I’m glad channels like yours can translate and westernise these classic Ottoman tales. The “Steamed Kebab”, the story of the classic Ankara expression, deserves to be shown to a international audience due to its cultural significance
we didn't call it kebab, it was called gyros, invented in greece, then brought to turkey, after ottoman empire's collapse, tho i can see what you did there, steamed gyros.
the thing that's even funnier is Ottoman Empire ended in 1922 and the cites of Albany and Utica were founded in 1686 and 1798 respectivly. so it's entirely possible that an Ottoman puppeter knew about these cities
Technically no. Ottomans last padishah sended to brits. What hell happened to him unknown afterwards. And because other goverment gone, ankara goverment became the country. After becoming new ruler of ottoman. tbmm(turkiye great nation council) decided to change flag and name of the land. @@Fkindo-europeanarechaotic
It's funny because "steamed hamburgers" are actually a popular turkish street food dish, they cover the buns in tomato sauce and leave the whole burger sitting in a steamer
-And you call them beef burgers, despite the fact that they look and smell like pork. -Uh, it's a regional dialect. -Oh, yeah? From where? -Uh, Trabzon? -Well, I'm from Bafra, and only the local Rumlar eat pork. -Oh, no no. I'm an inner city boy.
Dude I'm Turkish and this is fcking incredible! How the hell did you build the puppets, how are you moving them so accurately - and how is the voice acting so on point? I've never enjoyed Karagöz & Hacivat as a kid but I think as an adult I would watch 30 seasons worth of episodes if you parodied the entirety of the Simpsons.
Doing full episodes of the Simpsons would be a real feat. I have a short behind the scenes video on my Patreon showing how I made the puppets and performed it.
I'm glad to see someone working so hard to archive all these historical re-tellings of such a classic and ageless tale. Maybe one day you can show us a reproduction of Sophacles' three-part tragedy "Seymourius," or even a close examination of the original Cuneiform tablets describing the unforgettable luncheon.
I know it's because Greece was heavily influenced by Ottoman culture, but this brings back fond childhood memories of the Karagiotzis shadow puppet plays (in fact, those were also an adaptation of a Turkish tradition, I think) ! Absolutely outstanding work! This made my day!
Mad props to you. This is absolutely fantastic and surprisingly accurate for a Simpsons pastiche - down to the portrayal of an Ottoman fire brigade. As we say in Turkish, _helal olsun_
@@thegoddamnsun5657 I bought a shadow play set with these two from a school fair when I was in primary school and I used to be in the theater club from primary to secondary school, while also, you know, being from and living in the area. So yeah, I think I would at least be a fan They also used to air skits based on original Karagöz and Hacivat plays on the national channel close to midnight, usually before the programming schedule changed and the lottery tickets were announced - sometimes the channels aired interchangeably back then. I remember having a small CRT across the foot of my bed and not knowing which days aired the shadow plays so I would stay up every night to see if I could see them. And lastly, a kid on my school bus made fun of my name by likening it to a certain recurring character in the plays.
@@midorithefestivegardevoir6727 "a kid on my school bus made fun of my name by likening it to a certain recurring character in the plays." let me guess your name is Tussuz Deli Bekir
Tyrone, I showed this video to Bill Oakley, a.k.a. the Steamed Hams writer (and therefore memelord), and this is what he said about it: > This is amazing too! This guy is so insanely talented. I love that he is gracing Steamed Hams with his formidable skills! There you have it. I think you just may be a Canadian National Treasure (my words, not his)!
@@TyroneDeise I've told you this before, but it's not just that he likes your hams, but that he considers yours the best out of all the ones he's seen. *THAT*, my friend, is truly an honor!
Karagiozis itself is a Hellenized version of Karagöz, the original Turkish shadow play. Many formerly Ottoman nations carried the tradition of shadow puppetry after the fall of the Empire.
An artist like this should be savoured. I watched this twice, once in the conventional way on the toilet and the second on a mock up mezzanine floor muppets critic style as it helped as I laughed my head off
"What region?" "European side Marmara." "Really? Well I'm from Edirne and I have not heard anyone use the phrase steamed hams." "Oh not in Edirne it's a Tekirdağ expression." "I see "
@@Mr._Tyrannosaur The name "Istanbul" had become official only in the late 1930's. It was always called "Konstantiniyye" or "Konstantinopolis". Also the name Istanbul comes from "Stanpolis" in Greek meaning "to the city" which is used by people saying they're going to THE city.
@@furkanyilmaz0 wrong. The name istanbul first appeared in the book written in the 1360 and the book name is Dânişmendnâme. Also in the early days of the Ottoman empire it is also called istanbul in Gazavât-ı Sultan Murad. And it become the officil name of the city when Fatih sultan mehmed conquered the city. Also it is true that istanbul is a greek word that is TURKIFIED. And why would its name get turkified 482 years after its conquer?
@@circuscharlie54 Decades of controversy over slavery were brought to a head when Abraham Lincoln, who opposed slavery's expansion, won the 1860 presidential election. Seven Southern slave states responded to Lincoln's victory by seceding from the United States and forming the Confederacy. The Confederacy seized U.S. forts and other federal assets within their borders. The war began on April 12, 1861, when the Confederacy bombarded Fort Sumter in South Carolina. A wave of enthusiasm for war swept over the North and South, as military recruitment soared. Four more Southern states seceded after the war began and, led by its president, Jefferson Davis, the Confederacy asserted control over a third of the U.S. population in eleven states. Four years of intense combat, mostly in the South, ensued. During 1861-62 in the Western theater, the Union made permanent gains-though in the Eastern theater the conflict was inconclusive. The abolition of slavery became a Union war goal on January 1, 1863, when Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, which declared all slaves in rebel states to be free, applying to more than 3.5 million of the 4 million enslaved people in the country. To the west, the Union first destroyed the Confederacy's river navy by the summer of 1862, then much of its western armies, and seized New Orleans. The successful 1863 Union siege of Vicksburg split the Confederacy in two at the Mississippi River, while Confederate General Robert E. Lee's incursion north failed at the Battle of Gettysburg. Western successes led to General Ulysses S. Grant's command of all Union armies in 1864. Inflicting an ever-tightening naval blockade of Confederate ports, the Union marshaled resources and manpower to attack the Confederacy from all directions. This led to the fall of Atlanta in 1864 to Union General William Tecumseh Sherman, followed by his March to the Sea. The last significant battles raged around the ten-month Siege of Petersburg, gateway to the Confederate capital of Richmond. The Confederates abandoned Richmond, and on April 9, 1865, Lee surrendered to Grant following the Battle of Appomattox Court House, setting in motion the end of the war.[f] Lincoln lived to see this victory but was shot on April 14, dying the next day. By the end of the war, much of the South's infrastructure was destroyed. The Confederacy collapsed, slavery was abolished, and four million enslaved black people were freed. The war-torn nation then entered the Reconstruction era in an attempt to rebuild the country, bring the former Confederate states back into the United States, and grant civil rights to freed slaves. The war is one of the most extensively studied and written about episodes in U.S. history. It remains the subject of cultural and historiographical debate. Of continuing interest is the fading myth of the Lost Cause of the Confederacy. The war was among the first to use industrial warfare. Railroads, the electrical telegraph, steamships, the ironclad warship, and mass-produced weapons were widely used. The war left between 620,000 and 750,000 soldiers dead, along with an undetermined number of civilian casualties, making the Civil War the deadliest military conflict in American history.[g] The technology and brutality of the Civil War foreshadowed the coming World Wars. Edit: Now stfu and I'm balkan and my ancestors were ottomans you fucking idiot
it'd be even funnier if you changed the terms into Turkish lol like: "so in Izmir, you call Kebab, steamed ham?" "It's a regional dialect" "what sanjak?" "uhh, up Sanjak Adana" "I am from Adana, and I have not heard anyone use the phrase 'steamed hams'" "oh not in Adana, it's an Iskenderun expression"
"Allah Allah ya my roast is ruined!" :D As a Turkish, I wasn't expecting this version of Steamed Hams. You also did the Ottoman firefighters Tulumbacı Ocağı, well done
I am Turkish, born and raised, through and through. I have full command and expertise in the English language. To top it all off, I've seen this scene at least a dozen times. I still have no idea what the fuck they are saying. 10/10
i fucking love this sm😭 im from greece and grew up with plays like these. one of my grandpa's friends used to draw the puppets and backdrops for my town's theatre for these kind of plays. great work!!
I cannot but help admire the inventiveness that people have invested into this one episode from The Simpsons. That you've able to give it a different flavor, outside of the American setting, makes it even more hilarious and poignant!
- Aman Allahım! Mutfağında ne oluyor Hacı Seymour cav-cav!
- Ramazan ışıkları.
selam türk
Wiywiywiy mutfağında minare mi vardır ki ışık dikmişler
"Ramazan ışıkları mı? Yılın bu, günün bu vaktinde, ülkenin bu tarafında, sadece senin mutfağında mı?!"
"...Hee."
@@zeta3341 Görebilir miyim?
@@AlexHarrison-zv4jj Tövbe estağfurullah.
I feel like I'm learning more about the history of cinema and storytelling from your Steamed Hams videos than I could from a college level class
1.7k 10 mo 1 reply
To be fair there's really no experience like hands on experience and getting to see the real thing. Props to Tyrone Deise though this is awesome
The Steamed Hams shadow play was first introduced on 14th April, 1496 during the Simpsons' seventh year of entertaining people in the Ottoman Empire.
real
@MutedAndReported3032 especially since ham would be Haram.
@@MutedAndReported3032 Assuming the Simpsons was in 1489
@@anejat629 it was
@@anejat629 that means The Simpsons first aired during the reign of Sultan Bayezid II
I’m glad channels like yours can translate and westernise these classic Ottoman tales. The “Steamed Kebab”, the story of the classic Ankara expression, deserves to be shown to a international audience due to its cultural significance
Haşlanmış Kebap
Not in Ankara, no. It's an Eskisehir expression.
we didn't call it kebab, it was called gyros, invented in greece, then brought to turkey, after ottoman empire's collapse, tho i can see what you did there, steamed gyros.
@@El-Djazir-Blobfishthere are written records of kebabs during the Ottoman empire
@@Furko08 it's shishkebab
It's the freaking firefighters that were the cherry on top.
the thing that's even funnier is Ottoman Empire ended in 1922 and the cites of Albany and Utica were founded in 1686 and 1798 respectivly. so it's entirely possible that an Ottoman puppeter knew about these cities
Not ended replaced with new country because Ataturk hate Sultan and monarchy
so, it was replaced. doesn't that mean it still ended?
The Hamburger was also well established by the 1920s
Technically no. Ottomans last padishah sended to brits. What hell happened to him unknown afterwards. And because other goverment gone, ankara goverment became the country. After becoming new ruler of ottoman. tbmm(turkiye great nation council) decided to change flag and name of the land.
@@Fkindo-europeanarechaotic
@@Sky-pg8jmWhen was the first Hamburger?
The voice acting is really what sells this tbh
Thanks.
It's funny because "steamed hamburgers" are actually a popular turkish street food dish, they cover the buns in tomato sauce and leave the whole burger sitting in a steamer
how would you know
i wouldn't say popular
Everybody knows it here
I know it
Dang. I could dig on that.
This, the Hebrew translation, and the Soviet cartoon are an absolute godlike trilogy.
i’m a hebrew speaker and only now i find out there’s a hebrew translation
There's another that's an early German silent film style that's also great.
Also the version that was turned into a green day song
the soviet cartoon one was made by the same person as this one. he also made more, such as the german expressionist version
@@misterhuman895 hush up, bumpkin.
The anti-bolshevik one is great if you know about leftist politics
-And you call them beef burgers, despite the fact that they look and smell like pork.
-Uh, it's a regional dialect.
-Oh, yeah? From where?
-Uh, Trabzon?
-Well, I'm from Bafra, and only the local Rumlar eat pork.
-Oh, no no. I'm an inner city boy.
Haram Seymour
found the pontic greek xD
BWAHAHAHAHAHA
Also BAFRA MENTIONED 🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🥙🥙🥙🥙🥙🐟🐟🐟🐟🐟🐟🐟WTF IS A TERME PİDESİ
No no its a Çaykara expression
I like your funny words, magic man.
this feels way too high quality for a steamed hams bit, good stuff man
Have you seen his silent film one????
This is the highest possible reachable point in memeing, literally nothing can top this.
except for the complete recreation of this episode in hebrew script set to the Megillah in tone and pace
Dude I'm Turkish and this is fcking incredible! How the hell did you build the puppets, how are you moving them so accurately - and how is the voice acting so on point? I've never enjoyed Karagöz & Hacivat as a kid but I think as an adult I would watch 30 seasons worth of episodes if you parodied the entirety of the Simpsons.
Doing full episodes of the Simpsons would be a real feat. I have a short behind the scenes video on my Patreon showing how I made the puppets and performed it.
Physical shadow puppets, sprinkled with Turkish phrases here and there. It's a pity that I can't give 1000 likes. Muhteşem!
Oven is Turkish urn
The sheer, absurd production quality with historical and linguistic accuracy for such a shitpost. The mind boggles.
As a Turk, I have never before been so delighted with my culture being slandered.
im a turk too this isnt slander theyre appreciating our culture if anything
@@htsgm That's the joke.
@@NovaAge slander is a negative thing though
@@htsgm The joke is that it's not slander at all.
@@NovaAge oh ok
Seymur Skineroğlu and Çalmer Bey. I hope Seymur's mother Ağnız Hatun was ok.
Superintendent Chalmers wouldn't recognize the dialect, it's from the Ottoman Empire 🏰
Not in Kadıköy, hayır. It's an Üsküdar expression!
Yeah, I wish they localized it a bit more. But otherwise it's delightful.
No no not in İzmir it's a Manisa expression
-Really? Well i'm from Gelibolu and i never heard that expression
-Ow no, not in Gelibolu, it's an Edirne expression
I'm glad to see someone working so hard to archive all these historical re-tellings of such a classic and ageless tale. Maybe one day you can show us a reproduction of Sophacles' three-part tragedy "Seymourius," or even a close examination of the original Cuneiform tablets describing the unforgettable luncheon.
The dedication to not just your craft, but learning all these new crafts is inspiring
Thanks. I feel that every project should incorporate something you’ve never done before.
I know it's because Greece was heavily influenced by Ottoman culture, but this brings back fond childhood memories of the Karagiotzis shadow puppet plays (in fact, those were also an adaptation of a Turkish tradition, I think) !
Absolutely outstanding work! This made my day!
Yes it is a Greek adaptation of the Turkish Karagöz, which means Black eyed! Thanks for recognizing it komşu!
onu da çalmışlar babannesinin bacağına sıçtıklarım...
Mad props to you. This is absolutely fantastic and surprisingly accurate for a Simpsons pastiche - down to the portrayal of an Ottoman fire brigade. As we say in Turkish, _helal olsun_
Thanks. I try to steam all my hams with great care and detail. :)
Delightfully Turkish, Seymour.
That is one of the most creative retellings of Steamed Hams I've ever seen. And so nostalgic! Takes me back to the Ottoman rule over Bulgaria...
it’s nice to see one of the more obscure plays produced by mehmet gernek’s company finally come to life after so many centuries
Just the idea of turning this sketch into a Karagöz Hacivat is pure genius!
As an avid fan of the original Karagöz and Hacivat plays, this only serves to further serve the absurdity.
cringe pfp....
are you turkish? why do i doubt you are an avid fan
@@thegoddamnsun5657 I bought a shadow play set with these two from a school fair when I was in primary school and I used to be in the theater club from primary to secondary school, while also, you know, being from and living in the area. So yeah, I think I would at least be a fan
They also used to air skits based on original Karagöz and Hacivat plays on the national channel close to midnight, usually before the programming schedule changed and the lottery tickets were announced - sometimes the channels aired interchangeably back then. I remember having a small CRT across the foot of my bed and not knowing which days aired the shadow plays so I would stay up every night to see if I could see them.
And lastly, a kid on my school bus made fun of my name by likening it to a certain recurring character in the plays.
@@midorithefestivegardevoir6727 ok but are you turkish? Or atleast in cultural region relating to turkey like greece or cyprus
@@midorithefestivegardevoir6727 "a kid on my school bus made fun of my name by likening it to a certain recurring character in the plays." let me guess your name is Tussuz Deli Bekir
Tyrone, I showed this video to Bill Oakley, a.k.a. the Steamed Hams writer (and therefore memelord), and this is what he said about it:
> This is amazing too! This guy is so insanely talented. I love that he is gracing Steamed Hams with his formidable skills!
There you have it. I think you just may be a Canadian National Treasure (my words, not his)!
Bill’s blessing is an honour. 😊 I’m so thrilled that he’s seen my hams and has enjoyed them.
@@TyroneDeise I've told you this before, but it's not just that he likes your hams, but that he considers yours the best out of all the ones he's seen. *THAT*, my friend, is truly an honor!
You know it’s a good meme when you can take one look at the thumbnail and immediately know it’s steamed hams
... and the award for Best Supporting Role goes to....: The Ottoman Fire Brigade, in Steamed Hams but it's a Shadow Play from the Ottoman Empire
“Vay vay, Karagöz’üm; hoşgeldin! İnşallah unutulmaz bir öğün seni bekliyodur.”
Turning the ambulance from the last frame to a traditional tuulumbaci lmao
I really wasn't expecting to see tulumbacılar (firefighters). I thank you for making my day.
the steamed clams/steamed hams dynamic is actually used a lot on traditional shadow puppet plays too
ALLAH ALLAH YA MY ROAST IS RUINED!!!
Fascinating Thank you . Teşekkürler.
Thanks for the super. I’m glad you enjoyed it. :)
In Cyprus we have a famous puppet show that is called Karagiozis which looks similar to this 🇨🇾
Karagiozis itself is a Hellenized version of Karagöz, the original Turkish shadow play. Many formerly Ottoman nations carried the tradition of shadow puppetry after the fall of the Empire.
As a Greek I thought it was inspired by Karagiozis too. 😂 Karagiozis : Steamed ham edition
Never have I ever thought I'd see steam hams in the same way as the karagiozis puppet show
Karagöz... His name is Karagöz
@@Mr._Tyrannosaur We're talking about the Greek version
@@user1677 there is no Greek version. It is the greek equavelient of karagöz and hacivat
Please ignore these prepubescent morons. They have grown racist and fascist with the failure of financial and educational systems.
I never would have imagined Steamed Hams crossed with Hacivat ve Karagöz. Witnessing this is beyond surreal.
Never have we seen a meme get *better* with age.
Its very interesting seeing you take this dumb meme and using it as a way to explore various cultures/ art forms
Massively underrated series. The fact that this is obscure is criminal.
OMG you even made tulumbacı puppets for the ending 🤣
I mean, Simpsons did kinda have a couch gag in which there was a newspaper reading "Ottoman Empire collapses"
your steamed hams videos are so shockingly impressive and good, the lengths you go to.
I would love to see a version of Steamed Hams in Japanese Kabuki style.
as a turk,this is actually so close with the accent and the drums and they having the same voice
An artist like this should be savoured. I watched this twice, once in the conventional way on the toilet and the second on a mock up mezzanine floor muppets critic style as it helped as I laughed my head off
I like the detail of how you always or mostly include the firemen at the near end of the video
"What region?"
"European side Marmara."
"Really? Well I'm from Edirne and I have not heard anyone use the phrase steamed hams."
"Oh not in Edirne it's a Tekirdağ expression."
"I see "
you must have drinked some pure Rakı for doing this man even getting the slightest vision of memeifying something into this is abstractt
gonna have my teacher play this in my media criticisms course
The fire engine siren was the cherry on top! Great work!
These Steamed Hams parodies are getting better each time, please don't stop!!!
No, not in Constantinople. It's an Angora expression.
The hell is constantinople? I didnt hear that name since 15th century
@@ohnostoltzman2496 the name 'Constantinople' persisted until the early 20th century, locals there used 'Istanbul' colloquially
cringe pfp....
@@Mr._Tyrannosaur The name "Istanbul" had become official only in the late 1930's. It was always called "Konstantiniyye" or "Konstantinopolis". Also the name Istanbul comes from "Stanpolis" in Greek meaning "to the city" which is used by people saying they're going to THE city.
@@furkanyilmaz0 wrong. The name istanbul first appeared in the book written in the 1360 and the book name is Dânişmendnâme. Also in the early days of the Ottoman empire it is also called istanbul in Gazavât-ı Sultan Murad. And it become the officil name of the city when Fatih sultan mehmed conquered the city. Also it is true that istanbul is a greek word that is TURKIFIED. And why would its name get turkified 482 years after its conquer?
To quote another meme: your channel has always been celebrated for its excellence.
1:40 im so sad that he said new york instead of a place in the ottoman empire
Don’t be sad.
Upstate greece
My ancestors were the ottomans ps. I'm balkan
@@Muffcabage no
@@circuscharlie54 Decades of controversy over slavery were brought to a head when Abraham Lincoln, who opposed slavery's expansion, won the 1860 presidential election. Seven Southern slave states responded to Lincoln's victory by seceding from the United States and forming the Confederacy. The Confederacy seized U.S. forts and other federal assets within their borders. The war began on April 12, 1861, when the Confederacy bombarded Fort Sumter in South Carolina. A wave of enthusiasm for war swept over the North and South, as military recruitment soared. Four more Southern states seceded after the war began and, led by its president, Jefferson Davis, the Confederacy asserted control over a third of the U.S. population in eleven states. Four years of intense combat, mostly in the South, ensued.
During 1861-62 in the Western theater, the Union made permanent gains-though in the Eastern theater the conflict was inconclusive. The abolition of slavery became a Union war goal on January 1, 1863, when Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, which declared all slaves in rebel states to be free, applying to more than 3.5 million of the 4 million enslaved people in the country. To the west, the Union first destroyed the Confederacy's river navy by the summer of 1862, then much of its western armies, and seized New Orleans. The successful 1863 Union siege of Vicksburg split the Confederacy in two at the Mississippi River, while Confederate General Robert E. Lee's incursion north failed at the Battle of Gettysburg. Western successes led to General Ulysses S. Grant's command of all Union armies in 1864. Inflicting an ever-tightening naval blockade of Confederate ports, the Union marshaled resources and manpower to attack the Confederacy from all directions. This led to the fall of Atlanta in 1864 to Union General William Tecumseh Sherman, followed by his March to the Sea. The last significant battles raged around the ten-month Siege of Petersburg, gateway to the Confederate capital of Richmond. The Confederates abandoned Richmond, and on April 9, 1865, Lee surrendered to Grant following the Battle of Appomattox Court House, setting in motion the end of the war.[f] Lincoln lived to see this victory but was shot on April 14, dying the next day.
By the end of the war, much of the South's infrastructure was destroyed. The Confederacy collapsed, slavery was abolished, and four million enslaved black people were freed. The war-torn nation then entered the Reconstruction era in an attempt to rebuild the country, bring the former Confederate states back into the United States, and grant civil rights to freed slaves. The war is one of the most extensively studied and written about episodes in U.S. history. It remains the subject of cultural and historiographical debate. Of continuing interest is the fading myth of the Lost Cause of the Confederacy. The war was among the first to use industrial warfare. Railroads, the electrical telegraph, steamships, the ironclad warship, and mass-produced weapons were widely used. The war left between 620,000 and 750,000 soldiers dead, along with an undetermined number of civilian casualties, making the Civil War the deadliest military conflict in American history.[g] The technology and brutality of the Civil War foreshadowed the coming World Wars.
Edit: Now stfu and I'm balkan and my ancestors were ottomans you fucking idiot
im Greek and they have shadow puppets in greece too and i used to really love them as a kid and play around with them myself this is so cool
You put the fire truck.
I was so worried you wouldn't.
But then you did.
Good.
And that's why TH-cam is the best social media ever, you can do whatever comes to your mind and people will see it eventually
The acme siren at the end was inspired
Fun fact : in Greece we also have the Ottoman shadow play around :), just translated from Karagöz to Καραγκιόζης (Karagiozis)
it'd be even funnier if you changed the terms into Turkish lol like:
"so in Izmir, you call Kebab, steamed ham?"
"It's a regional dialect"
"what sanjak?"
"uhh, up Sanjak Adana"
"I am from Adana, and I have not heard anyone use the phrase 'steamed hams'"
"oh not in Adana, it's an Iskenderun expression"
This is an absolute masterpiece oh my goodness!
I’m glad you like it. I think it turned out pretty good.
I like how "Steamed Hams" has transcended beyond just a meme and has become a genre on its own
We're using art forms I didnt even know existed now 😭😭😭
"Allah Allah ya my roast is ruined!" :D As a Turkish, I wasn't expecting this version of Steamed Hams. You also did the Ottoman firefighters Tulumbacı Ocağı, well done
Now this is what I call a turkish delight.
people are geting more and more creative whith diferent art forms and cultures... 10/10 😊
"skinnargöz ve superintendivat"
The karagioziz is a cartoon series that giorgo lukis loves this
I've witnessed history.
Shadow play is underrated. Here in Greece we also have our version of it and I'm glad to see people keeping it alive
Y'all wouldn't believe it but the turks have steamed burgers
I remember reading something about that.
@@TyroneDeise You know these hamburgers are quite similar to the ones they have at Kızılkayalar!
This video deserves to blow up, this is too well made for a Steamed Hams parody.
As a lover of Ottoman history this filled me with so much joy upon it reaching my home page
Seymour'um iki gözüm
Ah yes, I love Buharda Pisirlmis Jambon (1888)
I am Turkish, born and raised, through and through. I have full command and expertise in the English language. To top it all off, I've seen this scene at least a dozen times.
I still have no idea what the fuck they are saying. 10/10
Hacivat ve Karagöz
Karagöz and Hacivat parody!
At this point we may as well send every variation on Steamed Hams into space to teach aliens about human culture.
Loved the "tulumbacılar" at the end, brilliant detail
I love your different versions of Steamed Hams!
This was such a cool thing to watch, I love different forms of theater and cinema
this guy can actually do everything
It makes me happy that world sees our past culture a little bit more.
i fucking love this sm😭 im from greece and grew up with plays like these. one of my grandpa's friends used to draw the puppets and backdrops for my town's theatre for these kind of plays. great work!!
Hacivat & Karagoz let's gooooo
You put so much effort into these. It's crazy.
this is culture
The most shocking part is that the sound quality fits perfectly
Steamed Hams has gone from a shitpost meme to a genuine genre of artform by now.
in antalya we use steamed hams way more often than köfte ekmek so yea this is historically accurate
Traditional Ottoman art is on the verge of extinction
This would’ve done numbers in 2016 🙏🏻😭
I cannot but help admire the inventiveness that people have invested into this one episode from The Simpsons. That you've able to give it a different flavor, outside of the American setting, makes it even more hilarious and poignant!
I don’t know how you say these lines without cracking up. This was genuinely hilarious.
Bonus points times one million for time taken to include the “fire palanquin”!