How Tokyo Vice Actor Learned Japanese FAST

🇯🇵 Japanese is a tough language to master, but this Tokyo Vice actor went from zero to fluent in just a few months! What is his method? In today’s video, we take a closer look at his insane language skills. And if you’re up for a language challenge, now’s the best time to purchase our Gold or Platinum StoryLearning bundles. 👉🏼bit.ly/2024bundle_discount
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⏱ TIMESTAMPS:
0:00 - An offer for $500,000
0:42 - Challenge Accepted
4:20 - Study Routine
5:57 - Shutting Down
8:50 - Immersion and Support
📜 SOURCES & ATTRIBUTIONS:
🎬 Video Clips:
• Tokyo Vice - Jake meet...
• ‘Tokyo Vice’ creator J...
• YES MAN - Jim Carrey s...
• Only In Mandarin - Fre...
• Only In Mandarin - Fre...
• Tokyo Vice | Getting I...
• Ansel Elgort Dives int...
• How Ansel Elgort Learn...
• Tom Hiddleston Found H...
• 【流暢な日本語披露】アンセル・エルゴートが語...
• Tokyo Vice’s Ansel Elg...
• Jennifer Garner talks ...
• Jennifer Garner Reveal...
• Tokyo Vice | Getting I...
• « Cœur » or « corps »?...
• Bradley Cooper French ...
• 【トークノーカット】アンセル・エルゴート、渡...

Пікірлер: 279

  • @storylearning
    @storylearningАй бұрын

    Want to become fluent fast? 👉🏼bit.ly/bundle_discount2024

  • @user-de1dj9hd7e

    @user-de1dj9hd7e

    Ай бұрын

    hes good for sure hes not that good as you guys are pumping him up

  • @annunakian8054
    @annunakian8054Ай бұрын

    Getting in top shape for a role is impressive but learning a language is another level of commitment.

  • @sethaldrich6902

    @sethaldrich6902

    Ай бұрын

    He didn't really learn Japanese, long way to go.

  • @nbvw3

    @nbvw3

    28 күн бұрын

    For that kind of money, and given that then is your ONLY job, I'll take that deal any day of the week. I struggle to balance a day job with desperate attempts at learning Japanese, and if those 40 hours a week were taken away for half a year, I have no doubt I'd be running circles around my current level, backwards. It's also, since you address it, why I am WAY more impressed with a regular guy (or girl) getting into killer shape while holding a regular job than with, say, Daniel Craig going to THE best PT in the business and pretty much telling him "this is how I want to look in 9 months, and I have all day during that period". Mind you, hats off to both of them, but still, in their case it's not something they are doing on top of their job - it IS their job.

  • @mnemonic8757
    @mnemonic8757Ай бұрын

    His pronunciation was a bit poor to believe he was fluent in the first season. He did more than the others anyway and I was impressed that there were a lot of Japanese lines in the show. Actors have high self-esteem, are not shy and are communicative. This speeds up the learning process incredibly.

  • @user-de1dj9hd7e

    @user-de1dj9hd7e

    Ай бұрын

    hes good dont get me wrong but notice how he says i had to learn all the hiragana, which he doesnt even mention the real hard part which anyone who knows knows

  • @alexlei2235

    @alexlei2235

    Ай бұрын

    @@user-de1dj9hd7e if you're referring to kanji, it seems like at 4:20, you get a look at what might be Ansel's notebook, which does have it. Not sure if it's actually his or just a prop shot for the video.

  • @user-de1dj9hd7e

    @user-de1dj9hd7e

    Ай бұрын

    @@alexlei2235 right but if he realy knew or knows what is hard he would have said something else which he didnt

  • @XaldinX

    @XaldinX

    29 күн бұрын

    @@user-de1dj9hd7e isn't that a personal thing lol?

  • @RahulDevanarayanan

    @RahulDevanarayanan

    24 күн бұрын

    by the second season his pronunciation sounds much more natural, that hard work was very noticeable

  • @famousatmidnight15
    @famousatmidnight15Ай бұрын

    The show is cool because it jumps from English to Japanese all through the episodes. It flows really well in the show.

  • @RiccardoGabarriniKazeatari

    @RiccardoGabarriniKazeatari

    Ай бұрын

    The actor's Japanese is awful though. At least in the first scene being shown here

  • @alexlei2235

    @alexlei2235

    Ай бұрын

    @@RiccardoGabarriniKazeatari I would go nowhere near saying he's awful. Ansel's individual sounds may still sound similar to how he speaks English (pronouncing じょう like "Joe," a common mistake with English speakers), he has the idea of the rhythm and intonation of the language, which sells it so much more to me because that's one of the main things that actors can't just copy. They have to study the language and be able to pick up on the inflections and breaths people take to sound fluent. Also, his ぜひ at the end was almost perfect.

  • @scottkronmiller3746
    @scottkronmiller3746Ай бұрын

    It's really obvious how much better and more comfortable of a Japanese speaker he is in the 2nd season even to me, an English only speaker.

  • @TheRyanos
    @TheRyanosАй бұрын

    It's still pretty fucking impressive how fast he learned Japanese, a language that's very hard to learn for the average (non-Japanese) person. And he really does speak it (as in understands it), he is not just simply memorizing his lines. Check out this clip where he's on a Japenese type of comic con and the reporters ask him all kinds of questions in Japanese followed by him answering in Japanese.

  • @user-de1dj9hd7e

    @user-de1dj9hd7e

    Ай бұрын

    if he was working on it that hard it wasnt that good but yes it was understandable with what he said

  • @cockamamy

    @cockamamy

    28 күн бұрын

    I don't see the clip?

  • @coolbrotherf127
    @coolbrotherf127Ай бұрын

    I study Japanese about 4 hours a day as well, and I feel like I make a lot of progress. I usually study vocab and grammar for 2 hours a day, and practice my listening and/or reading for another 2 hours a day. I have to keep it regimented as I'm still in college full time getting my computer science degree so I'm a busy bee studying human language and programming languages.

  • @storylearning

    @storylearning

    Ай бұрын

    Very impressive!

  • @mathiaslovnes2667

    @mathiaslovnes2667

    21 күн бұрын

    Wow, I’m also studying for a degree in comp sci and learning japanese on the side. With everything else on top it’s really hard to find the time even though I love it😢 In summer I’m going to grind 5h+ a day, though, which is gonna be so fun🤩

  • @zubinkynto

    @zubinkynto

    20 күн бұрын

    haha, CS and learning Japanese here too!

  • @spadaacca
    @spadaaccaАй бұрын

    I became completely fluent in French during COVID and now live in France and only speak in French all day, with an accent so good the French often think I'm French. Voila quoi.

  • @storylearning

    @storylearning

    Ай бұрын

    Awesome!

  • @jacquelinebye6484

    @jacquelinebye6484

    Ай бұрын

    How? I've lived in France 20 years and still sound English 😂

  • @JohnM...

    @JohnM...

    Ай бұрын

    Sure you do.

  • @itchyPoncho

    @itchyPoncho

    Ай бұрын

    from listening and copying I assume@@jacquelinebye6484

  • @spadaacca

    @spadaacca

    Ай бұрын

    @@jacquelinebye6484 Shadowing for hours per day. We speak very little per day even in our own languages. So just a few hours of continuous shadowing podcasts, audio/videos etc. per day and you can catch up on your pronunciation. But you have to intentionally try to copy the pronunciations, not just repeat the words.

  • @Sanatan_520
    @Sanatan_520Ай бұрын

    As a person who is in the very basic stages of learning Japanese this is actually motivational for me😮.

  • @sethaldrich6902

    @sethaldrich6902

    Ай бұрын

    He didn't really learn Japanese, long way to go.

  • @Sanatan_520

    @Sanatan_520

    Ай бұрын

    @@sethaldrich6902 Did he told you?

  • @BonanzaRoad
    @BonanzaRoadАй бұрын

    I lived in Tokyo for three years and was just becoming conversational in Japanese by time I left. I was able to read a couple hundred Kanji and memorized katakana and hiragana. It was fun learning the language. It was a challenge. Every day I was better able to communicate. I admire how committed Ansel has been in learning Japanese.

  • @sethaldrich6902

    @sethaldrich6902

    Ай бұрын

    Couple hundred Kanji isn't close to conversational

  • @BonanzaRoad

    @BonanzaRoad

    Ай бұрын

    Conversational means speaking. Vocabulary. Kanji means reading. There’s a difference. I can hold a conversation, even if my knowledge of Kanji was limited.

  • @RudolfHorvath
    @RudolfHorvathАй бұрын

    When actors dedicate this much to learning a skill for a show, you know it will be a good one. I remember watching the very first trailer and reading comments from japenese people saying he is really good, a next lever immersion.

  • @LeonSKennedy7777
    @LeonSKennedy7777Ай бұрын

    Thanks for bringing it to our attention that season 2 dropped, Olly! It’s fascinating to learn what went on behind the scenes for Ansel to prepare for the role as it’s something I’ve wondered about. Nobody makes content like yours… keep it up!

  • @theknightswhosay

    @theknightswhosay

    Ай бұрын

    Dropped… it’s almost over

  • @jellysalsa
    @jellysalsaАй бұрын

    I just started your Chinese Story learning course. I’m enjoying it. I’ve been working on learning for a few years. I’ve learned a lot but was totally stuck on not comprehending what people were saying to me. I’ve got great hope now, that I’ll get through that barrier. Videos like this, showing someone who succeeded in language learning are very inspiring.

  • @BandaInku
    @BandaInkuАй бұрын

    Absolutely love the StoryLearning method. Been going through the Japanese beginner course and now have the intermediate courses as well. It's so much better than any other method I have tried and it makes sense! Make more progress on my Japanese in 6 months than I ever have before. 100% recommend to everyone who wants to learn a language

  • @AidenDavid11
    @AidenDavid11Ай бұрын

    Wait up!!! 😅 Let me 1'st to learn Deutschland, français, and a little bit Indonesian as well hahaha... Then going with Chinese, japanese und Greek 😂❤ I'm enjoying this video pretty much. Thanks 🙏🏼

  • @sisenor4091
    @sisenor4091Ай бұрын

    This video is very inspiring

  • @iakona23
    @iakona23Ай бұрын

    Japanese is easy to pronounce relative to other languages for English speakers. Chinese would be more difficult. It’s the other elements of Japanese like the written alphabets and the grammatical structure which make Japanese difficult for English speakers.

  • @storylearning

    @storylearning

    Ай бұрын

    They are both very difficult!

  • @roxyiconoclast

    @roxyiconoclast

    Ай бұрын

    @@storylearninghe has a very good accent and intonation. Impressive! But I wonder whether he learned to read and write kanji, as well as kana (which is pretty easy)? I had about 3 years of college Japanese, plus I worked in Japan for a couple of years and married into a Japanese family. I found it really easy to pronounce, and I wondered whether that was because the sounds were so similar to Spanish, which I had studied for a couple of years in school. But kanji was my downfall! (I was so envious of friends who seemed to learn kanji easily.) So I went back to Spanish and made inroads on Portuguese after Covid hit. It’s really difficult to get beyond an intermediate level without at least being able to read news stories and such.

  • @coolbrotherf127

    @coolbrotherf127

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@roxyiconoclastI doubt he can read Japanese above an elementary level if most of his time was spent focusing on spoken Japanese specifically. Even really other proficient learners still take over 2 years of constant study to be able to read fluently.

  • @stanleyconnor6898

    @stanleyconnor6898

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@coolbrotherf127agree

  • @NelsonStJames

    @NelsonStJames

    Ай бұрын

    @@coolbrotherf127I wouldn’t necessarily doubt it. The ability to read a language will generally come faster than the ability to speak a language, or rather to converse in it, and the ability to write it. Of course we’re talking about a secondary language and not one’s native language where the reverse is more often the case since you know . . . Immersion; but provided you learn a secondary language in school, or are self taught, reading is going to be your foundation for study.

  • @annettg1202
    @annettg1202Ай бұрын

    Just for fun I began to learn Japanese. Now I’m fascinated of the completely different grammar and writing concept.

  • @stanleyconnor6898
    @stanleyconnor6898Ай бұрын

    Fascinating story - very impressive 🤓

  • @storylearning

    @storylearning

    Ай бұрын

    Glad you enjoyed it!

  • @starlight_rw
    @starlight_rwАй бұрын

    Great video!

  • @storylearning

    @storylearning

    Ай бұрын

    Glad you liked it!

  • @mrsoikawa
    @mrsoikawaАй бұрын

    This was exactly how I learned Japanese. Most language books are based on grammar, which is much easier and less important than people realise. What you need is vocabulary and sentence structures, so I just asked people how to say various phrases, and extrapolated the meanings, e.g like he says here, if you learn "Is it alright if I smoke?" you know how to say "Is it alright if I .....?" and just substitute in the word you need in the situation.

  • @goldhawk151
    @goldhawk151Ай бұрын

    During COVID I managed to go from being completely helpless in Korean to being conversational by the time restrictions got lifted

  • @jez-in-japan
    @jez-in-japanАй бұрын

    I learnt Japanese🎉. But it was a long process. Years of listening practice from anime, & studying it at university only got me to basic point. However after living in Japan for the last 5 years, has me pretty fluent with an understanding of several hundred kanji, & kana. I now even think in Japanese sometimes

  • @thebichannelful
    @thebichannelfulАй бұрын

    "I wonder where he got his inspiration" ... well, helloooo, $500K per episode? I would learn 2 of the hardest language for that amount per episode

  • @devin6272
    @devin6272Ай бұрын

    I bought your spanish, french, portuguese, german and russian stories. guess I'm learning 4 more languages than just portuguese 😂😂

  • @stationtostation8311
    @stationtostation8311Ай бұрын

    so i just need a life changing amount of money and a lot of free time?

  • @Vanity-dz1qu

    @Vanity-dz1qu

    Ай бұрын

    No, you just need to use the time u have wisely. Find the material that suits you best and stick to it. Whatever time you can afford is good enough as long as you stick to it, you'll be fine.

  • @_Amin_99

    @_Amin_99

    Ай бұрын

    You can use the time that you whine on KZread 😂

  • @TheWBWoman
    @TheWBWomanАй бұрын

    I started learning Hungarian during lockdown via zoom lessons with a teacher. Really enjoyed it but found it hard to remember things or concentrate which at first I assumed was my age but turned out I had severe Long Covid. I had to drop out eventually. I have Hungarian ancestry so if I learn Hungarian, I could apply for citizenship if I wanted. I'm still not sure if I'm ready to go back to language learning or not.

  • @brettevans2138
    @brettevans2138Ай бұрын

    I discovered my love for Filipino/Tagalog language during the pandemic I have been listening to thw language for yeara but lockdowns put me in that learn it mode

  • @SusanCollins-dk9kv
    @SusanCollins-dk9kvАй бұрын

    I'm learning Portuguese with your Portuguese uncovered courses because my son's girlfriend is Brazilian. I can recommend story learning as a method of learning. I love it.

  • @storylearning

    @storylearning

    Ай бұрын

    So glad you love it!

  • @gileswilliams3014
    @gileswilliams3014Ай бұрын

    Would you release a short stories book in Esperanto, please?

  • @StephenVenablesMusic
    @StephenVenablesMusic26 күн бұрын

    During Covid I leaned into learning Mandarin, and the following year wrote, recorded, and released my first album of original songs with Chinese lyrics. Feedback welcomed! Thanks to you Olly for all you do. I have your books in multiple languages 🤘

  • @derelictetv1547
    @derelictetv1547Ай бұрын

    I’ve really been interested in learning Italian as I work for an Italian company and many of my coworkers in my office are Italian. Question regarding your courses: the gold and platinum bundles look like such amazing values, but is there a way to do payment plans or would you have to bite the bullet on the the one time payment? Not many of have that kind of disposable income, especially in places like NYC where rent and the insane cost of living really limit our finances.

  • @BrichaJulbry
    @BrichaJulbryАй бұрын

    I find the standards also work backward. As a Thai-Chinese native, it was much easier to learn Japanese than to learn French, English, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, and German to me. (I have a degree in Western language interpretation, btw, not that I love any self-torturing challenges.) 😅😊😂

  • @mapl3mage
    @mapl3mageАй бұрын

    A common theme i see among westerners who are conversationally fluent in Japanese is that they spent a considerable time in Japan and learning Japanese is essential their full time job.

  • @MyInstantSearch
    @MyInstantSearchАй бұрын

    Tokyo vice is one of those shows that transitions really well between English and Japanese

  • @mztokyo7630
    @mztokyo7630Ай бұрын

    Congratulations to Ansel for working hard to pick up the language and immerse himself. I believe one needs to understand your native language and grammar terminology to understand the textbook explanations, i.e. transitive and intransitive verbs, conjugating a verb, etc. Then one is not "stuck" when trying to understand the English explanation of a foreign language. Reading and writing Japanese can be quite difficult.

  • @weeklyfascination
    @weeklyfascination2 күн бұрын

    Hat's off to Ansel! And great video, Olly!

  • @debbieaitchison4704
    @debbieaitchison4704Ай бұрын

    I’m learning German (with Story Learning, and a native German tutor who can help me with my pronunciation). True story: I chose German over several other languages that I have dabbled in because the German word for cat is a grammatically feminine noun, and I have a female cat. Odd reason, but I have fallen in love with the language. I am determined to become fluent.

  • @erntefreude

    @erntefreude

    Ай бұрын

    What is crazy about German, is WHO decides whether a German noun is masculine or feminine? WHY is the moon, DER Mond and the sun, DIE Sonne? The moon is traditionally feminine, and the Sun is traditionally masculine, in most cultures. And as a language, German pronounciation is quite precise, yet it contains a word, that is pronounced differently than it is written. Do you know the word for "look" in German is "gucken", but is pronounced, "kucken"? And lastly, native english speakers have a difficult time with the numbers, because they are backwards, i.E.: one and twenty is einundzwanzig.

  • @KeksUndStiefel

    @KeksUndStiefel

    Ай бұрын

    @@erntefreudeWell it's not the moon that's masculine, it's the word "Mond" that's masculine, so it has nothing to do with culture. That's also why "Mädchen" is "das" and not "die" - it's a diminutive, so the grammatical gender is neuter not feminine even though the word translates to "girl". Technically there are rules to figure out the grammatical gender of a word, it's just that they're so complicated and contain so many exceptions, that learning them makes no sense (unless you're into linguistics and want to learn about the language instead of learning the language). It's easier to just learn the correct article in context together with the word.

  • @hugzpls

    @hugzpls

    21 күн бұрын

    Lucky you. I’m learning German only through Busuu and Duolingo, but so far so good. I wish I have a native German tutor. Don’t have the money for it though, but I have fallen in love with learning it. I’m used to learning the feminine and masculine nouns because apart from English, Spanish is also my native language as well

  • @hugzpls

    @hugzpls

    21 күн бұрын

    @@erntefreudeI would just accept the way a language is and accept the rules it has unless you want to dive deep into linguistics

  • @iansteels9195
    @iansteels9195Ай бұрын

    My Japanese hasn't improved since taking the JLPT years ago. However i use it most days to chat with friends. They have gotten used to my broken Japanese so that's good enough.

  • @jadthecat387
    @jadthecat387Ай бұрын

    Funny enough, I only picked up the courage to start learning japanese during the pandemic because I had a lot of time I didn't just want to spend it gaming. and I've been on that grind ever since..

  • @sow_scout4989
    @sow_scout498927 күн бұрын

    I've been wanting to try and watch this show. Now seeing his progress from S1 to the next might be my motivator to actually watch. But for those that do watch Tokyo Vice, is it a show you'd recommend?

  • @grayanderson1222
    @grayanderson1222Ай бұрын

    Just saying at 1min 20sec approx you missed an opportunity to add Joey speaking French from Friends. Great video again!

  • @sakurachristineito6428
    @sakurachristineito6428Ай бұрын

    I looove Tokyo Vice wow

  • @skyefarnan2311
    @skyefarnan2311Ай бұрын

    Ronan O'Gara, La Rochelle's rugby coach, inspires me to not be afraid of speaking a language. He speaks french with the thickest Munster Irish accent ever. Its kinda hilarious

  • @stuartmisfeldt3068
    @stuartmisfeldt3068Ай бұрын

    I was working on base in Sasebo, Japan,but was not really picking it up. I got married in the fall of 2019, and started living in the Japanese culture. COVID allowed me time to study. Last year I started using Duolingo to push more vocabulary and lean kana. Now I’m getting into verb conjugation and Kanji. I’m still translating as I go, but I’m starting to think more in Japanese and not have to translate every time.

  • @originaldarkwater
    @originaldarkwaterАй бұрын

    Being around Japanese people and trying to speak to them was probably the biggest push for him. As someone who's family moved to Germany when I was 10, I can tell you, you never learn a language faster than when you are immersed in it and depend on learning it to communicate with mostly anyone.

  • @monkut
    @monkutАй бұрын

    I've seen him speak on some japanese Tv show, he is truely impressive.

  • @ack153
    @ack153Ай бұрын

    I have been living in Japan since 2017 but I had been studying for over 10 years on and off. During Covid I had a baby so I had no capacity to learn language skills other than if it pertained to babies. I want to study again for JLPT so I can change jobs here.

  • @andresmdc78
    @andresmdc78Ай бұрын

    Moved to Okinawa to learn Japanese. Making good progress.

  • @jasonjacob402
    @jasonjacob402Ай бұрын

    Great 😮😳

  • @EmaN-yk3yj
    @EmaN-yk3yjАй бұрын

    Would love to see you do a video on how soccer players learn languages fast idk if you have already but that would be fun

  • @lmclm1755

    @lmclm1755

    Ай бұрын

    Football and rugby players

  • @ZestonN
    @ZestonNАй бұрын

    During Covid, I started learning Russian. The primary way I learned Russian, was watching Martial Art and Cooking Videos in Russian on KZread. I did it that way, because I was already familiar with the vocabulary of Martial Arts and Cooking. So, I learned through context. 😊 Now, I watch Russian movies on Netflix and video podcasts on KZread. :)

  • @Quinkerbell_3604
    @Quinkerbell_3604Ай бұрын

    Take a look at the work of actor Ken Duken. He speaks German, English, French, Italian, Spanish and Norwegian.

  • @ShanesWanderlust
    @ShanesWanderlustАй бұрын

    Japanese is only level 5 if you are learning to read and write Japanese, which is extremely difficult. As far as just learning to speak it fluently, it's fairly easy as far as pronunciation and grammar.

  • @BoostedEP3
    @BoostedEP323 күн бұрын

    Hey, my wife and I were in Japan in March/April of 2020!

  • @Adam_Stefaniak
    @Adam_StefaniakАй бұрын

    As native Polish in my 20-ish years I've learned how to speak fluent Arabic in less than 5 years. Ever since I was watching Anime (it's been over 20 years) I managed to picked up some here and there. With some YT videos managed to learn the basics. Oh, and I also should mention I did learn English and managed to do interpretation from Arabic to English/Polish on-go. Most of my language skills I managed to obtain on my own. I'm looking into Spanish now, loved it after watching Narcos and Queen of the South.

  • @NelsonStJames
    @NelsonStJamesАй бұрын

    Wasn’t aware of this show, now I’m curious.

  • @voryoung
    @voryoungАй бұрын

    yeah...ansel makes me feel pretty bad. my mandarin classes were shut down and i basically haven't done anything since...is guilt enough motivation?

  • @UcheOgbiti
    @UcheOgbitiАй бұрын

    One thing i loved about the Tokyo Vice show was that the Japanese actors spoke English with a thick Japanese accent

  • @user-tr3wn9kl6b

    @user-tr3wn9kl6b

    Ай бұрын

    Except Jason 😊

  • @Rockawaysiren
    @RockawaysirenАй бұрын

    I was an extra in a movie with Jackie Chan and yes- he was given his lines by a coach and he repeated it till they call “action”. So the gap between him hearing the lines and saying them was very close!

  • @pokarface4453
    @pokarface4453Ай бұрын

    When people don't have to worry about money, they can definitely achieve everything! They just stop doing everything in their lives, to focus on the 1 activity that pays their lifestyle!

  • @done.6191
    @done.61915 күн бұрын

    I have never understood why Japanese (well, Kana and spoken Japanese) is considered so difficult. It's got an efficient and understandable structure.

  • @johnwayne2103
    @johnwayne210321 күн бұрын

    Where can I watch this wonderful show? I was a huge Michael Mann fan but have concentrated on other things.

  • @scottkronmiller3746

    @scottkronmiller3746

    20 күн бұрын

    HBO MAX

  • @maverickfox4102
    @maverickfox410211 күн бұрын

    I’m currently stationed in Sasebo Japan 🇯🇵 and I don’t know how I’ll ever be able to be that fluent in Japanese.

  • @steezmunky
    @steezmunkyАй бұрын

    "zero to fluent in just a few months" is a bit of an overstatement, no? "he found his why" ... yeah 500k and a job that must be done or else his boss (Mann) tosses him out. Mann's a tough boss.

  • @rsmith02

    @rsmith02

    Ай бұрын

    I don't think he meets any definition of fluent.

  • @steezmunky

    @steezmunky

    Ай бұрын

    @@rsmith02 not according to this video 😂

  • @christopherconcept926

    @christopherconcept926

    Ай бұрын

    Exactly. I work so much I can’t even consistently put in an hour a day on the weekday. When they pay you to learn and you have time to attend a 9 hour language class everyday, you can become fluently quickly

  • @quigglyz

    @quigglyz

    8 күн бұрын

    People who've never mastered a second language like to throw around the word "fluent" like they know what it means. I really doubt the actor got fluent in 8 months.

  • @israeldillinger5805
    @israeldillinger580523 күн бұрын

    I've been learning English for 12 years now and still learning, I have the enough level to communicate to others kid of B2 level, I don't know how to get that level in French and Chinese, I dream with the day when I can speak French, Chinese, Japanese and Italian 🙏

  • @animeprince7866
    @animeprince7866Ай бұрын

    As someone who is studying Japanese it is a lot. However, if you make the time and have a genuine "why?" like they say you can learn a language faster. I still have not had my "click day" as it were. It is harder when you do not have the vast resources at your disposal. However, there is a vast wealth of knowledge right here on KZread. There are no to low cost methods if you look. I see all the salty jealousy in the comments. Yes $500,000 per episode would be a life changing why. Being an already successful actor gives extra resources that most do not have. However, if you have a reason and the will to do something, you make ways not excuses for why not. I did not find this video to be helpful extra motivation. I do still appreciate the sharing of prominent success stories in language learning. Thank you for your hard work.

  • @thebichannelful
    @thebichannelfulАй бұрын

    Most English speaking people: "Oh my God, it was so hard but I learned a language and look how impressive I am", in the mean time, thousands of immigrants here speaking 3, 4, or even 5 languages

  • @paulocardoso5225
    @paulocardoso5225Ай бұрын

    パンデミックの間に私が日本語の勉強始まった。今頃日本に住んでいます。

  • @HannanMiah-nt9ic
    @HannanMiah-nt9icАй бұрын

    Please please make one Video about how can I learn Korean and English with storylearning website. And how to log in and how can I do 7days course. Please make one video about it And I want to learn Korean and English please reply 😢😢😢😢

  • @storylearning

    @storylearning

    Ай бұрын

    You can check out our blog for more Korean resources. storylearning.com/learn/korean/korean-tips/ Here's our Korean video playlist: kzread.info/head/PLQJscr8iS4eErbbqhGta-C5C8KbI8XFBr&si=IMElc8E6Ya_fYCcI

  • @lingualaddictja
    @lingualaddictjaАй бұрын

    sTILL NOT FLUENT, BUT i HAD BEGUN PRACTICE THESE 6 LANGUAGES TRYING TO USE AND IMPROVE THEM EVER SINCE, USING AN ASSIMILATIVE APPROACH

  • @DirectorCM
    @DirectorCMАй бұрын

    Step One; Be a rich actor and have every opportunity at your disposal.

  • @peski4939

    @peski4939

    Ай бұрын

    Or Step one buy a textbook and open a KZread account grab your bollocks and start learning. Put the effort in and regardless of how much money you have you will be able to speak the language.

  • @Pfsif
    @PfsifАй бұрын

    Olie, you should be an actor!!!

  • @andreasstavrinides6980
    @andreasstavrinides6980Ай бұрын

    Come on Olly. When will you release some stories in modern Greek? Βιάσου παρακαλώ.

  • @poozizzle
    @poozizzle25 күн бұрын

    I studied Chinese in college and it was way easier than Spanish. No conjugations... what a relief!

  • @bieddruhuggyfalsaperla5447
    @bieddruhuggyfalsaperla5447Ай бұрын

    How did Tony Revolori get fluent in Hindi for his role in the 2015 Hindi language film "Umrika"?

  • @ETIA0
    @ETIA0Ай бұрын

    Japanese,Chinese, and Korean are all the most difficult to write/read and speak because they are the top three languages furthest removed from english. They have not spread to here much, Vietnamese is also quite hard, and all of them share a lot in common but not with english or many germanic languages. Spanish and French are the top easiest languages for most English speakers because they share the most in common with each other, everyone is different so that about summarizes it. |Writing System ✍🏻 Speaking System🗣️ Reading Orientation📖 Grammer Structure Pronunciation and Silent and Sounded Out Vowels, Intonation Time, Effort, and Energy| Don't forget every other subject included in the above as having to be learned/studied in great detail to be as fluent as physically possible.

  • @JeraldEvans

    @JeraldEvans

    Ай бұрын

    Korean’s upper hand is the writing system is very easy to adapt to. As it’s alphabet based. Chinese is its very simplistic grammar structure Japanese is its easy to pronounce syllables. But most other things of each language is very difficult for English speakers.

  • @ETIA0

    @ETIA0

    Ай бұрын

    @@JeraldEvans Indeed!

  • @nenabunena
    @nenabunenaАй бұрын

    Fyi the languages on level 5 are there bec of their writing system

  • @RAS-zs6eq
    @RAS-zs6eqАй бұрын

    I think Rachel's Nihongo is particularly well spoken.

  • @jph4852
    @jph4852Ай бұрын

    Oh he plays b-ball at Yoyogi Park! I might start hanging out by the courts there.

  • @rollizle
    @rollizleАй бұрын

    Covid is what reinvigorated my language learning. It was in covid that I started playing VRChat, met an Israeli in there, and successfully revived my Hebrew. The fun of reviving Hebrew compelled me to study Spanish, which went great. I've now been studying Arabic and German which is going fairly well.

  • @nasa.teacher
    @nasa.teacher25 күн бұрын

    must be excellent if one has na opportunity to travel to Japan and have that experience freely without visas and such things ... just you buy a ticket and fly there.

  • @danicoleb5394
    @danicoleb5394Ай бұрын

    $500k per episode! 😮

  • @OzkAltBldgCo-bv8tt
    @OzkAltBldgCo-bv8ttАй бұрын

    The FSI language rank has got to be updated this is not good information. Think of all the people that are deterred from trying to learn Russian Turkish or Tagalog because it has the languages ranked in class 4 when actually class 2 is what it probably really is.

  • @nirvanafan6669

    @nirvanafan6669

    Ай бұрын

    It's weird that level 2 is only German, doesn't make sense to me.

  • @lukkash
    @lukkashАй бұрын

    HE LEARNT DIALOGUES in Japanese for the movie rather than the language itself to communicate.

  • @luhental
    @luhental25 күн бұрын

    We interviewed him for the movie driver. I remember thinking this guy has an IQ way beyond Hollywood standard.😂

  • @jameswoffinden9215
    @jameswoffinden9215Ай бұрын

    I don’t know how Hebrew can be level 4 and Japanese is level 5. I am learning them both, and Hebrew seems a lot more difficult.

  • @PMX
    @PMXАй бұрын

    If anyone wants to verify the theory that giving someone half a million dollars (per episode!) is a good motivation to learn Japanese fast, I'd gladly take that challenge 😛 (so far the only thing I managed was a few greetings and how to read individual hiragana 😂)

  • @sandiaYpescado
    @sandiaYpescadoАй бұрын

    500k per episode x 20. Worth it

  • @user-de1dj9hd7e
    @user-de1dj9hd7eАй бұрын

    keller was pretty good too

  • @tsukuneboy
    @tsukuneboy23 күн бұрын

    Oh you should see JESSEOGN's What people wear in Tokyo Harajuku video. Ansel hits the ball with his Japanese here

  • @claudiazamora4750
    @claudiazamora475020 күн бұрын

    I took two month of japanese classes before go to Tokyo,,, and all I could say was " chotto matte kudasai".

  • @YoutubeAccountMan
    @YoutubeAccountMan24 күн бұрын

    Answer: it's one of the easiest languages in the world and he probably skipped most of the reading/writing. It only took two years to learn it as a high school student. If I had a hollywood studio paying for my immersion classes, I imagine it wouldn't be hard to do it. The US State Department says it can teach fluency in Japanese for reading, writing, and speaking in just one year.

  • @n-rey
    @n-rey19 күн бұрын

    Weird... isn't Romanian a latin language? I don’t know much about it as it's to isolated of a language for me to care, but I remember checking it out and seeing lots of latin grammar Italian didn't even have....

  • @fazt_lane
    @fazt_lane18 күн бұрын

    Jim Carrey one is funny ash 😂😂

  • @tartempion5414
    @tartempion5414Ай бұрын

    That's impressive, but having the kind of resources that I'm sure he has means you have access to the best possible personal Japanese teacher. As the video mentions, learning chunk phrases can give people the impression that you're fluent, which is fantastic. However, I try to avoid relying too much on that in Japan. As the actor himself mentioned, people might perceive you as really good and you are quickly cornered. Still good work though and I enjoy the serie.

  • @jlastre
    @jlastreАй бұрын

    So does that mean he talks to the voice lord?

  • @gaming4K
    @gaming4K21 күн бұрын

    Wish someone paid me money for learning languages. xD There is too many languages to learn i would love to speak Chinese, Japanese, Ukranian(as i have ukranian coworkers and chinese at the place i work rn but the chinese are not my colleagues..) And German. . These are the languages i want to speak the most but because there is too many i didn't really commit to any one of them. :(

  • @user-sk4og1gk8m
    @user-sk4og1gk8m8 күн бұрын

    Half a million per episode would motivate anyone to learn something 😂

  • @quigglyz
    @quigglyz8 күн бұрын

    Learning his lines =/= fluent. Fluency is an extremely long journey.