“Things In My European House That Don’t Make Sense In America”: Viral Video Roasts American Households, But Many Disagree With It
Interview With AuthorIt’s no secret that lives in America and Europe seem like worlds apart. From understanding time and space completely differently to American schools that confuse the hell out of non-Americans, these are just the tip of the iceberg of the fundamental differences between them.
But sometimes God is in the details, and it doesn’t take a whole lot to see the stark difference. So when TikToker Sara Ras filmed her European house to show what things don’t make sense in America but totally do there, it immediately went viral.
Amassing 1.9 million views and 470.4k likes, the comedy clip revealed all the small things that Europeans take for granted. Like reusable kitchen towels and a kettle to boil water: everything feels kinda way smarter and more effective. So let’s see Sara’s full clip down below and let us know what you think of it in the comment section!
TikToker Sara Ras has filmed her European house to show what things wouldn’t make much sense in American households
@saarbabyyCan’t believe Americans use paper towels for EVERYTHING 🥲 ##fyp ##foryou ##xyzbca♬ 아무노래(Any song) – kozico0914
The clip has gone viral, amassing 1.9 million views on the social media platform
Image credits: saarbabyy
Bored Panda reached out to Sara Ras, the 23-year old social media influencer from Hillegom, The Netherlands. Social media has been a full-time job which she’s been doing for the last ten years.
When asked about her viral TikTok, Sara told us that the idea came after she realized that “in all 15 apartments in New York City that I’ve ever lived in, there were no kitchen towels to clean up small messes.”
And to make her TikTok even more humorous, Sara came up with more differences that nearly all European citizens have in their homes as a standard. “And the kettles were one of those things. I got pretty shocked when my friend asked me for tea and she put a cup of cold water in the microwave. I’m just so used to electric kettles or even a kettle on the stove, I HAD to include it.”
Image credits: saarbabyy
Image credits: saarbabyy
Image credits: saarbabyy
While living in Manhattan, Sara used to always bring her own shopping bags for veggies. “However, it amazed me how many groceries were already packed in plastic. Back at home, we do that too, but not for every single item,” she recalled.
Talking about the plastic packaging, Sara also mentioned that most Europeans who buy groceries take their stuff home in brown paper bags.
“In the EU, we passed a law that forbids stores to hand out free plastic bags. It cut down the amount of plastic bags by 80%. I think it would be great if the US could discuss a law like that too!”
Image credits: saarbabyy
Image credits: saarbabyy
Image credits: saarbabyy
Despite the ongoing globalization, Americans and Europeans still have very distinct tastes when it comes to almost everything, whether it’s burgers or steak tartare, SUVs, or electric cars. But as we’ve seen in this TikTok clip, a quick look around the household is sometimes all it takes to see that stark difference.
The app Porch has recently conducted a survey of 600 people in the US and Europe in order to grasp the differences in customers’ preferences on their homes. Probably not very surprisingly, the survey reflected some of the major differences.
Image credits: saarbabyy
Image credits: saarbabyy
Image credits: saarbabyy
Almost a quarter of European survey participants prefer to settle in a place surrounded by nature, compared to only 9.9% of American respondents. Meanwhile, gated communities and cul-de-sacs that are known as stereotypically American things were preferred by 23% of Americans. Only 5.5% and 3% of European respondents said the same thing.
Image credits: saarbabyy
Image credits: saarbabyy
Image credits: saarbabyy
Americans also seem to like more spacious things, like larger surfaces, more bedrooms, with an average of 4 in the US and 3 in Europe, and more bathrooms (three and two respectively.) Europeans also said they were happy with a moderate 0.9 acres of land, while Americans like way larger plots of 10.6 acres on average.
Image credits: saarbabyy
When it comes to the inside of the house, the differences between European and American households remain major. “Roughly 30 percent of Americans wanted tile in the kitchen, and nearly 16 percent preferred wood, compared to the 1 in 5 Europeans who opted for either marble or stone flooring instead.”
Turns out, Europeans were way more fond of wood floors, bamboo, laminate, and even marble. And as for other preferences, “Americans were more interested in having centralized air conditioning and a laundry room, while Europeans favored solar panels, swimming pools, and libraries,” the survey found.
While the video went very viral, getting over 2 Million likes, there were some who thought the video was far from the truth:
Yet most people loved the video and said it made them laugh:
What do you think? Were some of the things true, which ones were not? Share your opinion below!
I have never commented on anything before but I finally had too. This article is rude and wrong. I am American. I use those ikea bags all the time. Who doesn’t have a kitchen towel? I have NEVER seen someone use a microwave to heat up water. My house is not made of cardboard. It’s made of brick. I have a clothes drying rack from ikea! Who wears shoes in their house????? Of course my shower head comes off. Anyone can purchase that. America is huge. We are all different people. Stop with these stupid articles based on dumb crap you see on tv. Just stop. We get it. You think it’s funny to make fun of America.
You aren’t hilariously roasting all Americans. You are revealing you know nothing about a huge country. And limping is all together.
Load More Replies...I'm American and I don't wear shoes inside my house. I don't microwave water, I have a kettle. Most people I know use canvas bags for groceries and reuse them. We have kitchen towels but I personally use paper towels when I clean and disinfect to prevent cross contamination. Our eggs are refrigerated cuz we don't put any coating on them. I think the lady in the video should use some of that normal water pressure in the shower to clean the mold and mildew all over her grouting. Ewwwww!
The eggs have the coating removed in the US not added in Europe and her grouting is deliberately a dark colour, not mildewed, for contrast in looks.
Load More Replies...I don't understand the obsession with America vs The Rest Of The World (aka Europe), especially the Great Shoes Indoors Debate. I'm a South African. We wear shoes in our homes mostly - unless we just feel like wearing socks or going barefoot. When hubby and I were in the UK for a few months, everybody we visited there wore shoes in their homes. Obviously if they're super muddy or wet, we take them off - but in general ... we don't take them off as we step through our front door. Also obviously, winter vs summer plays a big part here - and in SA our winter is a lot milder than in the northern hemisphere.
I agree. It is exhausting. I'm tired of US vs X stuff. Who cares?? And yet, here I am posting about it. Ahhhhhhhhhh.
Load More Replies...This looks like it was made by someone who heard some things about American houses and just started making assumptions.
Yeah, other than the fact I don't have an *electric* kettle (because I have a coffeepot for *coffee* instead of tea), I guess the Midwest is Europe now?
Load More Replies...As an American, I have all of these things (with the exception of the electric kettle). In the morning I make ONE cup of instant coffee. There is no method which is faster or more effective than to put a mug of water in the microwave for 1:30. If its not more convenient or faster, it's not 'better'
Yes there is. It's putting a mug in the microwave for 0:90. LOL 1 less keystroke.
Load More Replies...I think this is just some stuck up girl with no sense of the world. I'm not from Europe, and I'm not from the USA, and even I know all of these apply to everyone in multiple countries. With certainty I can see I've seen kettles, kitchen towels, reuseable bags, etc in America. Sad thing is Bored Panda goes right along with this moronic tiktoker in the description of this article backing her up.
i am American, and i'm pretty sure my family does most of these things.... i think they make sense.
She’s drinking a cuppa ☕️ in her bathroom so I’m not engaging in any of her truths
She seems ill-informed about the USA. And I have to ponder what she will do when she finds out that light bulbs emit radiation too, and that it's much more energetic than what goes on in a microwave. And while we're at it, does she wash laundry every day, because a drying rack doesn't hold much.
This article is annoying. The subject may have been mildly amusing once but this is the umpteenth article about it and this one just smacks of smugness. Different countries do things differently - ooh big wow! I imagine there are more similarities than differences between us. And if you are going to post pictures of your bathroom, clean the grouting first! You could make penicillin with those tiles!
Looking at her Jip & Janneke mug, I'm afraid she's Dutch... I'm sorry, we're not all like that. -__-
Wow these guys are xenophobic most of this stuff we ( at least I) have. How is showing different tools and appliances you use in your country "roasting them" also this does not apply to everyone you are just bullying the minority that does live in these conditions, another thing to add is the houses are made of drywall not cardboard and also I use kitchen towels. I have no idea where you got this information but stop making false statements you got from your friends and such. Not all americans are stupid, dirty, and incompetent.
Wait, does she think we don't have kettles or reusable bags? Shoes, eggs, laundry, these are just personal preferences that vary by household. There are about a million funny, weird, or annoying differences between Americans and Europeans, she didn't mention a single one. -American, lives in Denmark
This person is not living in reality or has never visited America. Not to mention she is a rude n*b.
That was dumb. All those things you pointed out...we use in America. Maybe you were just stupid and never figured it out when you were in America.
The person who wrote this should be embarrassed. "You boil water in the morning because you don't like the taste of radiation?" What does that mean? So much to unpack here. Is this is microwave thing? Are you implying you can taste radiation? Your kettle is heated with EM radiation with a wavelength of 10,000 nm, while the microwave heats with EM radiation with a wavelength of 1 cm. Neither is ionizing. And I've lived more than 5 years in each of North America, Euro and East Asia and have NEVER seen anyone boil water using a microwave.
Lies. All lies. ALL US Americans use a microwave to boil water. /s Seriously though. This is about the 24th Bored Panda post about US Americans not having kettles. It is a VERY strange fixation. And no matter how many times a bunch of people from the US say - WE HAVE KETTLES, it falls on deaf ears.
Load More Replies...Wow. I find this slightly offensive. She unapologetically mocked Americans with her bullshit and shared it on social media because she needed attention. I’m guessing the closest she’s ever been to the U.S. is binge watching Friends on Netflix.
Maybe? But there was always a kettle on Monica's stove. (color/style varied by season.) friends-ki...2c9a0e.jpg
Load More Replies...All of these things are standard in Australia except perhaps the shoes inside the house thing. I don't wear shoes in my house but most people I know do.
I think Australians get a pass, considering everything wants to kill you ;)
Load More Replies...Cloth kitchen towels, which we prefer to use instead of paper, because it's cheaper. Check. 20210204_1...1242de.jpg
Handheld shower, which will splash the bathroom ceiling if I'm not careful. Check. 20210204_1...5dab85.jpg
Okay, I never really comment on posts, but I really have to here.... This article is completely wrong. I use all of those things. I have a detachable showerhead with adjustable water pressure. I have reusable target bags and ikea bags. I don't wear shoes in my house, that's nasty. Who uses a microwave to heat up water? That's why I have a kettle and a coffee maker. My house is made out of bricks and siding, I don't live in a cardboard box. Also who doesn't have a kitchen towel? Paper towels just leave lint on dishes... This article is completely false... It's a silly stereotype created from old American tv shows. People need to stop making fun of America like this. We may have our issues, but I guarantee most other countries have them too.
why does this BS even get posted? Also i might be wrong but pretty sure the cheese slicer is extremely uncommon outside the Netherlands and Scandinavia (I'm from the Netherlands)
Why would you think a cheese slicer is uncommon elsewhere? I have two kinds of cheese slicers (in California, USA). My grandmother had a cheese slicer 50 years ago. I've seen them used in Australia, in France, in Ireland, in Canada, and in many states in the U.S. Some people use cheese slicers, some people use knives. Whatever.
Load More Replies...Honestly, this is just offencive. My family uses dish towels, we have a kettle, we use reusable bags, we have a drying rack. And who tf wears shoes in their house?!
Did she, maybe, just hear some things about America from a friend of a friend who saw a movie? Most Americans do many, if not all, of those things she does and thinks we don't. The United States has less than half of the population of Europe in roughly the same size land mass. I'm sure there are more than a few Europeans who've microwaved their coffee, and more than a few Americans who have kettles. I'll concede to the fact that America has way more wood homes than Europe, though. She seems to like America enough to wear a Las Vegas sweatshirt from a place that probably doesn't exist.
Another Bored Panda post filled with European generalizations about Americans. Most of this is BS.
I have most of these things and I live in the USA. She is misrepresenting information.
I live in america and i have all of those things.... do you guys really think we live in cardboard houses?
Actually, as an American, I do 99% of those things as well, so 🤷🏽♀️
I have never seen a cardboard house here. Maybe she should inform herself before posting this stuff. And maybe Bored Panda should think twice before reposting stories that are factually and provably wrong.
Maybe you aren't REALLY American. Obviously this person on tiktok knows better than you. /s
Load More Replies...This has to be the dumbest article of them all. Most of that stuff we have here. Do people just see a tv show and assume that’s our culture? I do wish removable shower heads were a norm, but literally all of that is things many of us already have or use
Im from Arizona and We have all that stuff, she doesnt know wht shes talking about
I'm a Canadian, and all of these things are normal to me. Side note, as I was typing this I was also reading the top comment (from Tomas) and started typing "I'm Canadiation" due to reading "tastes of radiation" at the same time.
We have most of those things here though. The exceptions are that we dry our clothes outside on the clothesline, the microwave is fast and I love it lol, also our house (in South fl) are mostly CBS, and almost everyone i know takes their shoes off in the houses. American varies from region to region and by economic class. Paper towels are expensive, we use towels.
BTW, remember when BP was telling us that TikTok was dangerous to use? Then they post these things.
Majority of these are blatant lies. Doubt she has ever lived in America. We don't need a drying rack for clothes. We have utility rooms for our washer & clothes dryers. Kettles cannot be properly cleaned. Who want germ water?
Kettles can't be properly cleaned? I don't...You're an idiot.
Load More Replies...I think this gal has been reading those Buzzfeed articles again *eyeroll*
I am an American and just made myself a cup of tea using water I heated with a kettle. The only thing here that doesn't apply to many Americans as well is the eggs. Maybe these are true for some Americans, but they aren't for me and most people I know.
Literally the eggs were the only thing on the entire list that isn't common here. This is the stupidest thing I've ever read.
I actually did it for many years because we didnr have a kettle. And I am European xD
Load More Replies...She’s drinking a cuppa ☕️ in her toilet so I’m not engaging with the rest of her truths.
I guess this is just meant to be a joke? Another ha ha US Americans are weird? I have a removable shower head, reusable grocery bags, a kettle and an electric kettle, a cheese slicer, a drying rack in my laundry room, two drawers of kitchen towels, and a house made out of stone. My friend has chickens. She still puts the eggs in the fridge. So that's correct.
If you don't wear shoes in the house, how do you protect your toes from the coffee table? After I broke my pinky toe a few years ago, I don't go anywhere without shoes, ever.
Slippers that cover the toes help. Though I often forget to wear mine and broke my little toe as well...
Load More Replies...This is the absolutely worst Bored Panda article EVER. I’m 43, born, raised, and still living in TEXAS. And I have basically ALL of these things, with only one exception. The electric kettle, the IKEA bags and other reusable bags, dish towels, the shower head I used to replace the basic one in my apartment, and on and on. Only thing I don’t have is the front hallway, but that’s because it’s not common for apartments. Anywhere. DUMB. PLEASE TELL ME THIS WAS JUST A RUDE JOKE.
When I was reading this post, it felt like she was saying "Hey you materialistic Americans, my special European house has doors and walls and windows and yours doesn't". I kept waiting for her to come up with something that was actually unique to Europe. My house has ALL the things she thinks are unheard of in America and most houses I know of also have them.Where did she get her silly notions? They aren't even true. Many small places do not have room for a separate entry hall in both Europe and the US. She is quite misinformed, elitist, and should be embarrassed about her post.
I have all those things in my American home. She is obviously a young, misinformed person and should really be quite embarrassed about her post. It's like Gee my special European house has walls and doors and windows! Take that you materialistic Americans!
US bashing again. I do not feel bad about having a microwave, and I like enough water in the toilet to "take care of things." Repeated flushing, like having to do 2 washer rinse cycles, is wasteful as well. Everything else I have. I will say, some people have allergies, so using a dryer is actually a health issue for people with asthma and allergies. Just sayin'. Don't be judgey.
What an uninformed totally ignorant xenophobic idiot. Sorry but try actually going to America or reading about how microwaves actually work... (spoiler there's nothing "radioactive" in a microwave to have things taste like radiation...) and better eat your eggs quickly since they only last 21 days and refrigerated ones last 50... might want to learn about the "EGG BLOOM" kind of the difference... but she's a 20 something brain dead social media idiot so no surprise...
What utter stupidity... 1) guess she never sees a CANVAS CLOTH TOTE BAG in America? 2) exactly what is a CLOTH DISH TOWEL that's sold at Walmart then? 3) where is the RADIOACTIVE MATERIAL in a microwave since it uses MICROWAVES to heat your food hence the name? 4) teapots, kettles, or a countertop coffee machine isn't a thing in America? (As I stare at my kettle on the stove and keurig coffee machine) 5) guess she either eats A LOT of eggs or buys them pretty fresh because there's such a thing called the EGG BLOOM which in the US is washed off store sold eggs not in Europe. Without that you better refrigerate them and even with it, they last 21 days compared to refrigerated ones that go at least 50 days. 6) houses are made out of cardboard? Guess all that wood, concrete, and bricks at housing development construction sites are for show? But hey she's blonde so yeah that's proven correct..
This is just mean. I am an American citizen and we... 1. ALSO use reusable towels, because, who doesn't? I have never met ANYONE who does not use cloth towels in their kitchen to clean up messes and such. 2. We have an electric kettle. Which ACTUALLY uses less power than heating up the stove :) 3. OH LOOK we have a small hallway entrance too! Which if it didn't, why tf would it matter??? 4. Literally no one wears dirty shoes around their house. MAYBE they have a certain pair that they only where inside, but that was a stupid comparison. 5. Do you think we are just psycho planet destroyers??? YES we use reusable bags too. And actually our local Walmart has a plastic bag recycling system. You are insane. Stop making fun of people over something that literally isn't even an issue in most households.
I have three or four. This kid couldn't buy a clue if she won the lottery.
Load More Replies...I know boiling water in the microwave is normal for some people but just no. Sorry but I can't do that.
Might be an Australian thing but we have most of those things. My house is over sixty and probably just really well built (definitely not Aussie magic or anything)
Load More Replies...geez...I am American and ALL of that applies (Kettle, check, shoe rack, check, removable shower, check etc) except the house part being made of brick and the drying rack because I have a dryer. A cheese slicer? Wtf does she think we do, cut cheese by biting it off a block? No, we cut them with our butts (that's a fart joke). Edit: Waaait, do you think she is parodying?
I will give her that in my region, anyway, hallway entrances are rather rare. However, there *is* almost always a side entrance that, instead of opening up to the living room, opens up to the kitchen or a washroom off the side of it. This is what people most often use.
I am American, and I literally have almost all of these things. This isn't funny. Please stop generalizing all Americans. it's stupid.
Just wrong, I have a bunch of this stuff in my house, just cause I am American I don't have it or do this or do that?
Come on down South, a lot of house are made of brick. Heck, same on the Jersey shore where I'm from. Most people don't use kettles because we make coffee with coffee pots. Those reusable bags? Scientific studies show them collecting all sorts of bacteria. And, if she doesn't like the way we do things, she's welcome to stay home and remember how the US saved their butts in 2 world wars and kept the Soviets from taking over western Europe.
This girl is a rude idiot lol all those things exist in many North American homes
This girl is very biased. It's like some Americans are so biased because they don't know Europe. There are very many differences between our continents and countries, but even I know people here who use paper towels for everything. These people are just lazy. But there are actually also many Americans who walk around the house with shoes on. Quite simply, the world is not black and white. Or just white. Or just black. This article is quite mean and unfair. I may use a microwave SOMETIMES if I'm feeling lazy, but I have other ways. My house is made of brick. I may be half German, but I'm also NATIVE AMERICAN! I am sick and f*****g tired of this.
So is it acceptable to microwave food but not water? What's the difference? Also, I thought us Americans were supposed to be the arrogant ones who should be telling everyone else that our way is the best and everyone else is morons for not doing it like us.
Cloth bags. Check. These aren't the only ones I have, just the ones I still have in the house from shopping yesterday. 20210204_1...cbcede.jpg
We constantly talk about how diverse America is becoming but think this? I mean it's silly sure but...do people really think this? Why would they sell cheese slicers, kitchen towels, reusable bags, shoe racks, kettles and drying racks at every hardware/home goods store if they 'didn't make sense?' They sell cheese slicers at THE DOLLAR STORE. I also use a removable shower head several times a month at my gym - I don't have one because I haven't replaced mine since I moved in. But the last time I chose a showerhead - it was one like this. I'd be curious why she doesn't think these things make sense? Where did she even get these ideas? The local bars where I live sell their own dishtowels - I've never been in a house that didn't have them. I know America hasn't had it's greatest four years but seriously...this is just...really an ugly way to characterize things.
... The... the only difference I'm seeing was the eggs... I have no idea how she came up with the other stuff. Albeit some of our houses aren't made of bricks, but it's not uncommon either. Had to look in the comments for the radiation mention, that one made no sense to me.
She just feels superior because she left her home country? Meh. What does the "taste of radiation" even mean.
It means she doesn't have a clue how microwaves work.
Load More Replies...I have TWO drying racks, my house is most definitely not made from cardboard (what was the point of this? Aren’t most houses made of brick or that other thingy that I don’t know the name of??), i have a kettle, we use the ikea bags for overflowing laundry, but we have other bags for groceries and produce, we have like five kitchen towels in the kitchen right now not to mention the billion in the closet, you wear shoes i your house? Wait you only have a rack for shoes? We have mud rooms for you to take your shoes off before going into the house! ROOMS FOR SHOES! The only thing I don’t have is the little egg caddy but my grandparents do. I don’t like the shower heads that come off, and I’ve never seen a cheese slicer. That’s it. We aren’t THAT different.
Straight up living in the Midwest, and literally none of this is abnormal to me, nor has it ever been.
OKAY, besides eggs not going in the fridge. Eggs have always been in the fridge.
Load More Replies...Lol except for the sturdy construction, the hallway entrance and the cheese slicer (vegan home), I have all of these things in my tiny travel trailer. But, as someone who travels from state to state, I see a lack of a lot of these in homes. Though, I've bought, like, 3 brand new kettles for people and still use ours that is at least 20 years old because microwaves do not need to be involved in heating water ... unless you have no choice(uneven heating can cause sudden boiling over and injury when you remove the hot cup).
I have the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 8th, the 10th, and the 11th. Is that weird for the US?
I've been in america for most of my life and I do all of these things. Well I was born in europe, so maybe its just in my blood
Someone pls explain this to me now. There is 3.6 million slaves in europe. America abolished slavery a long time ago. This isn’t counting the maids and personal drivers (I don’t understand the concept of maids.)
I don’t really comment, but that changes now. This girl is ridiculous and uninformed. Yes, I am an American. No, I hate several things in America, (gun rights, racism, etc). But cmon! We don’t use paper towels for everything, and several houses have removable showers, but Americans don’t really want to spend so much money for something that won’t change much. Our shower pressure is normal, thank you very much. Our toilets don’t splash, and what is the point of a hallway into the living room? Eggs come in the fridge, cheese comes sliced, and our walls have great quality (for those who can afford the crazy high priced houses). Stop making fun of America, it’s not the only country that needs change. Stop poking fun at America, people. This just shows how not in touch Europe is and how little idk how many people know about America. And also, something we do that won’t make sense in europe, we don’t have slaves. In any day, at least 3.6 million men, women, and children are in modern slavery. America abolished that a long line ago. No slaves, no maids, no personal drivers.
I have all these things in my house in America plus one more you don't have in Europe: FREEDOM.
Sorry to rain on your parade, but brick houses in California don't last long. See: 1906 San Francisco Earthquake; 1989 Loma Preita Earthquake. :)
We have all these things in the US. This person knows nothing about the US.
Perhaps she has only seen American hotels. The only thing that's very different (and much better) in Europe is the windows. I'd love to have German windows here in the U.S. --the ones which can open from the top or, turn the handle a different way, and they open from the side. The only thing different (and much better) in the U. S. is the toilets. I mean, my German toilet had a shelf in it which caught your waste, for some reason. Then you flushed and hoped everything had gone away. Thanks, I prefer the American ones with no shelf and more water to flush waste away efficiently.
Ya know, everyone's so correctly bewildered at the notion we microwave our coffee or tea, no-one's even really commenting on the flat-out stupidity of the notion of "the taste of radiation." Mircowaved tea sucks because you don't boil the dissolved gasses out of the water. There's no "radiation." Microwaves work on electro-magnetic waves, (other frequences include light and infrared heat) which like all things which travel outward from a source (sound waves, water ripples) be called "radiation." Unlike nuclear radiation, e-m waves don't propagate nuclear decay... there's no "radiation" remnant in the cup... well, besides infrared (heat).
Infrared is also bouncing off of anything with heat so yea.
Load More Replies...Are there really no reusable kitchen towels in the US? This cannot be true!?
this is a bs article and none of these things are true exept the eggs
Load More Replies...The differences you see in this are more Americans in the Northeast of this country. Of course despite popular belief, not American lives in one of our major cities. We actually have nice things and aren't forced to spend every penny just trying to survive in a city.
I still use kitchen towels my grandma made. I don't drink tea sitting on the toilet. Hallway entrances? Big deal. Are based only on one or two if any experience. Pshaw. From the colonies.
This seems like a needlessly nitpicking post. True, I really don't get the fixed, crap water pressure shower thing and the egg thing. But of course US houses aren't made of cardboard - America does have rain! Does she mean plasterboard? And I've seen stove top kettles, so obviously they don't ALL use the microwave (ick). Never come across the drying rack thing though - do all US households insist on tumble dryers?
In the US they wash the protective coating off their eggs so the eggs have to be refrigerated. And electric (not stovetop) kettles don't heat up that fast when you're running on 110 volts compared to 220 or 240.
Load More Replies...Yes to everything except for the entrance hall. In Greece when you open the door to the apartment you get straight to the living room.
Seems to depend on the house design - I've lived in both kinds. Having a hallway is better for heat conservation.
Load More Replies...Omg dont even get me started on how dumb and inconvenient some things in Europe are. For example how they seem to install those removable shower heads at waist level. Install it above your head so you can actually conveniently and quickly rinse your body. Also, dryers are freaking amazing. Sure we could dry our clothes on a rack but we can also pop them in the dryer for one hour then they are dry. Its f'in awesome. Also, I could spend the extra 10 for a cheese slicer or I can use a regular knife because that can also slice cheese. Crazy right? Ill stop here.
I have eVery single one of these things in my house in America, plus one more that you wouldn't find in Europe: FREEDOM!
I'm confused about the water pressure thing..does she think we don't have normal water pressure?? I literally have every single item on here. I'm not sure where she supposedly visited or she got her information from, but, most people I know also have these. I'm just curious where she got this misinformation from?
A lot of these are wrong lmao. Not one person I know wears shoes in their house unless they are just running in to get something quickly. Entryways are often associated with class of the person. Wealthy people can afford a special area to take off shoes and coats. Poor people can't. Kettle? Stove top is most common but tea isn't that popular. Europes most extreme weather is what? Some rain? If tornados ripped though england the way they do in America, your houses would be trash. A lot of houses have detachable shower heads but it usually depends on the size of the bathroom. Literally everyone I know uses a mix of paper towels and rags. It depends on the job you want done. Cleaning the kitchen? Rag. Spilled some s**t? Paper towel. Europeans are so fragile lmaooo they would die if they had to live the working class, middle American life. It's pathetic.
So untrue. Only thing I don't have/do is eggs must be refrigerated because our egg producers wash the natural coating on eggs that protect them . No reason to be smug and disparaging . Only thing that does not make sense is your attitude toward America.
I have every single item in my very American home. I have ancestors who signed the Mayflower Compact.
I have all of that (here in America) except the shoe closet & brick. I don’t see much of a difference....
"Taste of radiation". Does she think she's a comedian? We wear shoes in our houses here. Most homes have tiled floors, NOT CARPETS. Brick walls, yes. I live on the most geologically stable part of the PLANET and we STILL have 9-inch brick walls.
I have all those things and we never wear shoes in the house. This article, whatever, actually pissed me off. Excuse me while I heat my water in the ancient electric hot water pot to make a pot of tea in a ceramic pot.....
I can see from the other comments that I'm far from the only one who's sick and tired of clueless twits bashing a country and a people they obviously know nothing about.
ok what this is just a normal house... i live in the us and we have an electric kettle, a concrete house, a shoe rack, a KNIFE, an electric dryer, reusable shopping bags, cloth towels, a hallway entrance, eggs in the fridge, a removable shower head with normal water, and a normal amount of water in the toilet. i'm pretty sure this is just a normal house.
Her statement that microwaved water is "radiated" perfectly illustrates her ignorance. I'm an American who has a detachable shower head, uses kitchen towels, uses reusable shopping bags, owns a cheese slicer and doesn't wear shoes in the house. Oh yeah, and my house is made of brick. Go figure.
Her statement that microwaved water is "radiated" perfectly illustrates her level of ignorance. Funny, I'm an American who uses reusable shopping bags, owns a cheese slicer and doesn't wear shoes in the house.
Some of these are kinda silly, but I do like the reusable mesh bag idea for veggies/fruit. For some day when I can go back into a grocery store post pandemic.
First of all. Most american homes don't have 100% of these things due to poverty. Most people don't microwave their water. Water pressure is mostly not in our control, cause again, we dont own our own homes so it on the landlords. The, drying the clothes without a dryer, my family has done that due to not being able to own one. Now as for the shoes in the house, I completely agree. Its gross and I'm not for it.
This is so ridiculous. Literally everything there is normal in the US (which is usually what people say when they are using the name of two continents). Has she been to the US? We have Ikea here. It's actually the law in my state to use reusable bags, everyone I know has a kettle (not all electric, I have both), people wear shoes only when they leave the house, on and on.
Do they also throw all the garbage, even recyclables like cans, glass bottles and paper in the same bag?
First, let me correct the title of your TikTok video: "Things in my European house that don't make sense in New York City". Seriously, you compare a Europe to one city in the U.S.A. and think it is accurate? I don't live in New York City, and my house has everything that you listed as a European standard (including the brick walls). Why don't you try visiting another dozen cities around the U.S.A. and then make your generalizations more accurate.
We, and most of our friends, have almost all of these things. I'd love to have European-style eggs, but hard to get.
UGH. She has NO CLUE about life in the US. I love my tea kettle (I don't even drink coffee), I purchased my first detachable showerhead in 1996! I've lived in 5 houses, two dorms and a condo - NONE had central AC. At our house, we don't even use paper napkins we use cloth ones; same for kitchen towels. I'd say most homes in the US have about 1/3 acre. I lived in Massachusetts where they have a tax on homes so that they can buy sensitive lands for conservation. I live in Connecticut where they reward homeowners (or those who group together) who have large plots of undeveloped land by giving them lower taxes if they agree that the land can never be developed. Connecticut also mandates that you bring totes to the stores- they did bring back plastic temporarily for the pandemic. I hang most of my clothes out to dry in my sunroom. Houses made of "cardboard" are real in Georgia, LOL. I've seen them being built- they're just vinyl siding and sheetrock: no insulation, no wood! Terrible!
My nephew raises chickens and keeps the eggs on his counter - not in the fridge.
Load More Replies...That girl just needs to shut up n leave America alone. What doesn’t make sense is she’s trying to make us look stupid, while she’s showing her own stupidity.
"Why are Americans so self-centered?!" Says Eurocentric person who doesn't know anything about America and mocks us for things they think only they have discovered.
One thing Americans don't do... Cover their face with a coffee mug while in their bathroom. I think she misunderstood the idiom, 'mugging for the camera.'
What was with the comments about houses flying away with tornados. Clearly, the commenters have never seen or been in a tornado. Brick houses fall, too. Also, that tik tok was snobbish as f***. Girl, get over yourself and your superior attitude. Remember, glass houses, honey. Glass freakin' houses.
If you need to live in 15 different apartments at the age of 23, you are likely the worst roommate ever: self-entitled, ignorant, self-absorbed, and a myopic view of the world. Go someplace and grow up.
First of all I don't get the electric kettle thing, I only use a tea pot. Paper towels, uh uh, washable towels. As for tea, I drink that cold, hot if I have a cold. Ive live in prefab and brick homes houses and apartments. I currently live in a brick and stone apartment right now. As for shoes in my home, when I come in I take them off even though I have hard wood floor. The reason, the outside streets and sidewalks are disgusting and I don't wanna trail that s**t back to my hardwood floors. She should stop paying attention to stereotypes, this is the reason the world is f****d up in the first place.
I'm an American living in a smallish Midwestern town. I have reusable shopping and produce bags, cloth kitchen towels, a cheese slicer, a shoe rack where I put my shoes when I enter my home, and an entryway (foyer) in my brick house. If I choose to heat my tea water in the microwave (which has no negative health effects) instead of buying yet another one-job appliance, what business is it of yours? We are DIFFERENT COUNTRIES with DIFFERENT CULTURES, so why is it so astounding that we have different cultural norms? And for those saying we have "cardboard" houses because tornados can destroy them, educate yourselves. Tornadoes destroy everything. They rip mature trees out of the ground, twist heavy steel construction cranes into pretzels, and take brick buildings apart... well, brick by brick.
When I was backpacking in Europe in 1972 we would go into a grocery store from time to time and I remember thinking "wow, what a good idea, plastic bags (and they were thicker) all we have is paper bags. The US didn't start using plastic bags till 1985 or so. In Europe it was in the 60s. Thanks for such a great idea Europe. Too bad we ALL didn't know what a horrible idea it was. We are all trying to do better. There are many products made from recycled plastic bags, they are sent to facilities that only recycle them because standard facilities can't. The company vests Walmart employees wear are made from recycled plastic bags. I'm with Jaclyn ciocco,I've never commented on anything before either
We have many houses with entrance hallways, but there are more that don't have them. A lot of Americans also use a kettle for tea, but there really are many that use the microwave if they have a microwave. This is mostly in businesses where they want a quicker & cheaper cup of tea. I grew up in a household that used reusable cloths, but we were poorer, a lot of upper middle class Americans do use paper towels. Our houses are built worse than European houses & we don't have as many historic buildings which is disappointing. America seems to focus more on time saving & making money. We do overuse plastic, even though many of us use reusable bags & try to avoid most plastic, especially the younger generations. She may be correct about the toilet water level because there's almost always that splash. Wearing shoes in the house is common, & you're annoyingly considered a prude, or a rude host if you ask others to leave shoes at the door. It all depends on location, money, & resources here.
There's a drought here, child. You want to save the environment? Start with saving water. Low flow shower heads may have less force, but the spray is just fine for getting clean. And you only need 1.5 gallons to flush. If it's splashing, you're constipated.
Shoes off, yes. But stored by the beds because earthquakes. If a very large quake were to hit (once every 20 years or so in my area), you don't want to step in debris.
Microwaves excite molecules to heat food. Exactly the same way a stove does. No radiation is involved. A "water otter" is better to get exact temperatures needed for various types of tea, but boiling water is best for coffee.
Eggs MUST be refrigerated in the US. Because of the way they are processed before packing, the protective membrane gets washed away, allowing bacteria to grow if the eggs are "left out".
American and I have all of this except I refrigerate my eggs bc we have to. This is boring, I'm bored.
Is it common in Europe to hold a mug up to the camera while you're showing off your loo? Didn't think so.
Not sure why she thinks American houses are made of cardboard, but criticizing them for blowing away in a tornado is a bizarrely cheap shot. Of the 62 EF-5 tornadoes in the entire world since 1955, 59 of them were in the U.S. (1 was in Canada, 1 was in the Soviet Union, and 1 was in France.) Best guess: Plaster (gypsum, not lime) used on the outer surfaces of interior walls is mass-produced away from the home, and installed with the paper backing still on it. This is known as "drywall."
Microwaves are completely safe. You don't like radiation? Light and heat are kinds of radiation. There are harmful radiations and safe radiations. Microwaves are the latter.
I have seen homes in Europe that have few if any of these things (especially the , and homes in the US that have some if not all, so whoever did the video? Is as ignorant as anyone in America is alleged to be about other cultures/places. Sign me an American who .... good grief.... apparently lives in the TTer's elite European world if these things make one European!
this is so stupid. everything here is in america, except i have an electric kettle. I would never microwave a cup of liquid. thats begging for a hot liquid explosion
Ok I'm a European living in the US. Lots of stereotypes obviously. I would say, despite the reusable grocery bags situation there are lots of improvements to be done when it comes to sustainability and it is true that most European countries have took a step further regarding this matter. The cardboard walls things is somewhat relevant to me as the 2 apartments I lived in since I moved to LA are not well isolated and you that can almost understand your neighbors conversation. Of course, that's my experience. Doesn't mean I'll blame everything, I am overall happy to live here and appreciate lots of things that I didn't know before moving here.
Bro first go to america and at least look at 5 american houses. My house has about 90% of these. If I did the shiz to Europe you guys will be losing your freaking mind, so come on and chill and the shoes was embarrassing. Don't even get me started with the paper towels, my family uses regular towels all the time and lastly, the removable shower head SUCKS. I have one of them it just me pointing it to where im already wet. I don't have some secret dark area on my body. If one side of my body isn't wet I do something where I turn around. Its simple and easy. So next time check your facts.
“but is it standard????” yes it is. this is quite standard. i just don’t get why everyone feels the need to go “americans bad” like every other country, we have some sucky people, but it’s not the majority for gods sake.
Born and raised in Europe, lived there for 27 years, have lived in US since 1994, I DO microwave water to make tea... very convenient.
I’m foreign born but I’ve lived in the US since I was 2. I’ve seen tons of Americans have these types of things... there are people don’t do some of these things but there are many who do. One thing I do agree is a big difference is most Americans wearing shoes indoors. In my 28 years here and having mainly American friends, I’ve only came across 2-3 people who don’t wear shoes indoors. Some people thought it was strange we removed our shoes. I guess because it’s not very common here. But everything else seems not that rare to have here in the US...
Okay so it's mainly the electric plug-in kettle comment that annoys me the most. Implying that the only alternative is using a microwave (I have never seen anyone use a microwave to boil water). Think for a moment what people used to use to boil water before there were microwaves or even electricity? Guess what, we still use them! It's called an "analog" kettle. You put it on the stove and turn the heat all the way up. No cord required.
Lol i have never seen any of these stuff before- I want a cheese slicer please!
You've never seen reusable bags and foyers? Where do you live?
Load More Replies...I didnt understand this article, but what was she say. I thought the things mentioned were quite American, even I am not from there and these household conveniences are not uncommon! In all of Europe and even other parts of the world. I can see how these can be taken for granted, but I didn't think the shoes is relatable because I am sure everybody has a pair of house-slippers or shoes? 🤔 also the microwave for water boil didnt make sense, because most has kettle then use of microwave is just for reheating something.
My husband has 4 pairs of house slippers. Literally. 4 pairs. Depending on what he is doing.
Load More Replies...I have literally all of these except for an entrance hallway, (why do you need one of those?) and unrefrigerated eggs (natural coatings removed in America for some reason). This stuff has been in almost every home I have lived in or visited in America. Also, microwaves aren't some horrible thing, they're useful
Plastic grocery bags are actually more environmentally friendly, assuming you reuse it for other purposes. Because otherwise you end up buying plastic bags to line trash cans, pick up dog poop, etc.
There's plenty of terrace houses in the UK where you enter through the front door into the lounge - but from American TV, films etc. I didn't think this was a thing except maybe in tiny apartments?
I will say that I (rather unfortunately) live in the U.S. and do/have most of these things...
What a total moron... reusable bags? Really guess you never seen CLOTH TOTE BAGS in America? I'm guessing you eat a lot of eggs quickly or get them directly from a farm because if they are store brought then the "EGG BLOOM" has been removed and you really might want to refrigerate them or get sick. Guess a "CLOTH DISH TOWEL" Isn't a thing in America? Where exactly is the radioactive material in a microwave since it uses "MICROWAVES" to heat food? Houses are made of cardboard? Really guess all that wood, concrete, and bricks I see at construction sites in housing developments are for show... what a totally clueless moron she is to even think she's funny let alone attempts to bash an entire country with such little knowledge.
Did nothing for me except to show that the stereotype of the typical European as being arrogant and ignorant of the U.S. isn't, in fact, a stereotype. They really are arrogant and ignorant. Maybe it's a holdover from the arrogance of colonialism all of them engaged in and haven't fully liberated themselves from.
I was married to a man from England, got married there and have been there. Here's some things you guys don't have...ice cubes!!!!! Its like why?? My mother in law never rinsed the dish soap off the dishes, right from soapy water to dish drainer. Washing machines that I saw to literally an hour to wash. By the time my clothes came out, there was no more color left. I'm sure there's more, not silly ones like not taking your shoes off. It is rude to compare and be a jerky about it. Thats the way i took it anyway. We have a saying in AMERICA "If you don't have anything nice to say,...say nothing at all"
Guess they don't have earthquakes in Europe. In California a brick house would come down or at least crack at an average size tremor.
OP is smug about the reusable shopping bags, but it's been demonstrated that the environmental impact of creating one cotton bag is equivalent to the energy used to create 20k throw-away bags? What's a self-righteousness girl to do?! Don't know, cry probably. But I reuse packaging from elsewhere and my rucksack on market day
You were downvoted for telling the truth. The world is a strange place. 2018 study from the Danish Environmental Protection Agency - relevant info on pages 17-18. https://www2.mst.dk/Udgiv/publications/2018/02/978-87-93614-73-4.pdf
Load More Replies...Apparently something else that is different in America is that we clean our showers.
It's a darker grout, made darker by water and some may also have come out, that isn't dirt. The loo photo shows the same grout. How can some people not know about coloured grout?
Load More Replies...Nope. That’s just a stupid stereotype. Most Americans do indeed have a kettle.
Load More Replies...Guys, it's a joke. Yes, you may have this but not everyone in America does, while in Europe this is more standard. Calm down, please :)
BP post: "These common Europe things are weird to Americans" Comments: "Haha true" BP post: "These common things in Europe are weird in America" Comments: "I am offended"
I am from America but ALL THOSE EUROPEAN(i spelled it wrong sorry!) THINGS MAKE SENSE IN MY HOUSE!!!! My family is Indian so we have been influenced by the culture of the Europeans. I never understand why Americans wear shoes in the house..
No, we don't. Those of us who drink tea use an electric kettle or a regular kettle and the rest of us probably use a coffee maker. This is all entertaining and funny but I can assure you almost all things she mentioned are not out of the ordinary in America. I do wear houseshoes inside the house but thankfully I have no carpet so it's easy to clean.
Load More Replies...Ahhh yes, being small minded and rude then saying "what? It's a joke!". So hilarious. Pretty sure making weird generalizations in order to insult other cultures is considered a bad thing nowadays
Load More Replies...Because it's cheaper. Not everyone can spend that much money.
Load More Replies...my family has reusable shopping bags and towels. a lot of people have the bags though
Load More Replies...I have never commented on anything before but I finally had too. This article is rude and wrong. I am American. I use those ikea bags all the time. Who doesn’t have a kitchen towel? I have NEVER seen someone use a microwave to heat up water. My house is not made of cardboard. It’s made of brick. I have a clothes drying rack from ikea! Who wears shoes in their house????? Of course my shower head comes off. Anyone can purchase that. America is huge. We are all different people. Stop with these stupid articles based on dumb crap you see on tv. Just stop. We get it. You think it’s funny to make fun of America.
You aren’t hilariously roasting all Americans. You are revealing you know nothing about a huge country. And limping is all together.
Load More Replies...I'm American and I don't wear shoes inside my house. I don't microwave water, I have a kettle. Most people I know use canvas bags for groceries and reuse them. We have kitchen towels but I personally use paper towels when I clean and disinfect to prevent cross contamination. Our eggs are refrigerated cuz we don't put any coating on them. I think the lady in the video should use some of that normal water pressure in the shower to clean the mold and mildew all over her grouting. Ewwwww!
The eggs have the coating removed in the US not added in Europe and her grouting is deliberately a dark colour, not mildewed, for contrast in looks.
Load More Replies...I don't understand the obsession with America vs The Rest Of The World (aka Europe), especially the Great Shoes Indoors Debate. I'm a South African. We wear shoes in our homes mostly - unless we just feel like wearing socks or going barefoot. When hubby and I were in the UK for a few months, everybody we visited there wore shoes in their homes. Obviously if they're super muddy or wet, we take them off - but in general ... we don't take them off as we step through our front door. Also obviously, winter vs summer plays a big part here - and in SA our winter is a lot milder than in the northern hemisphere.
I agree. It is exhausting. I'm tired of US vs X stuff. Who cares?? And yet, here I am posting about it. Ahhhhhhhhhh.
Load More Replies...This looks like it was made by someone who heard some things about American houses and just started making assumptions.
Yeah, other than the fact I don't have an *electric* kettle (because I have a coffeepot for *coffee* instead of tea), I guess the Midwest is Europe now?
Load More Replies...As an American, I have all of these things (with the exception of the electric kettle). In the morning I make ONE cup of instant coffee. There is no method which is faster or more effective than to put a mug of water in the microwave for 1:30. If its not more convenient or faster, it's not 'better'
Yes there is. It's putting a mug in the microwave for 0:90. LOL 1 less keystroke.
Load More Replies...I think this is just some stuck up girl with no sense of the world. I'm not from Europe, and I'm not from the USA, and even I know all of these apply to everyone in multiple countries. With certainty I can see I've seen kettles, kitchen towels, reuseable bags, etc in America. Sad thing is Bored Panda goes right along with this moronic tiktoker in the description of this article backing her up.
i am American, and i'm pretty sure my family does most of these things.... i think they make sense.
She’s drinking a cuppa ☕️ in her bathroom so I’m not engaging in any of her truths
She seems ill-informed about the USA. And I have to ponder what she will do when she finds out that light bulbs emit radiation too, and that it's much more energetic than what goes on in a microwave. And while we're at it, does she wash laundry every day, because a drying rack doesn't hold much.
This article is annoying. The subject may have been mildly amusing once but this is the umpteenth article about it and this one just smacks of smugness. Different countries do things differently - ooh big wow! I imagine there are more similarities than differences between us. And if you are going to post pictures of your bathroom, clean the grouting first! You could make penicillin with those tiles!
Looking at her Jip & Janneke mug, I'm afraid she's Dutch... I'm sorry, we're not all like that. -__-
Wow these guys are xenophobic most of this stuff we ( at least I) have. How is showing different tools and appliances you use in your country "roasting them" also this does not apply to everyone you are just bullying the minority that does live in these conditions, another thing to add is the houses are made of drywall not cardboard and also I use kitchen towels. I have no idea where you got this information but stop making false statements you got from your friends and such. Not all americans are stupid, dirty, and incompetent.
Wait, does she think we don't have kettles or reusable bags? Shoes, eggs, laundry, these are just personal preferences that vary by household. There are about a million funny, weird, or annoying differences between Americans and Europeans, she didn't mention a single one. -American, lives in Denmark
This person is not living in reality or has never visited America. Not to mention she is a rude n*b.
That was dumb. All those things you pointed out...we use in America. Maybe you were just stupid and never figured it out when you were in America.
The person who wrote this should be embarrassed. "You boil water in the morning because you don't like the taste of radiation?" What does that mean? So much to unpack here. Is this is microwave thing? Are you implying you can taste radiation? Your kettle is heated with EM radiation with a wavelength of 10,000 nm, while the microwave heats with EM radiation with a wavelength of 1 cm. Neither is ionizing. And I've lived more than 5 years in each of North America, Euro and East Asia and have NEVER seen anyone boil water using a microwave.
Lies. All lies. ALL US Americans use a microwave to boil water. /s Seriously though. This is about the 24th Bored Panda post about US Americans not having kettles. It is a VERY strange fixation. And no matter how many times a bunch of people from the US say - WE HAVE KETTLES, it falls on deaf ears.
Load More Replies...Wow. I find this slightly offensive. She unapologetically mocked Americans with her bullshit and shared it on social media because she needed attention. I’m guessing the closest she’s ever been to the U.S. is binge watching Friends on Netflix.
Maybe? But there was always a kettle on Monica's stove. (color/style varied by season.) friends-ki...2c9a0e.jpg
Load More Replies...All of these things are standard in Australia except perhaps the shoes inside the house thing. I don't wear shoes in my house but most people I know do.
I think Australians get a pass, considering everything wants to kill you ;)
Load More Replies...Cloth kitchen towels, which we prefer to use instead of paper, because it's cheaper. Check. 20210204_1...1242de.jpg
Handheld shower, which will splash the bathroom ceiling if I'm not careful. Check. 20210204_1...5dab85.jpg
Okay, I never really comment on posts, but I really have to here.... This article is completely wrong. I use all of those things. I have a detachable showerhead with adjustable water pressure. I have reusable target bags and ikea bags. I don't wear shoes in my house, that's nasty. Who uses a microwave to heat up water? That's why I have a kettle and a coffee maker. My house is made out of bricks and siding, I don't live in a cardboard box. Also who doesn't have a kitchen towel? Paper towels just leave lint on dishes... This article is completely false... It's a silly stereotype created from old American tv shows. People need to stop making fun of America like this. We may have our issues, but I guarantee most other countries have them too.
why does this BS even get posted? Also i might be wrong but pretty sure the cheese slicer is extremely uncommon outside the Netherlands and Scandinavia (I'm from the Netherlands)
Why would you think a cheese slicer is uncommon elsewhere? I have two kinds of cheese slicers (in California, USA). My grandmother had a cheese slicer 50 years ago. I've seen them used in Australia, in France, in Ireland, in Canada, and in many states in the U.S. Some people use cheese slicers, some people use knives. Whatever.
Load More Replies...Honestly, this is just offencive. My family uses dish towels, we have a kettle, we use reusable bags, we have a drying rack. And who tf wears shoes in their house?!
Did she, maybe, just hear some things about America from a friend of a friend who saw a movie? Most Americans do many, if not all, of those things she does and thinks we don't. The United States has less than half of the population of Europe in roughly the same size land mass. I'm sure there are more than a few Europeans who've microwaved their coffee, and more than a few Americans who have kettles. I'll concede to the fact that America has way more wood homes than Europe, though. She seems to like America enough to wear a Las Vegas sweatshirt from a place that probably doesn't exist.
Another Bored Panda post filled with European generalizations about Americans. Most of this is BS.
I have most of these things and I live in the USA. She is misrepresenting information.
I live in america and i have all of those things.... do you guys really think we live in cardboard houses?
Actually, as an American, I do 99% of those things as well, so 🤷🏽♀️
I have never seen a cardboard house here. Maybe she should inform herself before posting this stuff. And maybe Bored Panda should think twice before reposting stories that are factually and provably wrong.
Maybe you aren't REALLY American. Obviously this person on tiktok knows better than you. /s
Load More Replies...This has to be the dumbest article of them all. Most of that stuff we have here. Do people just see a tv show and assume that’s our culture? I do wish removable shower heads were a norm, but literally all of that is things many of us already have or use
Im from Arizona and We have all that stuff, she doesnt know wht shes talking about
I'm a Canadian, and all of these things are normal to me. Side note, as I was typing this I was also reading the top comment (from Tomas) and started typing "I'm Canadiation" due to reading "tastes of radiation" at the same time.
We have most of those things here though. The exceptions are that we dry our clothes outside on the clothesline, the microwave is fast and I love it lol, also our house (in South fl) are mostly CBS, and almost everyone i know takes their shoes off in the houses. American varies from region to region and by economic class. Paper towels are expensive, we use towels.
BTW, remember when BP was telling us that TikTok was dangerous to use? Then they post these things.
Majority of these are blatant lies. Doubt she has ever lived in America. We don't need a drying rack for clothes. We have utility rooms for our washer & clothes dryers. Kettles cannot be properly cleaned. Who want germ water?
Kettles can't be properly cleaned? I don't...You're an idiot.
Load More Replies...I think this gal has been reading those Buzzfeed articles again *eyeroll*
I am an American and just made myself a cup of tea using water I heated with a kettle. The only thing here that doesn't apply to many Americans as well is the eggs. Maybe these are true for some Americans, but they aren't for me and most people I know.
Literally the eggs were the only thing on the entire list that isn't common here. This is the stupidest thing I've ever read.
I actually did it for many years because we didnr have a kettle. And I am European xD
Load More Replies...She’s drinking a cuppa ☕️ in her toilet so I’m not engaging with the rest of her truths.
I guess this is just meant to be a joke? Another ha ha US Americans are weird? I have a removable shower head, reusable grocery bags, a kettle and an electric kettle, a cheese slicer, a drying rack in my laundry room, two drawers of kitchen towels, and a house made out of stone. My friend has chickens. She still puts the eggs in the fridge. So that's correct.
If you don't wear shoes in the house, how do you protect your toes from the coffee table? After I broke my pinky toe a few years ago, I don't go anywhere without shoes, ever.
Slippers that cover the toes help. Though I often forget to wear mine and broke my little toe as well...
Load More Replies...This is the absolutely worst Bored Panda article EVER. I’m 43, born, raised, and still living in TEXAS. And I have basically ALL of these things, with only one exception. The electric kettle, the IKEA bags and other reusable bags, dish towels, the shower head I used to replace the basic one in my apartment, and on and on. Only thing I don’t have is the front hallway, but that’s because it’s not common for apartments. Anywhere. DUMB. PLEASE TELL ME THIS WAS JUST A RUDE JOKE.
When I was reading this post, it felt like she was saying "Hey you materialistic Americans, my special European house has doors and walls and windows and yours doesn't". I kept waiting for her to come up with something that was actually unique to Europe. My house has ALL the things she thinks are unheard of in America and most houses I know of also have them.Where did she get her silly notions? They aren't even true. Many small places do not have room for a separate entry hall in both Europe and the US. She is quite misinformed, elitist, and should be embarrassed about her post.
I have all those things in my American home. She is obviously a young, misinformed person and should really be quite embarrassed about her post. It's like Gee my special European house has walls and doors and windows! Take that you materialistic Americans!
US bashing again. I do not feel bad about having a microwave, and I like enough water in the toilet to "take care of things." Repeated flushing, like having to do 2 washer rinse cycles, is wasteful as well. Everything else I have. I will say, some people have allergies, so using a dryer is actually a health issue for people with asthma and allergies. Just sayin'. Don't be judgey.
What an uninformed totally ignorant xenophobic idiot. Sorry but try actually going to America or reading about how microwaves actually work... (spoiler there's nothing "radioactive" in a microwave to have things taste like radiation...) and better eat your eggs quickly since they only last 21 days and refrigerated ones last 50... might want to learn about the "EGG BLOOM" kind of the difference... but she's a 20 something brain dead social media idiot so no surprise...
What utter stupidity... 1) guess she never sees a CANVAS CLOTH TOTE BAG in America? 2) exactly what is a CLOTH DISH TOWEL that's sold at Walmart then? 3) where is the RADIOACTIVE MATERIAL in a microwave since it uses MICROWAVES to heat your food hence the name? 4) teapots, kettles, or a countertop coffee machine isn't a thing in America? (As I stare at my kettle on the stove and keurig coffee machine) 5) guess she either eats A LOT of eggs or buys them pretty fresh because there's such a thing called the EGG BLOOM which in the US is washed off store sold eggs not in Europe. Without that you better refrigerate them and even with it, they last 21 days compared to refrigerated ones that go at least 50 days. 6) houses are made out of cardboard? Guess all that wood, concrete, and bricks at housing development construction sites are for show? But hey she's blonde so yeah that's proven correct..
This is just mean. I am an American citizen and we... 1. ALSO use reusable towels, because, who doesn't? I have never met ANYONE who does not use cloth towels in their kitchen to clean up messes and such. 2. We have an electric kettle. Which ACTUALLY uses less power than heating up the stove :) 3. OH LOOK we have a small hallway entrance too! Which if it didn't, why tf would it matter??? 4. Literally no one wears dirty shoes around their house. MAYBE they have a certain pair that they only where inside, but that was a stupid comparison. 5. Do you think we are just psycho planet destroyers??? YES we use reusable bags too. And actually our local Walmart has a plastic bag recycling system. You are insane. Stop making fun of people over something that literally isn't even an issue in most households.
I have three or four. This kid couldn't buy a clue if she won the lottery.
Load More Replies...I know boiling water in the microwave is normal for some people but just no. Sorry but I can't do that.
Might be an Australian thing but we have most of those things. My house is over sixty and probably just really well built (definitely not Aussie magic or anything)
Load More Replies...geez...I am American and ALL of that applies (Kettle, check, shoe rack, check, removable shower, check etc) except the house part being made of brick and the drying rack because I have a dryer. A cheese slicer? Wtf does she think we do, cut cheese by biting it off a block? No, we cut them with our butts (that's a fart joke). Edit: Waaait, do you think she is parodying?
I will give her that in my region, anyway, hallway entrances are rather rare. However, there *is* almost always a side entrance that, instead of opening up to the living room, opens up to the kitchen or a washroom off the side of it. This is what people most often use.
I am American, and I literally have almost all of these things. This isn't funny. Please stop generalizing all Americans. it's stupid.
Just wrong, I have a bunch of this stuff in my house, just cause I am American I don't have it or do this or do that?
Come on down South, a lot of house are made of brick. Heck, same on the Jersey shore where I'm from. Most people don't use kettles because we make coffee with coffee pots. Those reusable bags? Scientific studies show them collecting all sorts of bacteria. And, if she doesn't like the way we do things, she's welcome to stay home and remember how the US saved their butts in 2 world wars and kept the Soviets from taking over western Europe.
This girl is a rude idiot lol all those things exist in many North American homes
This girl is very biased. It's like some Americans are so biased because they don't know Europe. There are very many differences between our continents and countries, but even I know people here who use paper towels for everything. These people are just lazy. But there are actually also many Americans who walk around the house with shoes on. Quite simply, the world is not black and white. Or just white. Or just black. This article is quite mean and unfair. I may use a microwave SOMETIMES if I'm feeling lazy, but I have other ways. My house is made of brick. I may be half German, but I'm also NATIVE AMERICAN! I am sick and f*****g tired of this.
So is it acceptable to microwave food but not water? What's the difference? Also, I thought us Americans were supposed to be the arrogant ones who should be telling everyone else that our way is the best and everyone else is morons for not doing it like us.
Cloth bags. Check. These aren't the only ones I have, just the ones I still have in the house from shopping yesterday. 20210204_1...cbcede.jpg
We constantly talk about how diverse America is becoming but think this? I mean it's silly sure but...do people really think this? Why would they sell cheese slicers, kitchen towels, reusable bags, shoe racks, kettles and drying racks at every hardware/home goods store if they 'didn't make sense?' They sell cheese slicers at THE DOLLAR STORE. I also use a removable shower head several times a month at my gym - I don't have one because I haven't replaced mine since I moved in. But the last time I chose a showerhead - it was one like this. I'd be curious why she doesn't think these things make sense? Where did she even get these ideas? The local bars where I live sell their own dishtowels - I've never been in a house that didn't have them. I know America hasn't had it's greatest four years but seriously...this is just...really an ugly way to characterize things.
... The... the only difference I'm seeing was the eggs... I have no idea how she came up with the other stuff. Albeit some of our houses aren't made of bricks, but it's not uncommon either. Had to look in the comments for the radiation mention, that one made no sense to me.
She just feels superior because she left her home country? Meh. What does the "taste of radiation" even mean.
It means she doesn't have a clue how microwaves work.
Load More Replies...I have TWO drying racks, my house is most definitely not made from cardboard (what was the point of this? Aren’t most houses made of brick or that other thingy that I don’t know the name of??), i have a kettle, we use the ikea bags for overflowing laundry, but we have other bags for groceries and produce, we have like five kitchen towels in the kitchen right now not to mention the billion in the closet, you wear shoes i your house? Wait you only have a rack for shoes? We have mud rooms for you to take your shoes off before going into the house! ROOMS FOR SHOES! The only thing I don’t have is the little egg caddy but my grandparents do. I don’t like the shower heads that come off, and I’ve never seen a cheese slicer. That’s it. We aren’t THAT different.
Straight up living in the Midwest, and literally none of this is abnormal to me, nor has it ever been.
OKAY, besides eggs not going in the fridge. Eggs have always been in the fridge.
Load More Replies...Lol except for the sturdy construction, the hallway entrance and the cheese slicer (vegan home), I have all of these things in my tiny travel trailer. But, as someone who travels from state to state, I see a lack of a lot of these in homes. Though, I've bought, like, 3 brand new kettles for people and still use ours that is at least 20 years old because microwaves do not need to be involved in heating water ... unless you have no choice(uneven heating can cause sudden boiling over and injury when you remove the hot cup).
I have the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 8th, the 10th, and the 11th. Is that weird for the US?
I've been in america for most of my life and I do all of these things. Well I was born in europe, so maybe its just in my blood
Someone pls explain this to me now. There is 3.6 million slaves in europe. America abolished slavery a long time ago. This isn’t counting the maids and personal drivers (I don’t understand the concept of maids.)
I don’t really comment, but that changes now. This girl is ridiculous and uninformed. Yes, I am an American. No, I hate several things in America, (gun rights, racism, etc). But cmon! We don’t use paper towels for everything, and several houses have removable showers, but Americans don’t really want to spend so much money for something that won’t change much. Our shower pressure is normal, thank you very much. Our toilets don’t splash, and what is the point of a hallway into the living room? Eggs come in the fridge, cheese comes sliced, and our walls have great quality (for those who can afford the crazy high priced houses). Stop making fun of America, it’s not the only country that needs change. Stop poking fun at America, people. This just shows how not in touch Europe is and how little idk how many people know about America. And also, something we do that won’t make sense in europe, we don’t have slaves. In any day, at least 3.6 million men, women, and children are in modern slavery. America abolished that a long line ago. No slaves, no maids, no personal drivers.
I have all these things in my house in America plus one more you don't have in Europe: FREEDOM.
Sorry to rain on your parade, but brick houses in California don't last long. See: 1906 San Francisco Earthquake; 1989 Loma Preita Earthquake. :)
We have all these things in the US. This person knows nothing about the US.
Perhaps she has only seen American hotels. The only thing that's very different (and much better) in Europe is the windows. I'd love to have German windows here in the U.S. --the ones which can open from the top or, turn the handle a different way, and they open from the side. The only thing different (and much better) in the U. S. is the toilets. I mean, my German toilet had a shelf in it which caught your waste, for some reason. Then you flushed and hoped everything had gone away. Thanks, I prefer the American ones with no shelf and more water to flush waste away efficiently.
Ya know, everyone's so correctly bewildered at the notion we microwave our coffee or tea, no-one's even really commenting on the flat-out stupidity of the notion of "the taste of radiation." Mircowaved tea sucks because you don't boil the dissolved gasses out of the water. There's no "radiation." Microwaves work on electro-magnetic waves, (other frequences include light and infrared heat) which like all things which travel outward from a source (sound waves, water ripples) be called "radiation." Unlike nuclear radiation, e-m waves don't propagate nuclear decay... there's no "radiation" remnant in the cup... well, besides infrared (heat).
Infrared is also bouncing off of anything with heat so yea.
Load More Replies...Are there really no reusable kitchen towels in the US? This cannot be true!?
this is a bs article and none of these things are true exept the eggs
Load More Replies...The differences you see in this are more Americans in the Northeast of this country. Of course despite popular belief, not American lives in one of our major cities. We actually have nice things and aren't forced to spend every penny just trying to survive in a city.
I still use kitchen towels my grandma made. I don't drink tea sitting on the toilet. Hallway entrances? Big deal. Are based only on one or two if any experience. Pshaw. From the colonies.
This seems like a needlessly nitpicking post. True, I really don't get the fixed, crap water pressure shower thing and the egg thing. But of course US houses aren't made of cardboard - America does have rain! Does she mean plasterboard? And I've seen stove top kettles, so obviously they don't ALL use the microwave (ick). Never come across the drying rack thing though - do all US households insist on tumble dryers?
In the US they wash the protective coating off their eggs so the eggs have to be refrigerated. And electric (not stovetop) kettles don't heat up that fast when you're running on 110 volts compared to 220 or 240.
Load More Replies...Yes to everything except for the entrance hall. In Greece when you open the door to the apartment you get straight to the living room.
Seems to depend on the house design - I've lived in both kinds. Having a hallway is better for heat conservation.
Load More Replies...Omg dont even get me started on how dumb and inconvenient some things in Europe are. For example how they seem to install those removable shower heads at waist level. Install it above your head so you can actually conveniently and quickly rinse your body. Also, dryers are freaking amazing. Sure we could dry our clothes on a rack but we can also pop them in the dryer for one hour then they are dry. Its f'in awesome. Also, I could spend the extra 10 for a cheese slicer or I can use a regular knife because that can also slice cheese. Crazy right? Ill stop here.
I have eVery single one of these things in my house in America, plus one more that you wouldn't find in Europe: FREEDOM!
I'm confused about the water pressure thing..does she think we don't have normal water pressure?? I literally have every single item on here. I'm not sure where she supposedly visited or she got her information from, but, most people I know also have these. I'm just curious where she got this misinformation from?
A lot of these are wrong lmao. Not one person I know wears shoes in their house unless they are just running in to get something quickly. Entryways are often associated with class of the person. Wealthy people can afford a special area to take off shoes and coats. Poor people can't. Kettle? Stove top is most common but tea isn't that popular. Europes most extreme weather is what? Some rain? If tornados ripped though england the way they do in America, your houses would be trash. A lot of houses have detachable shower heads but it usually depends on the size of the bathroom. Literally everyone I know uses a mix of paper towels and rags. It depends on the job you want done. Cleaning the kitchen? Rag. Spilled some s**t? Paper towel. Europeans are so fragile lmaooo they would die if they had to live the working class, middle American life. It's pathetic.
So untrue. Only thing I don't have/do is eggs must be refrigerated because our egg producers wash the natural coating on eggs that protect them . No reason to be smug and disparaging . Only thing that does not make sense is your attitude toward America.
I have every single item in my very American home. I have ancestors who signed the Mayflower Compact.
I have all of that (here in America) except the shoe closet & brick. I don’t see much of a difference....
"Taste of radiation". Does she think she's a comedian? We wear shoes in our houses here. Most homes have tiled floors, NOT CARPETS. Brick walls, yes. I live on the most geologically stable part of the PLANET and we STILL have 9-inch brick walls.
I have all those things and we never wear shoes in the house. This article, whatever, actually pissed me off. Excuse me while I heat my water in the ancient electric hot water pot to make a pot of tea in a ceramic pot.....
I can see from the other comments that I'm far from the only one who's sick and tired of clueless twits bashing a country and a people they obviously know nothing about.
ok what this is just a normal house... i live in the us and we have an electric kettle, a concrete house, a shoe rack, a KNIFE, an electric dryer, reusable shopping bags, cloth towels, a hallway entrance, eggs in the fridge, a removable shower head with normal water, and a normal amount of water in the toilet. i'm pretty sure this is just a normal house.
Her statement that microwaved water is "radiated" perfectly illustrates her ignorance. I'm an American who has a detachable shower head, uses kitchen towels, uses reusable shopping bags, owns a cheese slicer and doesn't wear shoes in the house. Oh yeah, and my house is made of brick. Go figure.
Her statement that microwaved water is "radiated" perfectly illustrates her level of ignorance. Funny, I'm an American who uses reusable shopping bags, owns a cheese slicer and doesn't wear shoes in the house.
Some of these are kinda silly, but I do like the reusable mesh bag idea for veggies/fruit. For some day when I can go back into a grocery store post pandemic.
First of all. Most american homes don't have 100% of these things due to poverty. Most people don't microwave their water. Water pressure is mostly not in our control, cause again, we dont own our own homes so it on the landlords. The, drying the clothes without a dryer, my family has done that due to not being able to own one. Now as for the shoes in the house, I completely agree. Its gross and I'm not for it.
This is so ridiculous. Literally everything there is normal in the US (which is usually what people say when they are using the name of two continents). Has she been to the US? We have Ikea here. It's actually the law in my state to use reusable bags, everyone I know has a kettle (not all electric, I have both), people wear shoes only when they leave the house, on and on.
Do they also throw all the garbage, even recyclables like cans, glass bottles and paper in the same bag?
First, let me correct the title of your TikTok video: "Things in my European house that don't make sense in New York City". Seriously, you compare a Europe to one city in the U.S.A. and think it is accurate? I don't live in New York City, and my house has everything that you listed as a European standard (including the brick walls). Why don't you try visiting another dozen cities around the U.S.A. and then make your generalizations more accurate.
We, and most of our friends, have almost all of these things. I'd love to have European-style eggs, but hard to get.
UGH. She has NO CLUE about life in the US. I love my tea kettle (I don't even drink coffee), I purchased my first detachable showerhead in 1996! I've lived in 5 houses, two dorms and a condo - NONE had central AC. At our house, we don't even use paper napkins we use cloth ones; same for kitchen towels. I'd say most homes in the US have about 1/3 acre. I lived in Massachusetts where they have a tax on homes so that they can buy sensitive lands for conservation. I live in Connecticut where they reward homeowners (or those who group together) who have large plots of undeveloped land by giving them lower taxes if they agree that the land can never be developed. Connecticut also mandates that you bring totes to the stores- they did bring back plastic temporarily for the pandemic. I hang most of my clothes out to dry in my sunroom. Houses made of "cardboard" are real in Georgia, LOL. I've seen them being built- they're just vinyl siding and sheetrock: no insulation, no wood! Terrible!
My nephew raises chickens and keeps the eggs on his counter - not in the fridge.
Load More Replies...That girl just needs to shut up n leave America alone. What doesn’t make sense is she’s trying to make us look stupid, while she’s showing her own stupidity.
"Why are Americans so self-centered?!" Says Eurocentric person who doesn't know anything about America and mocks us for things they think only they have discovered.
One thing Americans don't do... Cover their face with a coffee mug while in their bathroom. I think she misunderstood the idiom, 'mugging for the camera.'
What was with the comments about houses flying away with tornados. Clearly, the commenters have never seen or been in a tornado. Brick houses fall, too. Also, that tik tok was snobbish as f***. Girl, get over yourself and your superior attitude. Remember, glass houses, honey. Glass freakin' houses.
If you need to live in 15 different apartments at the age of 23, you are likely the worst roommate ever: self-entitled, ignorant, self-absorbed, and a myopic view of the world. Go someplace and grow up.
First of all I don't get the electric kettle thing, I only use a tea pot. Paper towels, uh uh, washable towels. As for tea, I drink that cold, hot if I have a cold. Ive live in prefab and brick homes houses and apartments. I currently live in a brick and stone apartment right now. As for shoes in my home, when I come in I take them off even though I have hard wood floor. The reason, the outside streets and sidewalks are disgusting and I don't wanna trail that s**t back to my hardwood floors. She should stop paying attention to stereotypes, this is the reason the world is f****d up in the first place.
I'm an American living in a smallish Midwestern town. I have reusable shopping and produce bags, cloth kitchen towels, a cheese slicer, a shoe rack where I put my shoes when I enter my home, and an entryway (foyer) in my brick house. If I choose to heat my tea water in the microwave (which has no negative health effects) instead of buying yet another one-job appliance, what business is it of yours? We are DIFFERENT COUNTRIES with DIFFERENT CULTURES, so why is it so astounding that we have different cultural norms? And for those saying we have "cardboard" houses because tornados can destroy them, educate yourselves. Tornadoes destroy everything. They rip mature trees out of the ground, twist heavy steel construction cranes into pretzels, and take brick buildings apart... well, brick by brick.
When I was backpacking in Europe in 1972 we would go into a grocery store from time to time and I remember thinking "wow, what a good idea, plastic bags (and they were thicker) all we have is paper bags. The US didn't start using plastic bags till 1985 or so. In Europe it was in the 60s. Thanks for such a great idea Europe. Too bad we ALL didn't know what a horrible idea it was. We are all trying to do better. There are many products made from recycled plastic bags, they are sent to facilities that only recycle them because standard facilities can't. The company vests Walmart employees wear are made from recycled plastic bags. I'm with Jaclyn ciocco,I've never commented on anything before either
We have many houses with entrance hallways, but there are more that don't have them. A lot of Americans also use a kettle for tea, but there really are many that use the microwave if they have a microwave. This is mostly in businesses where they want a quicker & cheaper cup of tea. I grew up in a household that used reusable cloths, but we were poorer, a lot of upper middle class Americans do use paper towels. Our houses are built worse than European houses & we don't have as many historic buildings which is disappointing. America seems to focus more on time saving & making money. We do overuse plastic, even though many of us use reusable bags & try to avoid most plastic, especially the younger generations. She may be correct about the toilet water level because there's almost always that splash. Wearing shoes in the house is common, & you're annoyingly considered a prude, or a rude host if you ask others to leave shoes at the door. It all depends on location, money, & resources here.
There's a drought here, child. You want to save the environment? Start with saving water. Low flow shower heads may have less force, but the spray is just fine for getting clean. And you only need 1.5 gallons to flush. If it's splashing, you're constipated.
Shoes off, yes. But stored by the beds because earthquakes. If a very large quake were to hit (once every 20 years or so in my area), you don't want to step in debris.
Microwaves excite molecules to heat food. Exactly the same way a stove does. No radiation is involved. A "water otter" is better to get exact temperatures needed for various types of tea, but boiling water is best for coffee.
Eggs MUST be refrigerated in the US. Because of the way they are processed before packing, the protective membrane gets washed away, allowing bacteria to grow if the eggs are "left out".
American and I have all of this except I refrigerate my eggs bc we have to. This is boring, I'm bored.
Is it common in Europe to hold a mug up to the camera while you're showing off your loo? Didn't think so.
Not sure why she thinks American houses are made of cardboard, but criticizing them for blowing away in a tornado is a bizarrely cheap shot. Of the 62 EF-5 tornadoes in the entire world since 1955, 59 of them were in the U.S. (1 was in Canada, 1 was in the Soviet Union, and 1 was in France.) Best guess: Plaster (gypsum, not lime) used on the outer surfaces of interior walls is mass-produced away from the home, and installed with the paper backing still on it. This is known as "drywall."
Microwaves are completely safe. You don't like radiation? Light and heat are kinds of radiation. There are harmful radiations and safe radiations. Microwaves are the latter.
I have seen homes in Europe that have few if any of these things (especially the , and homes in the US that have some if not all, so whoever did the video? Is as ignorant as anyone in America is alleged to be about other cultures/places. Sign me an American who .... good grief.... apparently lives in the TTer's elite European world if these things make one European!
this is so stupid. everything here is in america, except i have an electric kettle. I would never microwave a cup of liquid. thats begging for a hot liquid explosion
Ok I'm a European living in the US. Lots of stereotypes obviously. I would say, despite the reusable grocery bags situation there are lots of improvements to be done when it comes to sustainability and it is true that most European countries have took a step further regarding this matter. The cardboard walls things is somewhat relevant to me as the 2 apartments I lived in since I moved to LA are not well isolated and you that can almost understand your neighbors conversation. Of course, that's my experience. Doesn't mean I'll blame everything, I am overall happy to live here and appreciate lots of things that I didn't know before moving here.
Bro first go to america and at least look at 5 american houses. My house has about 90% of these. If I did the shiz to Europe you guys will be losing your freaking mind, so come on and chill and the shoes was embarrassing. Don't even get me started with the paper towels, my family uses regular towels all the time and lastly, the removable shower head SUCKS. I have one of them it just me pointing it to where im already wet. I don't have some secret dark area on my body. If one side of my body isn't wet I do something where I turn around. Its simple and easy. So next time check your facts.
“but is it standard????” yes it is. this is quite standard. i just don’t get why everyone feels the need to go “americans bad” like every other country, we have some sucky people, but it’s not the majority for gods sake.
Born and raised in Europe, lived there for 27 years, have lived in US since 1994, I DO microwave water to make tea... very convenient.
I’m foreign born but I’ve lived in the US since I was 2. I’ve seen tons of Americans have these types of things... there are people don’t do some of these things but there are many who do. One thing I do agree is a big difference is most Americans wearing shoes indoors. In my 28 years here and having mainly American friends, I’ve only came across 2-3 people who don’t wear shoes indoors. Some people thought it was strange we removed our shoes. I guess because it’s not very common here. But everything else seems not that rare to have here in the US...
Okay so it's mainly the electric plug-in kettle comment that annoys me the most. Implying that the only alternative is using a microwave (I have never seen anyone use a microwave to boil water). Think for a moment what people used to use to boil water before there were microwaves or even electricity? Guess what, we still use them! It's called an "analog" kettle. You put it on the stove and turn the heat all the way up. No cord required.
Lol i have never seen any of these stuff before- I want a cheese slicer please!
You've never seen reusable bags and foyers? Where do you live?
Load More Replies...I didnt understand this article, but what was she say. I thought the things mentioned were quite American, even I am not from there and these household conveniences are not uncommon! In all of Europe and even other parts of the world. I can see how these can be taken for granted, but I didn't think the shoes is relatable because I am sure everybody has a pair of house-slippers or shoes? 🤔 also the microwave for water boil didnt make sense, because most has kettle then use of microwave is just for reheating something.
My husband has 4 pairs of house slippers. Literally. 4 pairs. Depending on what he is doing.
Load More Replies...I have literally all of these except for an entrance hallway, (why do you need one of those?) and unrefrigerated eggs (natural coatings removed in America for some reason). This stuff has been in almost every home I have lived in or visited in America. Also, microwaves aren't some horrible thing, they're useful
Plastic grocery bags are actually more environmentally friendly, assuming you reuse it for other purposes. Because otherwise you end up buying plastic bags to line trash cans, pick up dog poop, etc.
There's plenty of terrace houses in the UK where you enter through the front door into the lounge - but from American TV, films etc. I didn't think this was a thing except maybe in tiny apartments?
I will say that I (rather unfortunately) live in the U.S. and do/have most of these things...
What a total moron... reusable bags? Really guess you never seen CLOTH TOTE BAGS in America? I'm guessing you eat a lot of eggs quickly or get them directly from a farm because if they are store brought then the "EGG BLOOM" has been removed and you really might want to refrigerate them or get sick. Guess a "CLOTH DISH TOWEL" Isn't a thing in America? Where exactly is the radioactive material in a microwave since it uses "MICROWAVES" to heat food? Houses are made of cardboard? Really guess all that wood, concrete, and bricks I see at construction sites in housing developments are for show... what a totally clueless moron she is to even think she's funny let alone attempts to bash an entire country with such little knowledge.
Did nothing for me except to show that the stereotype of the typical European as being arrogant and ignorant of the U.S. isn't, in fact, a stereotype. They really are arrogant and ignorant. Maybe it's a holdover from the arrogance of colonialism all of them engaged in and haven't fully liberated themselves from.
I was married to a man from England, got married there and have been there. Here's some things you guys don't have...ice cubes!!!!! Its like why?? My mother in law never rinsed the dish soap off the dishes, right from soapy water to dish drainer. Washing machines that I saw to literally an hour to wash. By the time my clothes came out, there was no more color left. I'm sure there's more, not silly ones like not taking your shoes off. It is rude to compare and be a jerky about it. Thats the way i took it anyway. We have a saying in AMERICA "If you don't have anything nice to say,...say nothing at all"
Guess they don't have earthquakes in Europe. In California a brick house would come down or at least crack at an average size tremor.
OP is smug about the reusable shopping bags, but it's been demonstrated that the environmental impact of creating one cotton bag is equivalent to the energy used to create 20k throw-away bags? What's a self-righteousness girl to do?! Don't know, cry probably. But I reuse packaging from elsewhere and my rucksack on market day
You were downvoted for telling the truth. The world is a strange place. 2018 study from the Danish Environmental Protection Agency - relevant info on pages 17-18. https://www2.mst.dk/Udgiv/publications/2018/02/978-87-93614-73-4.pdf
Load More Replies...Apparently something else that is different in America is that we clean our showers.
It's a darker grout, made darker by water and some may also have come out, that isn't dirt. The loo photo shows the same grout. How can some people not know about coloured grout?
Load More Replies...Nope. That’s just a stupid stereotype. Most Americans do indeed have a kettle.
Load More Replies...Guys, it's a joke. Yes, you may have this but not everyone in America does, while in Europe this is more standard. Calm down, please :)
BP post: "These common Europe things are weird to Americans" Comments: "Haha true" BP post: "These common things in Europe are weird in America" Comments: "I am offended"
I am from America but ALL THOSE EUROPEAN(i spelled it wrong sorry!) THINGS MAKE SENSE IN MY HOUSE!!!! My family is Indian so we have been influenced by the culture of the Europeans. I never understand why Americans wear shoes in the house..
No, we don't. Those of us who drink tea use an electric kettle or a regular kettle and the rest of us probably use a coffee maker. This is all entertaining and funny but I can assure you almost all things she mentioned are not out of the ordinary in America. I do wear houseshoes inside the house but thankfully I have no carpet so it's easy to clean.
Load More Replies...Ahhh yes, being small minded and rude then saying "what? It's a joke!". So hilarious. Pretty sure making weird generalizations in order to insult other cultures is considered a bad thing nowadays
Load More Replies...Because it's cheaper. Not everyone can spend that much money.
Load More Replies...my family has reusable shopping bags and towels. a lot of people have the bags though
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