.
Thought argies would go to brazil more
@@kaiserteddie9564 Argentina is weird, all of latam is like it to a degree, but culturally there’s a ton of self hatred towards Latin America as a whole by everyone middle class and above.
Yes it's like the closest thing to a capitalist liberal Hispanic nation, most of latin America and Spain are quite leftist social-democratic countries.
I’m a Russian-Texan who learned Spanish through working in construction and skilled trades, moved to Miami to be the maintenance and renovation director for a real estate company and lo and behold felt right at home surrounded by Russians and Spanish speakers again lol. I feel like a solid 60-70% of clients, tenants, contractors, and employees I work with every day speak either Spanish or Russian
No. You’re a Russian Canadian. And you’re in Canada because you know nothing. And you’re Russian because you’re trolling and that story is made up.
Привет😂
@@anonymoususer8895 haha
I bet you are in sunny isles. Many less Russians in the rest of south Flo
😂😂😂😂 russians with their superficial stories, keep dreaming dawg
Lot of Brazilian elites have residence in Miami. Even thou it is mostly Hispanic, Brazilians feel at home there as well!
I know, it's complicated, but Americans also have "invaded" latín American towns and cities, as Acapulco or Punta Cana. Neighborhoods in the centers of our main cities, forcing gentrification and making people who was born in those areas to move. I'm not saying that is good or even that is bad. It's happening in both sides, for different reasons, but is happening...at the end is normal to happen, I accept American living in my country, cabarete for example, a town in the beach in the north part of DR is full of immigrants from the us and Europe, for me is not a problem if they respect the locals and pay their taxes.
I'm not trying to convince you that you should be happy with the Florida situation, but to see the whole picture. Illegal immigrants should be deported, of course, but once you are legal you are protected by the law, winning rights and also acquiring responsibilities. Not only the US is made by immigrants, also the whole Latin America continent, so, since our foundation this is happening.@@MA-cs2ty
@@MA-cs2ty
That's too bad. You're going to have to assimilate and learn to speak Spanish, or Portuguese if you're going to do business with Brazilians.
Brazil is a "Hispanic" nation too.
@@carlosmante
Brazil isn't a Hispanic nation. Hispanic nations are those founded by Spain. Brazil was founded by the Portuguese.
@@carlosmante
Let me guess, judging by your statement that Brazil is "Hispanic", I guess it's safe to say that you're an American who doesn't know much.
Interesting Miami facts: Miami was named after the Miami River, derived from Mayaimi, the historic name of Lake Okeechobee and the Native Americans who lived around it. Mayaimi means "big water". The roosters found in South Florida like in Miami and Key West are descendants of Cuban ones bred for fighting. Doing that isn't legal in the US anymore, hence why a lot were released and now roam the region. Little Havana has big rooster statues to honor these Cuban roosters, installed back in 2002 when there was a craze to put animal sculptures up in US cities. They're based on a model sculpted by Tony Lopez who had a pet rooster named Pepe who followed him around. Miami Beach holds the largest collection of Art Deco buildings in the world, and Miami Beach's embrace of Art Deco was a perfect storm of circumstances. The city needed buildings to accommodate all the people (their population inflated to roughly 28,000 by 1940), it had the space to do so, and Art Deco was the style at the time of the 1930s and 1940s. Dozens of architects, like Albert Anis, L. Murray Dixon, and Henry Hohauser, took their talents to South Beach.
The Tequesta tribe occupied the Miami area for around 2,000 years before contact with Europeans. A village of hundreds of people, dating to 500 to 600 BCE, was located at the mouth of the Miami River. It is believed that the entire tribe migrated to Cuba by the mid-1700s. Miami is noted as the only major city in the United States founded by a woman. Julia Tuttle, a local citrus grower and a wealthy Cleveland native, was the original owner of the land upon which the city was built. Tuttle was the one who convinced railroad tycoon Henry Flagler to extend his Florida East Coast Railway to the region. Miami was officially incorporated as a city on July 28, 1896, with a population of just over 300. Incredible growth since then!
You are everywhere
No wonder why 2024 Copa America final is to be held in Miami.
no wonder why gta 6 is going to be in miami.
@@daxtynminn3415 Hah! Nice pun.
And most important, Messi is there
@UnitTrace Would say everyone has a short of, addiction, to Florida.
Hence why Messi wanted to play there because of Latin America culture where he has been in Europe for so many years.
Miami is the Singapore / Hong Kong of LatAm.
It even has its own cryptocurrency 😅
That implies something else
@@lawden210 that America is becoming ROME?
No kidding.
@@vcab6875 I can tell you’re smarter than the average bear.
@@H8nji obrigado
A great example of Miami culture is "¿Qué Pasa, USA?" which was a sitcom produced for PBS by WPBT in Miami from the late 1970s. The sitcom was monumental because not only was it the first sitcom produced for PBS, but it was the country's first bilingual sitcom too (and one of the first bilingual shows in general)! It's about a Cuban family called the Peñas living in Miami's Little Havana facing an identity crisis. On one side, the elders are trying to preserve their Cuban values and traditions, and on the other, the domination and pressure of Anglo-American society. Or conflict within Cuban values itself as there was once an episode about Catholicism versus the Afro-Cuban religion Santería.
As I've mentioned, the show was very much bilingual, with Miami accent (or Cubonics) influence. Switching from Spanish at home to English while out and about. The younger family members and their friends speaking English while the elders spoke just Spanish and were reluctant to learn English showed the generational differences of both the show and the struggle of living a Latino lifestyle in the US in general. And a running gag of the show was the younger members butchering their Spanish grammar or vocabulary. The show's mixing of the two languages is reflected in the name of the show. ¿Qué Pasa, USA? is grammatically incorrect in Spanish since USA in Spanish is EE UU or Estados Unidos. But that's how Cubonics became a thing
At least those were decent Cubans. And not the trash we have today. 1960s cubans were decent, from then on it’s all trash…Hialeah Ghetto Spanish is spoken in Miami, most can’t even write or read it. Miami ghetto Spanish is the Laughing stock of all Latin America and Spain.
Those were decent Cubans from the 1960s and not the trash that comes today that won’t learn a word of English and all they do is talk about trips to communist Cuba in their Hialeah ghetto Spanish, mostly screaming and bad words… shameful!!!
Ye It may be grammatically incorrect but I do hear for example Mexicans, Argentinians, Chileans and Colombians use “USA” instead of “EUA” very frequently. I think we might got used to the American culture and language and USA is shorter than EEUU who knows?
dawg i have never heard of that shit and i’m a beaner from miami 😹😹😹
Why don't cuban people go back to cuba and preserve their culture? Why bring your culture to somewhere that already has culture? cubans should just go back to their homelands and fix their country.
the first time i visited miami i was surprised by the influence of latin america on the city... after few days i embraced it and it's one of the best things about miami in my eyes.
Agree! Most of the hardworking Latins are there with thriving business.
Cause of the huge Cuban 🇨🇺 influence
hate the crime though
@@Sora_Nailove your pfp! it's perfect for this format!
@@NoctLightCloud thanks. But how 🤔
People don't realize how important Miami is as a cultural, economic, and political hub for Latin America-US relations. Its known as the "capital of Latin America" lmao
No it isn’t. Montreal is known as the capital of Latin America. Miami speaks English.
@@anonymoususer8895Montreal are French Canadians! Dude put the pipe down
@@dancalvano8702 I think he is mad about something because he keeps writing that 😯
Miami should be populated with anglosaxons again
Technically French is a Latin Language and culture.
This needs Spanish subtitles.
En serio 😂😂😂💯
Miami need to understand this video
Hay que poner el español como idioma dominante en usa
@@Alex-ce1os❓
💯💯💯💯🔥
Damn we’re going to be hearing a lot of fucking Spanish from NPCs in GTA 6.
yeah no shit
Lmao
And French
una chimbita
Por supuesto 😂
I was born in Latin America, but lived in Miami almost all my life. I can attest this video is accurate and succinct in its description of Miami, it's people and history.
They missed that flights are typically quite expensive from two Latin American countries, but can be quite cheap to Miami. Sometimes it's the cheapest place for two businessmen to meet.
@@oliversissonphone6143 it might be because there are tons of multinationals based in Miami oriented to latin America economy. Like music industry
The best part is that we have been living here illegaly and no one ask questions 😂
ahora dilo en español
Wow they speak Latin in America?!
Watching this while living in the Miami area all my life & you did a good job explaining our demographics & history. But you should also do one of the entire South Florida area: Broward County/Ft. Lauderdale area & their mostly Caribbean culture (Jamaica, Haiti, etc.) & large Brazilian communities, as well as
Palm Beach County & its large Jewish & Central American population (especially Guatemala).
@@saltamonte305 don’t be a hater, bro. If you’re gonna hate on another Florida region north Florida & the Panhandle are better targets. Broward & Palm Beach are like Miami-Dade’s siblings. And Monroe County/The Keys is like the cool older cousin
Monroe County too. It's full of Latin life style and with the Cuban hats, cigars, boat life and all that. The only thing that reminds me of mexico are the wild roosters 🐓
@@dannyrosabal719 Nope. That’s Canada, London, Ontario specifically.
@@anonymoususer8895 ?
@anonymoususer8895 have you been to key west? If not then go when you can and you'll see what I mean
Growing up in Miami I had a classmate from literally every single country & Latin America & most of the Caribbean as well. The school papers & letters for home in Mdpcs were written in 4 different languages that just shows the diversity of the population of Dade county & it’s students
Spanish is the primary language in Miami.
i used to be a mdpcs student and it was horrible lol
How is it diverse if it is overwhelmingly Latin American?
Would you call 30% Croatian, 40% Servian, 30% Slovenian population as diverse?
You grew up in Canada silly. Montreal to be specific. You’re confusing Canada with the US.
And in Canada that’s where their Latinos and Caribbean folk are, only in Canada. Not the US.
Florida was under colonial rule by Spain from the 16th century to the 19th century, and briefly by Great Britain during the 18th century (1763-1783)
Florida means flowery in Spanish
Did anyone ask you??? I see no one!
@martincito1662 Most people don't know the real history. The natives of FL are Pensacola, Apalachee, Guale, Timucua, Potano, Ocale, Tocobaga, Mayaimi, Ais, Calusa, Jeaga, Tequesta and Matecumbe..
Europeans stole many lands in America's. It's all reality.
History doesn't offend me. But it does some people because most people can't handle the truth
Florida was Spain, not a colony
@elpibe1924 Thank you for making it clear.
Thanks man, Ik some ppl are dicks, but pretty cool fact!
Another thing is Haiti. Although they don’t speak Spanish they still influenced parts of Miami. Same for Brazilians, and Caribbeans such as Jamaicans and Guyanese although not as much as Hispanics
Brazil is still apart of us they have indigenous and Spanish/portugues blood just like us Latinos but Jamaicans Haitians and Caribbeans are their own shxt.
@@cdaloc2701 yeah Brazilians are Latino
However Latin America also includes the Caribbean islands since they are also native. But most classify as black or Afro-Caribbean so I get what you’re saying
@@Manueltion15 Not all of the Caribbean is Latin American, and you don't need to have indigenous blood to be Latin American. As defined, Latin America is defined as the region in the Americas where Latin/romance language and culture had an important influence.
In contrast to what you say, the more native a person is, the less Latino that person is perceived by other Latin Americans. That is because an indigenous person is not and doesn't want to be considered a latino, ignoring his true origin is an insult to them.
@@angeldiaz7001 Haiti? French influenced
I only ment Haiti and others influenced by romance speaking countries
@@cdaloc2701 Brazilians have also Kongo blood like a lot of latin countries, "C da Loc".
I’m a Coral Gables native of French Canadian descent and I can’t imagine not speaking Spanish in South Florida. Also, compared to French, Spanish is SO easy to learn.
You’re a Snowbird ? 😂
@@naxmax5634 they're a native so no. Maybe their parents or grandparents are.
Spanish ain’t spoken in Florida. That’s Canada. And you live in Canada.
@@allydr90 So he is an ultra Snowbird then 🤣
Yeah it's easy, I wanna learn French
I lived in Miami August 1979 to January 1985, mostly for college at the Univ. of Miami, and the most frequent sentence spoken by Hispanics then was "No peak Ingles" meaning, "I don't speak English."
No. Miami speaks English. You were in Canada. That’s where Hispanics are, in Canada. Not America.
@@anonymoususer8895what you said made no sense. Hispanic means someone who speaks Spanish an Hispanic region is a region were Spanish is spoken. in canada people don't speak spanish, they speak English and French. making it a Latin region but not an Hispanic one since French is not Spanish.
to summarize it. we have 3 term that I believe you are confusing.
Latin: "a region or a person who speaks a language that was born from Latin"
Latin American: "a region or person inside one of the American continents that speaks a language that was born from Latin"
Hispanic: "a region or a person that speaks spanish"
by these definitions Miami is a Latin American region and a Hispanic region since people in the area speak a "Latin language" and that language happens to be Spanish.
canada is a Latin American region since they are a country in north America that speaks French but they don't use Spanish for that reason they are not Hispanic.
@@jose91807don’t feed the troll
Did you meet Crocket and Tubbs?
Well now you have to say sorry no español lol
I’m from California an visited Miami with my gf an the coolest thing was that everyone spoke Spanish .. so much that I had to translate for my gf … I like the whole vibe .. would’ve definitely move there
I was born in Miami. My family is from Cuba & Nicaragua. I speak Spanish about 45-50% in daily life. This video is pretty accurate
So you're illegal?
Yo momma@@Karuska22ps
Meh. This video acts as if Miami is so unique. I'd argue Houston now is much more diverse and as heavily Spanish. Switch the Cuban with Mexican (Tejanos have been here since the beginning of Texas statehood). And the HUGE population of Central Americans and incoming Venezuelans and Cubans. The Cuban swell in Houston is making us much more Cuban, and it looks very different than the 60s & 80s era Miami. The amount of business owners that are Colombian and Salvadoran probably rivals Miami.
Love Los Ranchos!!
@@NoNo-ng9sl sounds nice, I wouldn’t know never been to Houston
As a Costa Rican I always think of Miami as part of Latin America, but in the US
Nah. Miami speaks English. By your logic, Costa Rica is part of Africa. Or China is part of South America. It makes no sense.
@@anonymoususer8895Compare the number of flights between Miami and Latin America to those between Latin America and Africa. Count the number of people in Miami who actively maintain their relationships with people in Latin America to those who live in Latin America and maintain an active relationship with someone in Africa. Count the amount of Dollars exchanged between people in Miami and Latin America to that between Latin America and Africa.
Things may start to make sense, once you start counting.
@@anonymoususer8895 why are commenting nonsense everywhere?
@@allydr90He keeps saying that only Canada has Latin Americans. I think he dislikes Americans 😮
Just like PR
Geography, an established local Latino community, and the climate created Miami.
Why cannot democratic demand be both pro and anti immigration? Why is pro immigration is seen as liberal and democratic, and anti immigration as authoritarian, even if it is overwhelmngly supported by the resident population?
@Biggie-Cheese9french is literally latin based.
@Biggie-Cheese9 Nope. English speakers are majority in Miami. There’s a flood of Latinos in Montreal.
@@anonymoususer8895lol, you're at all comment sections. i admire your devotion to gaslight people
@@val-schaeffer1117Because stopping immigration is restricting personal freedom.
There are parts of Miami that you would be lost not knowing spanish.
I don't mean you won't fit in, you actually might not find a person who speaks english. Being 50/50 American/Colombian from NJ, it was very interesting bouncing around different areas of Miami.
Born and grew up in India, been living in Miami now. Colada and Cortadito have replaced my chai 😂 Empanadas and Arrepas are my new Theplas and Khakharas 😂
One thing I can say for sure is, Hispanics and Latinos are gem of people. Sometimes they may sound little rude in the initial conversation but they have a 24k gold heart
I’ve been wondering for some time as to why southern Indians aren’t moving to coastal FL, the beaches, and weather are much more similar than Kerala/TN and CA.
@@relaxedleisure4766 I am not sure about South Indians, I am from Gujarat which is in the western India.
@@JohnWick-ls7yt I didn’t say that you were from south India, I just stated that south India and coastal FL look similar. Does coastal Gujarat look similar as well?
@@relaxedleisure4766 Costal Gujarat weather is pretty dry compared to Southern India
People and food and cultures are vastly different too
I am a 22 year old Italian and I have been living in Miami for 2 years. I can speak both English and Spanish quite well but 70% of the conversations I have with people I don't know are in Spanish.
Kinda sucks Mexicans can't go to Florida anymore whereas italians can lol
@@fredrcewhy can't Mexicans go?
@@fredrce italy literally has the strongest passoport in the world
It does not@@cricio9139
Was born in Jamaica and grew up in Hialeah. Learned to speak Spanish just from living there! Also learned I love reggaeton and Latin food ❤️
God I miss Miami
If you like reggae you will like reggaeton because it’s ripped (illegally) from a reggae song from the 80’s song fish market
@@RoCK3rADcry
@@RoCK3rADno illegally. Learn the history first please. Jamaicans working in Panama influenced reggaeton. At first “El General” was the first to come out with something similar to modern day reggaeton, working along side Jamaican producers. Also reggaeton is a sped up beat of Dance hall not reggae.
Why not stay in Jamaica? I’m noticing a pattern
@@AustrianPainter14 same reason you didn't stay in Austria 💁🏾♂️
Great channel
Come to Kissimmee and it's the same way. The Orlando area is completely repeating Miami history of the 70s and 80s. Kissimmee has so many billboards in Spanish and I would say more than half of the radio stations are in Spanish. My son is in a private school and in 2nd grade there are only 2 white kids in his entire class! Everyone is hispanic in Kissimmee for the most part. Local old boys are moving as fast as they can to Tennessee and the Carolinas. I saw the exact same thing as a kid living in South FL.
Kissimmee is a Puerto Rican enclave especially with many who came after Hurricane Maria a few years ago so this is no surprise.
I live here. I love it. You must know Spanish 👍
Woah, it’s him.
Went to Miami/Fort Lauderdale area for a week last year in the summer. Went to numerous convenience stores and gas stations where the cashier barely spoke English. I remember in the liquor store, I asked if they had “flasks” and she said “Uhh we have Tequila?!” only to find out there was a shelf full of flasks right behind her. Though it was pretty ridiculous :P
Lahcsap could you please tell me what is” flasks”? I have been living in a miami for 54 years, working in a customer service departments, dealing with licenses and permits, motor vehicle where the weight of the vehicle and the use or type of transportation or cargo determines the cost. I also needed to explain to customers the legal aspect of owning a motor vehicle and the type of insurance needed for the single vehicle or the a fleet. To make the story short I needed to learn a lot of legal terminology in English and never read that word “ flask” . That is why I needed to know why my English instructor never mentioned to me that in order to be educated and proficient enough to English I needed to use that word. Can anyone tell me please? I do not drink any liquor at all perhaps is this any brand of whiskey? Or wine? Gin? Beer? Bourbon? Scotch? Tequila? Rum?
I found out in internet that “ flasks” is a little container to hold ( or hide) liquor so
Nobody will notice you are drinking. In other words the person saying the clerk did not know English for not understanding that word is very close mind. Why he did not change the phrase and asked “ Do you have a small bottle
or container to pour liquor inside? Usually cheap people who do not want to pay full price at events and restaurant try to hide those small devices inside their cloth to get in the liquor. I did not know the name of that container and it does not mean I did not know English. In Spanish you do not have a name for it.
That the fck is flasks??
I guess some people live under a rock. In America, I can confidently say most people have heard of or know what a flask is… It’s just a small container, typically metal, that is used to hold alcohol. Mainly used if you need to sneak it into an event where they do not allow outside drinks (a concert, a sports game, things of that nature).
Very accurate video I was born in Cuba raised in Miami and I never realized I had a Miami accent until I moved recently
🗣️🗣️🔥🔥🔥UN VÍDEO MAS MI GENTE AHH STATE
Great analysis
don´t forget the amount of ecuadorians that fled their country to the usa during the 1999 crisis, with miami being one of the main destinations after new york. One of my uncles currently lives in Miami as a pensioner, and we have visited the city sometimes, it feels like home
3 million Ecuadorians left and never came back during the decade following 1998. although the vast majority settled around New York and the Northeast US. there's relatively few Ecuadorians in Florida.
Queens is full of Ecuadorians. yes there’s everything in Miami but relatively few ecuadorians compared to Cubans Colombians Venezuelans etc.
@@katjerouacQueens is basically Little Ecuador, can confirm I live there.
@@brianausrin3355they have been slowly expanding to other parts of the state but the largest population of them are in Queens
But it is not ❤
In 2001 when i was 5, my parents took a flight from Peru to Miami. In school there where all kinds of people from every country, lots of europeans and south americans and other hispanics. Good childhood, I consider myself Floridian though i dont live there anymore but go every once in a while for business and seeing relatives and friends. Im sure theres plenty like me.
hmm.
You're not a Floridan. You're an immigrant. Your family isn't from Florida. You cannot trace your lineage back to Florida, so why lie? Stop trying to be something you're not. You're of an immigrant background, you just happen to live here.
Met a group on the Appalachian trail up here in WV. None of them spoke a lick of English. And in my limited Spanish I asked where they were from. They said Miami
This is just a recipe for a balkanized nation where we have no common language. WE need to immediately severely limit all immigration legal and otherwise. Enough is enough. How are these Miami spanish speakers ever going to live outisde their little bubble in south Florida. Imagine if we did this to a city in Spain. Only the US puts up with this crap, but my feeling is people are really getting tired of all immigration legal and illegal.
Ha ha ha.
In the 70s when Venezuela was doing well, many Venezuelans would go to Miami over the weekend to do the weekend shopping.
I’ve been in Miami for vacations several times in my life, I was surprised I barely had to use English because most of the employees speak spanish.
The Cuban influx into Miami-Dade county turned the greater Miami area from a sleepy retiree heaven into a vibrant, cosmopolitan and world re-known international city.
@@carymarshallfelton9188 I hate to contradict you, but I know what I'm talking about, cocaine did not built-up Miami, immigrants did.
@@carymarshallfelton9188 The Population of Miami in 1950 was 249,276, and the county 495,084. All things considered, not too small, but what Hispanics created economically in Miami, is beyond trying to minimize. I mean one can try, but the numbers are the numbers. And yes, let us not forget there was a history prior, which many are unaware of and should be.
Can’t forget about the Haitian and African American urban influences. The music, the slang, the cars, etc.
When people outside of Miami think of Miami it’s an image of Tony Montana. Now it’s insurance fraud, money laundering, scammers, government corruption, only fans, Miami coin 😆 blah blah and in between you have rich foreigners and angry minimum wage survivors. Don’t @ me this is 📠
@@WHYOSHOthere’s a very small almost unnoticeable amount of influence from those groups in Miami
Dope. Now do a video like this about Dearborn.
I'd rather NYC and the tunnels that's been buried by the news
Dearborn is a small suburb of Detroit.Nothing compared to Miami
@@Hasanaljadid it's a microcosm sure, but the effects are still the same
I saw this coming in 1983 when I was a student at the University of Miami, and went to eighth Street, the center of “Little Havana.” Even back then you could walk into a business like a Franchised gym where the staff did not speak English
I’m from El Paso, it’s the exact same in my hometown. This is good and normal.
Most of El Paso Hispanic population is from Mexico same in Texas California although Texas has some pockets of Central Americans and a small minority of Cubans Venezuelans Colombians
I naturally picked up Spanish in middle school. I was always around Latinos. It also helped that I came from a multi cultural background so I was encouraged to learn about different languages and cultures. I’ve come to learn that speaking multiple languages opens up so many doors and opportunities.
On point. That was a great documentary. I don't think most people understand what makes Miami so different from Los Angeles & some Texas cities because they've never experienced this. Miami-Dade County is literally segregated by language. Those that require Spanish & those that require English & then you have people like me that can speak both & go anywhere because we can speak to any clerk or employee no matter which language but the majority is always those that require one or the other.
Actually since most Hispanics in Texas and California are Mexicans and Mexican Americans and with a minority of Central Americans most Mexicans in Texas that I personally have talked to have never been to Florida alot of Mexicans in Texas California Arizona Nevada have no idea that Miami and Florida has Hispanics or that the Hispanics from Miami are not non-Mexican Hispanics in America Hispanics are portrayed as being all Mexicans for them other Hispanic nationalities don’t exist it’s only Mexicans
Because of all the immigrants going to Florida, in 1982, the United States Border Patrol set up a roadblock and inspection point just south of Florida City. The people of the Keys viewed this as the government effectively viewing them as another nation, and the Key West City Council claimed the roadblock hurt their tourism industry. In response, Mayor Dennis Wardlow and the council declared Key West's independence as the Conch Republic in April of that year. As part of the protest, Mayor Wardlow immediately declared war against the US by symbolically breaking a loaf of stale Cuban bread over the head of a man dressed in a naval uniform, quickly surrendered after one minute, and applied for one billion dollars in foreign aid.
Two invasions happened in 1995. In September, it was reported that the 478th Civil Affairs Battalion of the Army Reserve conducted conduct a training exercise simulating an invasion of a foreign island. However, Key West officials weren't notified. Thus, they mobilized, sending a schooner and attacked a Coast Guard cutter with water balloons, conch fritters, and stale Cuban bread. During the government shutdown at the end of that year, Dry Tortugas was closed. The Conch Republic wanted it to remain open, so in protest, they sent a flotilla of Conch Navy, civilian, and fire department boats. And in 2006, the Conch Republic annexed the Seven Mile Bridge because the US claimed it wasn't US territory under "wet feet, dry feet".
It was a 1-minute symbolic secession, which is still represented by the motto "where other failed, we succeeded" still shown on the Florida keys flag
Hi I'm a Salvadorian there was something else that you could put is that Miami, and Texas flights are way cheaper than to California and New york, (Example: American airlines flights from Central America are 310 dollars, while an Avianca flight to NYC costs you about 500-600 dollars) Something else, that you said is that they where a lot of Hispanic people before the 1950's families where already there many people quickly became an US citizen since the families already lived there, that's why most of my family is in Miami. And many Hispanic families live there.
Salvadoperro 🤣🤣🤣
Salvadoran from the DMV. Flights from here are $30-$100 since Miami is Americans hub. And it’s like that for the whole northeast which is where most of their tourist come from. It’s easy for us to just say “let’s got to Miami for the weekend” because it’s an hour and a half flight.
@@JhonnyBoi Yes, I never been to Miami actually, I only been to Los Angeles and New York. But generally it's always Miami, from flights to 9:45 AM-2:30PM you'll mostly see flights to Miami. Als
@@yougottagofastwithout yeah probably because America will fly from Miami to basically every city in the US so Salvadorans that live in places where Avianca or Volaris doesn’t go can get there.
@@JhonnyBoi also mostly (All the time) flights to more northern cities, and countries cost way more then flights to miami. I feel like Miami is also just a good place to remember home not only for us, to all Latin Americans.
I was born in miami. Your video was extremely accurate. Great job.
Illegal immigrants
@@Karuska22psflorida was spain. Stolen by the brits. Now invaded by Hispanics from America.
en español porfavor
I recently visit the city and it is true. Languages are so important in Miame, as I also speak french I notice there are a loto of French-Canadians too, if you speak languages I bet your chances for success at work is guaranteed!
The Miami School system asked its Students as to what Languages they can speak or communicate with their friends and/or families either at School / Work or Home. They identified 74 Languages being used to communicate in Miami.
thank you for sharing! that's very interesting!@@xoxxobob61
I went to upper new york before and there were tons of french people from quebec
As a person who wants to live in Florida in the future, and with knowledge in Spanish. I might consider moving to Miami over Tampa or Cocoa Beach.
As beautiful as Miami is, It is a very busy city. If you like more of a family oriented, slower paced place, Tampa is the way to go.
Tampa is a poorly planned, “poorly” ghetto compared to Miami and Cocoa Beach isn’t what it once was.
@@funDAYsmiling You’re in Canada and have never been to the US. So you know nothing. Delete this comment that shows off your ignorance!
@@anonymoususer8895what is canada? You mean smaller, shittier and colder America?
@@robertduluth8994 Nope. You heard me.
I'm glad you mentioned that Cubans arrived in Florida when Cuba was still a Spanish colony, because it is often perceived that all Cubans came to the US after Fidel's revolution when that isn't true as while a lot did come after the revolution, many were already in what's now the US for far longer than that! Tampa and Key West were already Cuban-American centers before the revolution. Key West used to be known as the cigar capital of the world because of the Cuban presence. Devastating fires in Key West in 1886 and 1896 caused many manufacturers to relocate to Tampa. When Cuban national hero José Martí was gathering support for Cuban independence, he visited Tampa and Key West. When there was an assassination attempt in Tampa, he recovered in Paulina Pedroso's boarding house in what's now Parque José Martí...a piece of land that was given to Cuba in 1956.
There have even been Cubans in NYC for just as long. NYC is where the current Cuban flag was designed in 1849, and José Martí stayed in NYC when he was in exile. This is why there is a statue of him on horseback in Central Park, which was given to NYC from Cuba. The iconic word "bodega" to mean a corner store actually comes from the Cubans. In Spain, bodega means "wine cellar" but it became the word for corner shop when the word made it to Cuba. In NYC, the first bodegas appear in the 1920s. Then after WWII when Puerto Ricans opened shops in NYC to sell comfort food to Puerto Rican factory workers, Boricuas adopted the word! My mom's side is Cuban, and her parents came to the NYC metro before the revolution because they were working-class people who hated Batista.
I was wondering if anyone would mention Key West "Cayo Hueso" and Tampa as pre-Castro Cuban cigar industry settlements. But because they don't receive enough injections of new immigrants there are lots of people with Spanish surnames that have no idea how to speak Spanish except maybe a few words. It was too long ago.
Puerto Rican Colombia here from Hollywood, FL. Traveling to other parts of the world were people do not transition between languages makes me feel like an outlier.
Excellent video. I'm a bilingual Anglo and lived in Miami for 6 years. The video is accurate.
Too much traffic, too high property taxes, since the pandemic crime, too much construction, my condo parking garage had lambos, Maseratis, Benz’s and 3 families sharing a one bedroom. Speaking English means jury duty, everyone is exempt, even defendants have translators. I sold my condo in 44 days, moved to small town Central Florida 1/4 acre 3/2 with garage for half the price. No thanks
That's an insane story man, sorry you had to go through that. I am thankful I live in Cape Canaveral. This place is literally paradise :0
crime has been going down forever
Oh poor you
@@dreadhead5719 They are just not reporting it, shoplifting, property crimes, auto break ins under $1000 swept under the rug, its going to increase with migrants that are chasing a smaller dollar
@@Not_Sal Not any more, I am outta there
I was raised in Miami in the 80s in the Cuban exile community. But my family came from Cuba and Nicaragua! This is a great video! I don’t live there now but I miss the culture!
I visited Orlando last week and was blown away at how much Spanish was spoken. I ended up opting for Spanish-first conversation there, in Universal Studios 😂
@versed I wouldve spent more time researching and perhaps contacting Miami historians before publication. Glaring mistakes like interchanging the terms hispanic and latin. Or excluding Haiti from the history. Yes, Haitians are considered latin by definition and their inclusion would've of made your analysis more encompassing of Miami's story, especially when considering the summer that the Mariel boat lift occurred.
I lived in Miami-Dade for 5 of the most formative years of my life, and because of this, a piece of my heart will always live there. My family is from Puerto Rico and we mostly lived in NYC, but later moved to Miami for many years. It truly is a multicultural hub within Florida, and there's very few places like it in the US, imho. My friends and neighbors were majority Black or Latino, and honestly, I remember having more white teachers than classmates, most everyone around our community was non-white (later moving to NC was a major culture shock for me). You can find any type of Carribean or Central American restaurant you can think of, you hear different languages daily depending on where you live- of course English, Haitian, many Spanish dialects (including Spanglish 😂), French from southern creole folks or Africans- you name it. And so much rich Native American history in Florida; in school, we learned about the Miccosukee and Seminole tribes. Many streets, counties, cities, and rivers in Florida are named after native American tribes or words like Okeechobee and Okaloosa counties, the Caloosahatchee river, the city of Kissimmee, etc. But Miami, in particular, is just a colorful place to live in general. It's like NYC with a warmer climate and friendlier neighbors who speak and do business in Spanish. I probably wouldn't live there again because of high rent and overcrowding, but it's a wonderful place to visit and take in Latin American and Carribean culture without leaving the country.
Black and Latino are not separated groups there’s many black latinos specially in the Caribbean. Haitians are latinos too
@@2007CamryToyotaHaitians aren't Latinos mate. They speak French and Creole and have a totally different culture.
@@joblakelisbon French is derived from latin and creole mostly from french. They got Independence from France which was also one of the countries that derived from the roman empire. So they do count. There's plenty of diversity between latin americans. In fact french speakers are the reason it's called Latin America and not Ibereo America which would far more accurate. The term latino is kinda vague, there's a little bit of latin in all of us after all.
@@joblakelisbonFrench is a latin language and they are in latin American just like how brazil is latin American country. There just not hispanic countries which is a different category which is exclusively Spanish speaking countries.
Watching this to prepare for GTA VI
GTA6 isn’t set in Montreal?
@@anonymoususer8895why do you keep on saying mtl in the comments what does that have to do with anything here
@@Improj69he's either a troll or on the spectrum.
@@Badookum💀☠️
Excellent analysis. Very accurate
I was born & raised in South Florida, and privileged enough to have lived in several states but always return to South Florida. South Florida has a diverse culture incredible shopping plenty to do & the food is amazing. When I think melting pot I think South Florida. I don’t enjoy, living in non-culturally diverse regions of the United States.
Feel like youre seeing this everywhere in rhe US. Latino pop growth has been insane and almost everu major city has seen it to varying degreees even away from the border. Rhode Island and the western suburbs of Chicago come to mind as big examples of a big latino pop. My uni is in the Midwest and has a majority Latino pop as well, went to high school in the northeastern suburbs of atlanta and that was also predominantly Hispanic.
someones gotta work.
guess that's what they said when they brought slaves over huh@@johnjones3332
@@johnjones3332work to send the money back to their countries. net negative drain on the US economy. teenagers looking for a summer job shouldnt have to compete with 45 year old mexicans.
This is kind of a problem because Hispanics are taking over jobs and businesses that were once dominated by non Hispanic black ppl. That shyt has been going on since my grandfather's time smh we are slowly being phased out 🤦🏾♂️
Is it true that in Rhode Island there are more Brazilians and Portuguese than Spanish speakers?
I love miami. The diversity there left me awestruck when I first visited. Not to mention the infrastructure and beaches. It's a wild and beautiful place ❤
Well done
Damn, this is so accurate. Que bola asere
Florida is a former Spanish colony.
This idiot is clueless
But now it belongs to America, “The Land of the Free”.
@@zlayer3170 There’s no such thing as a land of the free.
It was a former british colony too. In fact it was under British control during the revolutionary war.
@@2007CamryToyota for 20 years and Spain recaptured it from the British.
Both Tony Montana and Frank Lopez added to the dynamism and vibrancy of Miami.
Good upstanding men, need more of those 😀
HAHAH most of Scarface was shot in LA < the Cubans in Miami drove them out and the actors were mostly Italian NOT Cuban,
@@waverider227 Which I can understand -- those Cubans wouldn't have been overjoyed at being portrayed as drug lords and criminals.
I was in Miami for holiday with some colleagues this year and nobody spoke english. I was so surprised!
Orlando is becoming the same thing for Latinos, especially Puerto Ricans, and to a lesser degree Dominicans and Venezuelans
Kissimmee is basically San Juan, Puerto Rico 😂
In my experience Orlando is Puerto Rican, Haitian and Brazilian
@mixtapemania6769 true those groups are present too, probably a little more than the other groups I mentioned, aside from Ricans ofcoarse, Puerto Ricans dominate the Orlando area
Quite a number of times I've heard from people that went to do tourism on the US that they went to Florida, mostly Miami and Orlando, mainly because they can just speak in Spanish and be understood.
Yall tripping, Ive lived in Miami since I was 5 and you get along just fine speaking english. lmao
Oh really.
Si, mi'jo, sigue durmiendo de ese lado que te va a salir UN chichon muy grande. Buena suerte encontrando UN trabajo.
Tampa saw Cuban, Spanish, Italian and even German immigration well before Miami. Most to work in the cigar industries at the hundreds for cigar factories. While Miami is now larger, Tampa is much older of a city.
I went to Florida about 5 or 4 years ago to meet families, and I was surprised that on my trip there was only one occasion when I couldn't talk to someone because they spoke English.
In the southwest specifically South/west Tx to SoCal are heavily Hispanic and almost always have been but it’s mostly Mexican and descendants of Hispanics who settled there when it was apart of Spain/Mexico
Nope. That’s the prairie provinces of Canada you’re thinking of.
California has been Hispanic almost as long as it has been Anglo; the first permanent Spanish settlements were established in the 1770s. Anglos started coming around the 1810s
Texas Hispanics has more influences from North Eastern Mexico and Central Americans, California Hispanics have influences from Northwestern Mexico and Central America as well.
@@raymondcerv1370 Texas has no Hispanics. You’re thinking of Alberta in Canada.
@@2007CamryToyotaActually the first permanent Spanish settlements in the U.S. southwest happened in the 1500s in New Mexico and Texas. Juan de Oñate and other colonists established what eventually became the cities of Santa Fe and Albuquerque New Mexico. They established the Camino Real (Royal Road) which originated in Mexico City, winding north through important Mexican silver cities, and into El Paso and Santa Fe. Even today, many New Mexicans have Spanish Sephardic Jewish genetic ancestry from settlement during that period. After independence Mexico still used this route to send more colonist settlers into its northern territories.
The 1700s is when states like today's California first received permanent settlers though.
As a man born here in 99 to a Nicaraguan mother nothing makes me happier than saying I’m from this magical city.
Born in Nica but raised most my life in Miami.
When i moved to Miami, the thing i learned first was cuban coffers, and then i learned Spanish because it was sooo good
Makes complete sense, considering the fact that Miami's proximity to Cuba and the rest of Latin America makes up for a strong Latin American presence than any other minority…
I think scarface explained this a bit, It's a multude of different reasons, Started in the 60s and part of me thinks it's because it was the closest place to go
I have an uncle that lives in Miami, you have to know Spanish there. Because there's so many Spanish speakers. Even his wife is Latin American.
There’s no Spanish speakers there. And your uncle lives in Canada. That’s where Spanish speakers are.
@@anonymoususer8895womp womp
@@anonymoususer8895wut
What horror!
@@jorgeomarjaimesviafara6061what horror , Learn another language 🙉😵🙈
Madrid is also becoming a big latino hub probably on par with Miami in terms of rich latin americans moving to. Would be interested to see a video about Madrid on that topic
10:48 Im from Miami, I went to FIU in Miami and studied linguistics. I was one of few learning French, Japanese, Mandarin while everyone studied this exact phenomenon for their Masters and PhD theses, Miami English. You got it pretty spot on with the Spanish affected vowels and ESPECIALLY rhythym. One guy used the example of these really funny youtube videos from the late 2000s called Pichy films where the creator'd make fun of the Miami accent as an example and jumping off point for the evolution of Spanish inflected English in Miami and was able to create a map showing the further south you go up to about Homestead, the thicker the average accent becomes, and even 2nd and 3rd generation immigrants who might not even speak spanish anymore show the pattern! Even some black and white people living in areas like Kendall and Pinecrest show the accent, it spreads like a plague! I worked really hard to lose any accent, but when you put me with my high school friends, there it is!
Is an accent that bad?
@@SamuelincaElinca I don't think anybody said it was bad
LITERALLY? 😑
i love the accent lol you know your home when you hear it. i love the evolution of language especially in the case of Miami local culture it really is phenomenal.
I left Miami in the mid 1990's . Moved back to the caribbean never spoke a Word of English for like 15yrs, ,Now i came back and have been wondering ever since: did i speak like that back then?? Can't remember
Coral Gables and much of South Florida used solely Spanish and Mediterranean architectural styles developed primarily by George Merrick in the 1920s . This design focus still predominates in much of South Florida.
Raised in Miami as a Cuban American, I can say Miami is the capital of Latin America and Cuban America. It’s the city that welcomed us with open arms. We love Miami Dade- County!
NYC is wild especially in the Latin American slums on Roosevelt Avenue in Queens. It's quite electric 💡⚡
It's all under a tram bridge too 🚝
how can these slums be justified? if these people do become business owners and workers they send most of the money back anyway. we probably loose trillions.
@@harrisonc985 I don't know dawg, it's not going anywhere anytime soon. Have you ever traveled to a third world country? Ever experienced anything electric before? Sometimes the suburbs just get bland and mundane. It's different if you're someone who's been sheltered their whole life.
@@p.ipebomb I dunno dawg, everytime i go to new york city, i am confronted with some of the worst of humanity. the suburbs are boring yes but atleast i dont have to navigate the minefield of illegal street vendors, annoying bluetooth speaker music, drug addicts begging me for change, and sometimes even human waste.
i lived in miami for four years for university (go fiu!)! the first time i went was on vacation the year before and i was amazed, it felt like i was in a different country. all the friends i have from there are either latino or afro-caribbean. it is such a beautiful, unique place with incredible, rich history and with so many quirks. it's so cool to see so many different latino cultures together in one area. you can walk into t-mobile or tj maxx and you will be spoken to in spanish first in some areas. the store windows will have discount information in spanish. it's also true about the dialect of english forming there. it's heavily influenced by spanish in it's vowel sounds, inotations and rhythmn. my friends never could hear their 'accents' and i loved it. it was the perfect place to live before i moved to spain lol. lastly extraño pollo tropical.
Pipo, can u make this video on spanish? My english in not very good looking
Well Explained 10/10
I read the cigar manufactures didn’t want Cuban government to take their name but sadly it happened anyway which is why you get doubles of cigar brands like Cohiba
Funny that some dude with a foreign accent is acting like Miami being mostly Latino is something new. Like as a Latino myself it's been like this all my life. Many hispanic productions come from Miami this days. Florida itself was a Spanish colony for a long time as well so there was always Hispanic influence.
Also not only Miami is that way but Orlando as well. Go to MCO and you realized real quick that Spanish is the language spoken by most people there.
bruh just cuz you’re from a hispanic part of a city doesn’t mean the whole place is hispanic dawg. north miami is ran by blacks and the coast is ran by whites so what u talking about 😹😹😹
I live in Miami and whenever I meet someone that doesn't they always say its like entering another country.
Romans 6:23
For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.
Come to Jesus Christ today
Jesus Christ is only way to heaven
Repent and follow him today seek his heart Jesus Christ can fill the emptiness he can fill the void
Heaven and hell is real cone to the loving savior today
Today is the day of salvation tomorrow might be to late come to the loving savior today
John 3:16-21
16 For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. 17 For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved. 18 He that believeth on him is not condemned: but he that believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God. 19 And this is the condemnation, that light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil. 20 For every one that doeth evil hateth the light, neither cometh to the light, lest his deeds should be reproved. 21 But he that doeth truth cometh to the light, that his deeds may be made manifest, that they are wrought in God.
Mark 1.15
15 And saying, The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand: repent ye, and believe the gospel.
2 Peter 3:9
The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness; but is longsuffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance.
Hebrews 11:6
6 But without faith it is impossible to please him: for he that cometh to God must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him.
JesusRomans 6:23
For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.
Come to Jesus Christ today
Jesus Christ is only way to heaven
Repent and follow him today seek his heart Jesus Christ can fill the emptiness he can fill the void
Heaven and hell is real cone to the loving savior today
Today is the day of salvation tomorrow might be to late come to the loving savior today
John 3:16-21
16 For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. 17 For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved. 18 He that believeth on him is not condemned: but he that believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God. 19 And this is the condemnation, that light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil. 20 For every one that doeth evil hateth the light, neither cometh to the light, lest his deeds should be reproved. 21 But he that doeth truth cometh to the light, that his deeds may be made manifest, that they are wrought in God.
Mark 1.15
15 And saying, The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand: repent ye, and believe the gospel.
2 Peter 3:9
The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness; but is longsuffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance.
Hebrews 11:6
6 But without faith it is impossible to please him: for he that cometh to God must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him.
Jesus
Maybe he should have picked a different airplane, then one from Swiss, when he says: “With flights to central and South American cities” 😂 (8:17)
Great video though 👏🏽
I remember shopping in Target there about 7 years ago and they had to find an English-speaking employee to help me 🤦🏿
girl you need to learn spanish… 2024
@@a.k.alizzygrant3358 Nope, I don't live in a Spanish-speaking city now. I'm a guy btw.
@@a.k.alizzygrant3358 And they dont have to learn english?
Went to visit the UM campus and check out the area because I wanted to move there. There was a subtle hostility because I didn’t speak Spanish. I remember trying to grab Wendy’s one night and the lady flat out told me “no English. Go” 😂 like wtf. The art distract was nice, music and food amazing, but damn I realized I couldn’t live there
Everyone that moves to Miami that doesn't speak Spanish has a traumatic story where they realized they had to learn Spanish to survive.
Yeah. Realizing I either have to really invest in learning Spanish or leave.
It's a massive culture shock, growing up in central Florida. Like I always grew up around Spanish, but people still overwhelmingly use English there.
@@allydr90 for me it wasn’t that I’d have to learn, I guess it was more the hostility near coral gables and near the old Wyndham walls. We went to this restaurant on the Havana strip and the food was bomb. Waitress was nice, but the regulars kinda glared like wtf was I doing there 😂. Still had a good time, but realized it probably wasn’t an easy move just to go to school there
@@allydr90 And the latinos dont have to learn english? They can just live in america because their countries of origin are way to poor to live in and act like they own the place.
@@DariusJones05 "What is this American doing in America? Go back to your.....uuuuh."
Best video explaining Miami’s history
I was born in St. Augustine(founded by the Spanish) in 2008, and Miami is where my mom and Mexican dad meet in early 2007.
Cool I live in St Augustine but the irony here is that very little of modern day SA is Spanish very few Spanish here who speak it its mostly an historic town with colonial Spanish architecture from 1500s Spain.
Definitely want to go check out Miami now!! I'm Puerto Rican, but I was born, raised, and still I've in Maryland. Its so boring here, there's almost no Latin culture here. I want to move somewhere were there's more Latin culture. I could move to some of the border states near Mexico, but that's too far from my family plus that's more central America Latin culture. I've been to the homeland (US territory) of Puerto Rico and it is a paradise. I'd love to move there, but it seems like big leap because its not technically a part of the US, and when I go there I still feel like an outsider because its very different, I get a culture shock. I've never been to Miami, and from what I've heard from other people, that its an amazing city. And after watching this video, I really want to go check the city out. It can prepare me and be my launching point to move to Puerto Rico, or if I really love the city more than Puerto Rico, then I'll stay.
If you want a more "Boriqua" culture than Miami I would suggest Orlando / Kissimmee instead. It's just more "Suburban" than Miami though but the culture is there.
@xoxxobob61 Yeah, I've been to Orlando, nice city. I'm not really looking for only small Boricua communities, I'd like to live in a big city that just has more latin culture in general. Orlando I didn't see it as like a big latin hub, it was still pretty much a mixed city. Haven't driven around Kissimmee, I should go check that out. But also, I love big cities.
What I've heard and seen from the internet and from people I know that have been there, is Miami is a big city, beautiful women, its clean, and some areas feel like your in Puerto Rico. And now, from this video and from people in the comments, hearing that the majority of the demographic is hispanic and Spanish and latin culture is everywhere. Sounds like my kind of city. Also I've heard from other Puerto Ricans that Kissimmee is kinda boring, and that there's a joke that the Chicago and NYC Puerto Rican communities are better than Kissimmee and the other communities. But I also don't want to move up north into the small communities.
The Bronx?
@Myhandle718 Nah, I'm not interested going up north and I've been to the Bronx it's not super hispanic, it's still pretty mixed. Plus it's just one community in the city, I'm looking for a city that's entirely dominated with latin culture.
@@jlm3744 I'm from Miami and your description is accurate. There truly isn't another city like it in the US. You can take that to the bank!
Miami is home for many caribbean folks too and most of them see south florida as their home away from home.