Brit Reacts to Why Helsinki? Why do I live here?

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Пікірлер: 61

  • @VanArn
    @VanArn6 ай бұрын

    The thing that he is cooking is called "tippaleipä". They are usually made for 1st of May or "Vappu" (in finnish) celebration, They are made of loose wheat doe dropped into hot oil and sprinkled with powder sugar on them.

  • @janemiettinen5176

    @janemiettinen5176

    6 ай бұрын

    Funnel cake is the English name for it.

  • @robertfast2713

    @robertfast2713

    6 ай бұрын

    Moro

  • @perttivahalahti7898

    @perttivahalahti7898

    5 ай бұрын

    Just asking why in Finnland

  • @squidcaps4308
    @squidcaps43086 ай бұрын

    BTW, Donald Duck in the Nordic is bigger than Mickey Mouse, and the comics are produced in Europe. The language they use is amazing, it is not dumbed down to kids but it really challenges you when you are learning to read. They have received multiple awards for just that and a big portion of kids have learned to read from Donald Duck. It is full of "what does this mean, dad?" moments and you learn at home, very efficiently. So, that is why he is reading Scrooge McDuck, it is really good material for learning the language. Them being comics also helps since you have a story and pictures, with limited amount of text: the entertainment value is high and the learning part is not too overwhelming. That is how i learned to read too, we had a huge crate full of Donald Ducks, so i sat on top of the pile and read them all.

  • @janemiettinen5176
    @janemiettinen51766 ай бұрын

    Ive heard from several expats how they feel like home here; mostly its about the non-competitive culture, wealthy people dont flaunt it and we see others as equals, no matter what your balance currently is. We work to live, not the other way around. We dont use titles, first name is good enough. No one-upping the Johnsons, thats tacky. Close second is the safety, nature (access and appreciation) and people respecting your person. No need to small talk, if you dont feel like it, silence is perfectly fine. This is often seen as shyness or coldness, but its neither, you have the right to be left unbothered. Unspoken rule that only drunkards break :)

  • @finnishculturalchannel
    @finnishculturalchannel6 ай бұрын

    Snuggling indoors during the winter is definitely a thing, but he might not have discovered the winter activities possible. Here's some less, more or fairly popular ones: "Winter Biking in Helsinki - FINLAND", "AVANTO HOLE IN THE ICE", "Funny things in Finland: Walking, skating and skiing on ice", "Nordic skating on lake Näsijärvi | Tampere, South Finland (Shrove Sunday 2019)", "Skating 100+ km Distance on Lohjanjärvi", "Windsurf on ice at downtown Helsinki", "Enduro On The Ice", "PILKKIKAUSI 2023 ALKAKOON | ICE FISHING IN FINLAND", "Fishing under ice (ORIGINAL)", "Hockey Heaven. Some of the BEST outdoor rinks in Europe are in Finland", "Kempan lumisota", "Potkukelkkailun MM-kisat 2018 - Multia", "Snowmobile ride in Lapland - FINLAND", "Cross-country skiing paradise Pello in Lapland Finland", "Winter wonderland of Ruka Ski Resort, Kuusamo, Finland", "Skiing at Levi, Finland", "Saariselkä - Suomen pisin pulkkamäki", "Valtavaara Winter Hiking trail Finland" and "Experience winter in Finland". And probably the most popular winter activity of them all: "Lumityöt Kasaria kuunnellen".

  • @buddyweiz
    @buddyweiz6 ай бұрын

    He's making "Tippaleipä" (=funnel cake) it's a kind of krispy doughnut. Specially made for Vappu (1 of May). And about Donald Duck comics in Finland, they do have an excellently good language on purpose, an easier way to learn Finnish.

  • @oh2mp
    @oh2mp6 ай бұрын

    Tyler is a nice guy. He has a live session weekly in KZread.

  • @pamelakilponen3682
    @pamelakilponen36826 ай бұрын

    It is snowing here in Helsinki and will snow for another 3 days. It is beautiful. I hope we have a snowy Christmas! I disagree about the English thing, yes you can get by with services, but not with jobs. You need to know Finnish for working life.

  • @moonliteX
    @moonliteX6 ай бұрын

    in america there is no option to walk to a grocery store. you have to get into your pick-up -truck, go on the interstate or turnpike for 15 minutes to get to a wallmart and buy your stuff for the week

  • @buddyweiz
    @buddyweiz6 ай бұрын

    Jup "räntää" is the word in Finnish for snow/slush/water combination. We do get it.

  • @pamelakilponen3682

    @pamelakilponen3682

    6 ай бұрын

    räntä is sleet, loska is more commonly used for slush.

  • @js0988
    @js09886 ай бұрын

    Sadly we get snow! It's freaking november and we already have snow and it was -20C in southern Finland! 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭

  • @Jantzku

    @Jantzku

    6 ай бұрын

    Better to have snow than rain and darkness 👍🏼

  • @elinahamalainen5867

    @elinahamalainen5867

    6 ай бұрын

    I both hate and love snow. It is pretty and it's whiteness helps with darkness. But I go everywhere with bike and it's so much more difficult on snow.

  • @haneski8020

    @haneski8020

    6 ай бұрын

    I hate snow. People are always complaining about the darkness, but I feel it comforting. It really gives you a permission to just lay down and be still (with book and warming fire). When it is snowing you have to get rid of it before driving or walking - plenty of useless work every time. And when it's melting it turns to slippery ice. So depressing! Don't mind if there is no snow ever again. (One can dream.)

  • @Jantzku

    @Jantzku

    6 ай бұрын

    @@haneski8020 I don't need the darkness as a permission to just lay down etc. I can just put on the curtains and have darkness any time of the year I want.

  • @haneski8020

    @haneski8020

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Jantzku Of course you can do so. But I do have two kids and two jobs and it's just wonderful feeling when everything is dark and silent. I really enjoy winter time without snow.

  • @casteliero
    @casteliero6 ай бұрын

    I prefer lakeland area in Finland more than sea shore area. Cleaner water, much more nature, less people etc

  • @leopartanen8752
    @leopartanen87526 ай бұрын

    In Finland, many employers are interested in an employee's previous experience, especially if it is in a different field. Maybe it makes him feel important and more confident here. 🤷‍♂️

  • @Jantzku
    @Jantzku6 ай бұрын

    He was making Tippaleipä / Funnel cake

  • @bengtolsson5436
    @bengtolsson54366 ай бұрын

    I am a bus driver and I drive children who travel alone every day. Nothing strange about that!

  • @Nabekukka

    @Nabekukka

    2 сағат бұрын

    Yeah the thing is, in America you're not going to see kids get on a public bus alone. Ever. School buses are different, but in the US, if parents let a kid go by themselves anywhere, so much as leave them alone and unattended even inside their parked car and walk 10m to the ATM, the parent(s) can get arrested for that.

  • @bengtolsson5436

    @bengtolsson5436

    2 сағат бұрын

    @@Nabekukka Yes, it's crazy! And you call your country free?

  • @Nabekukka

    @Nabekukka

    2 сағат бұрын

    @@bengtolsson5436 Not my country, I'm not an American nor do I live there, I'm Finnish.

  • @Necrotechian
    @Necrotechian6 ай бұрын

    america has school busses that stop like almost outside every home with a kid and only picks up the kids and goes straight to the school... so i guess kids going in public transportation by themselves where they have to get on to the right numbered bus and get off on the right stop and start walking to the right direction to get to school and there are also lots of adult riding the same bus might look abnormal to an american...

  • @MissSylvia67

    @MissSylvia67

    6 ай бұрын

    81❤

  • @hennahallikainen711
    @hennahallikainen7113 ай бұрын

    I also live in Helsinki. I also have lived in Spain, but this is my home.

  • @user-yt9pg6hz6j
    @user-yt9pg6hz6j5 ай бұрын

    Please come to Finland. You will have no probs. Everyone here can speak english and it is safe here. But don't come to Helsinki at the wintertime. July might be the best time. :)

  • @Gittas-tube
    @Gittas-tube6 ай бұрын

    Hi, Dwayne! You're my favourite guy on youtube! The 'pastry' he's deep-frying is a special type only consumed during the 1st of May celebration together with the traditional meed, home-made or store-bought. In Swedish it's called 'struva (en struva, many struvor. And the meed, harking back to the Viking era, os called mjöd (same word as in English) in Swedish and sima in Finnish. As you've notice by now, Dwayne, the BIG cultural divide lies between Europe and the U.S. and less between the various states within Europe, though there are, of course, some big differences here, too, for instance between North and South and West and East, but villages and towns were built hundreds of years before cars even existed. In the U.S., you're forced to have one or more cars, because the whole society is built for and around the car. Americans do everything by car, short or long jaunts to their closest shopping center and to every other activity as, for example, driving the children to all of their hobbies and activities.

  • @hennahallikainen711
    @hennahallikainen7113 ай бұрын

    He was making ”tippaleipä” what we eat 1.5. then we have Vappu. This is big party in here.

  • @moonliteX
    @moonliteX6 ай бұрын

    in a way, helsinki is new york but everything is walking distance and EVERYTHING is 100% safe. everything is friendly, everything is nice and quiet and content. nobody wants anything more than you have. big-brand skateboard videos and snowboard videos have been shot here and the actual real-life forest (not a park) is walking-distance and everything is by the sea or at least lakes or rivers.

  • @moonliteX

    @moonliteX

    6 ай бұрын

    i'm REALLY into culture and especially sub-cultures are just big enough to be "world-class" and the rest IS VERY MUCH big enough for anyone.

  • @moonliteX
    @moonliteX6 ай бұрын

    oh if you didnt know it is ILLEGAL in the usa to leave someone who is under 16 even alone in the house. and children NEVERR EVER EVER EVER take public transport. the SPECIAL school-bus driver can and will not let the kid out of the bus until a specifically identified parent walks into the school-bus to take them home. yes. they have to walk into the bus and pick the kid up from the seat. i mean .... america is CRAAAZYYYYYYYY

  • @Frank-wt6lg

    @Frank-wt6lg

    6 ай бұрын

    I used to be a school bus driver in Helsinki. It was usual that kids (age 8-14) came alone and got off alone. No problem.

  • @PyryRichter
    @PyryRichter6 ай бұрын

    I've heard that it's very tough for foreigners and immigrants to learn finnish and thus integrate to finnish society because everyone starts to speak english when they notice someone is not speaking finnish as their native language. And btw finnish language is mainly learned through speaking, not reading and studying on your own.

  • @Ukkoslapsi
    @Ukkoslapsi6 ай бұрын

    Well that is maybe the most linguistically difficult main stream graphic novel one could try.

  • @moonliteX
    @moonliteX6 ай бұрын

    i would very much argue that finland and sweden are the most american/english adopters of europe. quite near to EVERYTHING we watch and listen to is from usa/canada/uk. we kinda adopt your culture and language quite a bit.

  • @moonliteX

    @moonliteX

    6 ай бұрын

    what i´ve heard, most european cultures try to forcefully or mindfully "conserve" their own culture and deliberately rejecting english-speaking culture but in finland we have never done that.

  • @moonliteX

    @moonliteX

    6 ай бұрын

    so most people are actually excited about talking with americans and people from the uk. because it´s like the television comes alive XD XD XD XD XD XD

  • @pekkakarppinen1608
    @pekkakarppinen16086 ай бұрын

    Haha, here in north we have much more clearer seasons. and much much more tranquil life than in Helsinki. 🤘🤘🤘

  • @ristogayer
    @ristogayer6 ай бұрын

    Tyler 😁👌used to be my teacher great guy !

  • @rockcanem
    @rockcanem6 ай бұрын

    Yes the grocery storse are so far apart, and often in places you can't acess whit out a car, that one can live in a suburb and not have waling distance to a grocerey stor in USA. There are a lot of housing areas that are called "food deserts" where the only places to get food from are the lokal fast food resturants, unless you got a car to go shopping with. Not only are the grosery stores far apart, but even the roadnetworks makes it difficult and often dangersous to get to the lokal grocery stores. We got our streats and roads here in Europe, but in US you got something called stroads, that is i mixture of smaller streets and bigger roads. This paired with the bonkers laws of how much parking the stores in USA need to provide makes most suburbs theese food deserts. You should watch some videos of USA just to see how difrent USA is from Europe. When learning more aboute the states, Europeans often gets to think of "The land of The Free" as "Russia lite". .

  • @eetukytokangas1364
    @eetukytokangas13646 ай бұрын

    Are you going to Vaasa too?

  • @janikallio76
    @janikallio766 ай бұрын

    that whas he made call "tippaleipä"

  • @SK-nw4ig
    @SK-nw4ig6 ай бұрын

    WTF = Welcome to Finland!

  • @apileppanen5431
    @apileppanen54316 ай бұрын

    Life is so much better like 100km north from Helsinki

  • @suvikivioja298
    @suvikivioja2985 ай бұрын

    Today where I live was -32 electricy bill is 300 euros and + woods to burn 165 euros... I don't like. Here we need own car because nearest shop is 7 km and no busses and lot of more I can't tell in english... Helsinki is good place, but Finland has many other places live in

  • @Mojova1
    @Mojova16 ай бұрын

    Everyone has a car in the US so if someone is using the bus then something is not right, so you will probably just get shot in the bus. 😅 Also surprisingly healthy looking vegan. 😄

  • @juhokalliokoski9518
    @juhokalliokoski95186 ай бұрын

    If you decide to enter Finland, let me know. I can arrange you're travel needs

  • @markuslaikkoja742
    @markuslaikkoja7426 ай бұрын

    Tampere best Sity on finland ;)

  • @hannadegerlund3227
    @hannadegerlund32276 ай бұрын

    Tippaleipä ☝

  • @psygamarerotu2408
    @psygamarerotu24086 ай бұрын

    It´s called tippaleipä..basicly it´s a donut,made and doughstring and fry it.

  • @matswinberg5045
    @matswinberg50456 ай бұрын

    English migrants are privileged since English is a high status language, and native Englsh speakers are treated very well througout the Nordic countries. I have had migrant acquaintances who are not native English speakers pretend they are Americans to increase their chances on the dating scene . I don't think that he would be so positive if he was, for instance, a Swede living in Helsinki. Americans are highly regarded campared to other migrants in the Nordic countries.

  • @robertquail5838
    @robertquail5838Ай бұрын

    I'm in Helsinki now. Boring ,expensive, to much light or to much night . To cold . Bad food many better countries to vist

  • @StPaul76
    @StPaul76Ай бұрын

    This guy lives right down town very expensively and declares fashionably "there's no need for a car".. Probably works from home most days too.. Admires cleanliness, old renovated buildings and does not give a shit how or who restored everything or how they got there or where from.. :D

  • @Nakkisesonki
    @Nakkisesonki6 ай бұрын

    I would never live in helsinki