An interesting fact is that Brazil is the country with the largest community of Japanese outside Japan, it's also the largest community of Italians outside Italy and is the country with the second largest community of Germans outside of Germany, São Paulo is the city with more Japanese outside of Japan, millions of Brazilians are of Japanese descent today, and São Paulo is also the city with the most Italian blood in the world, of the 12 million people who live in the city, 6 million are of Italian descent, this number is even larger than the entire population of Rome or Milan, 15% of the entire population of Brazil has an Italian ancestor in the family, more precisely 33 million Brazilians, and about the Germans in Brazil, the South of Brazil has a strong influence German, more than 5 million Brazilians are descendants of Germans today and the second most spoken native language in Brazil is German!! The Korean community in Brazil is small, unfortunately, but there are some Brazilians of Korean descent, especially in São Paulo too 😂, all these people in the video, besides the Brazilian, could also be Brazilian, this is the enchanting biodiversity of Brazil!!🇧🇷
Cara já esta chato isso, toda vez que um japonês aparece/fala algo relacionado ao Brasil alguém tem que falar isso. Vai passar uma má impressão nossa para eles, como se fossemos crianças querendo atenção.
@@benjamim9138e mesmo assim a galera de fora não sabe e fica positivamente surpresa quando descobre. se você tem vergonha de ser de um país de imigrantes ou odeia japoneses, italianos e descendentes, não é da conta dos outros, queridão.
As a german, the german things weren't wrong, but I think especially the toilet one didn't really fit the question ^^' But another thing I can think of that you shouldn't do in germany is wishing somebody a happy birthday before their actual birthday. After is okay, just not before because it's considered bad luck.
The birthday wishing was also on my mind, cause it is a very German thing that I have not heard of in other countries so far, but I just learned it is similar in Italy, so never mind^^
The toilet rule isnt that strict in Germany thou. Some stores might want you to buy "one item", so you can just get a drink or something - thats usually in busier areas. But usually you can go into a restaurant or cafe and just kindly ask the waiter there if you can use the toilet. I think only once or twice in my life they wanted me to buy something for it.
It depends on where you are in Germany, if you're in a city, it's more likely that they enforce the buy stuff rule. If it's in the more rural regions, they might allow you to use their facilities for free. It's the same here in Sweden. Although it's very unlikely at all that you can use the facilities at restaurants and cafés for free even in rural areas. It's €2 to use the toilets at my local train station. And as someone who used to clean those toilets, I would say €2 is not enough, had it been €100 I'd be fine with it, because those toilets despite me cleaning them 3 times per day, never looked decent.
I´m from south germany and i almost never had to pay in restaurants you just kindly ask them, but its true that in high traffic areas its like @felitastic stated they are more strict. But normaly if u insist with common sense they let u go. Most people are no Monsters :D
@@arres7158 I am even more southern. So southern, I am from austria but since we are kinda similar anyway.. If I have to pee in vienna (Biggest and the only real city actually in the whole country.) but also when I was in other cities or villages or whereever, I just go into a café, restaurant, hotel, gas station and kindly ask if I may use their toilet. "Greet god (Good day). May I please use your toilet?" (Grüß Gott. Dürft ich bitte Ihr WC benutzen? - Very polite. May and please.) I usually leave the toilet cleaner than it was before anyway so that's kinda how I pay. :'D Never got asked to buy anything. Never got declined a toilet. Would be quite rude to decline that actually. In my work place (No café, no hotel, no restaurant, but a store. We sell food for pets. :D) we let customers and even non customers use our toilet if they ask. Why wouldn't we? I am not sure but I think access to sanitary facilities is a human right. 🤔 (I googled. It IS a human right. Declining someone access to sanitary facilities if no other viable facilities are near enough to be reasonable should therefore be considered a violation of human rights I think. Damn.)
The reason not to ask for a “ Latte” it’s because they are gonna give you a cup of milk 🥛, if you want a mixture of coffe and milk you have to ask for a “macchiato lungo” (for a medium size) or a “caffè macchiato” or “latte macchiato” (you can add “freddo” or “caldo” at the end of the phrase if you prefer it cold or hot)
"(you can add “freddo” or “caldo” at the end of the phrase if you prefer it cold or hot)" This is especially confusing as a German since "Cold" means "Kalt" in German so "Caldo" could be tempting to get cold milk
I was wondering if latte macchiato would be ok since it's the longer version for latte in germany or if the germans made something up to make it sound more italian/delicious😂
Essa japonesa é extremamente fofa mano, gostei muito dela kkk A brasileira tá representando como sempre, gostei do que ela falou sobre Samba principalmente
@@RoBeTauMcaraca eu não sabia que ela era idol kkkkkkk Pesquisei aqui depois de ler teu comentário e já tinha ouvido falar do grupo mas vou dar uma olhada boa nos vídeos delas agora ✌
Here are some more things you shouldn't do in Germany: In Germany you shouldn't call sandwich bread "brot (bread)", we call it "toast". We take great pride in our bread as we have thousands (not exagerrating) of different types of bread so to call sandwich bread "bread" seems a little insulting. Fun fact: when you put toast in the toaster we call it "getoastetes toast (toasted toast)" Germans value their time so we consider it rude when people show up late. One time I got shouted at by my German elementary school teacher for being 2-5 minutes late to school (school starts around 7am) I feel like this one isn't as strict but if you cross the traffic light when it's red as a pedestrian, people will give you a look since we generally don't cross it when red We also take recycling and littering quite serious so if someone sees you not recycle properly or litter then they may approach you and tell you to correct your mistake. There's even a stereotype that some neighbours are so strict, they will patrol whether or not their neighbours are recycling properly and they won't be afraid to call you out
same here in italy for bread: toast, sandwich or most commonly pancarrè? sure, but call that type of bread pane and people will think you have the shittiest taste in the world. (not saying that sandwiches are bad, just that they're not considered bread by our standards) can't say the same of being late though, it's obviously frowned upon but such a small amount of lateness will be fine, and when with friends, often people assume you're gonna be late of at least 15 minutes.
@@esamazing809 i just checked my timetable from my old school and school starts at 7.30am so I'm not sure if they changed it or if i misremembered since it's been a while but yeah either way i think it's way too early for young children
Juri is THE first japanese that I saw saying it's bad manners doing noise when eating noodles, soba, etc! Normally, every Japanese says it's the opposite...that you should make noise eating those foods! Maybe she's from some part of Japan that this is considered a bad manners or maybe her family rules?! Also, she said that making noise is only in anime, not in real life... but actually everywhere you go Japanese tend to make noise while eating ! I'm living here for about 10 years, and I see it often, and nobody seems to get annoyed about the sound!
I’ve not been to Japan yet but I’ll visit Japan for 2 months next month, and this also confused me. Because everywhere where I’ve looked people said it’s totally normal to make noises while eating. I’ll be sure to look around before I eat something in Japan, just so I won’t stick out.
Noodles are the exceptions for making noise in general. But yeah, it could be a family thing. My mom would not let us make noise while eating food, even noodles.
Also in Italy, if the waiter guides you to a particular seat and you seat elsewhere is rude. If you dont like the seat you can ask to change to another seat
In Italy also don't ask for alfredo *food* like "Pasta Alfredo", because only in big cities for turists you'll find it. That's due to the fact that it is an american thing
wrong myth, what they call Alfredo it's a kind of pasta made in Rome in a specific restaurant named Da Alfredo (Alfredo's) and the dish name is "Fettucine Alfredo", it's very specific dish, but for some reason they think everything with Alfredo in its name means italian, and everything they make thinking about Alfredo is completely wrong, infact they add to the dish things that have nothing to deal with the dish itself!
In japan it's okay to make noise when slurping noodles. I think over 90% of japanese people do this. It may not have been okay at Juri's house but generally it's okay. But most of japanese people dislike eating food with their mouths open so they make sounds when they slurping noodles but they don't when chewing them.
Yea, that was weird for her to say that. You watch any YT video with japanese people eating noodles and they're 100% slurping away. Maybe she comes from a wealthy family?
After watching this content, manifesting Rocket Punch to be able to visit Germany, Italy & Europe in general, and also Brazil & other South America countries. For music festival or tour would be great 👍🏽.
A thing that went unnoticed: the Italian guy was pointing upwards when they were trying to get Germany right, because Germany is north of Italy on a map, genius hint😂
Juri and Yeonhee are so beautiful and sweet, I love them a lot! I can't wait to see my girls in Brazil someday 😍 tysm Awesome World and the guests for receiving and talking with them so warmly, especially Kaylee for showing our culture to them! 💝
I‘m German and and if you visit Germany on a Sunday, you even have to be quiet, so no loud parties etc.. Because your neighbors could report you for disturbing the peace. (here’s a little article abt it „A fine of up to 5,000 euros may be imposed for a violation of the nighttime rest period.“) Sunday is really for recreation and was meant to go to church etc. back then.
It’s like in the Bible…the Sunday is to rest after working the whole week. Even doctors aren’t opened on sunday, so if you have a problem, you either have to wait until Monday or go to the hospital.
In Brazil we say that to say goodbye, but the spelling changed to “tchau” for me it seems like a mixture of the Italian “Ciao” with the German “Tschüss”
@@MaxTargin0 Ciao and Tchau is the same word. You use it because of the Italian immigration in Brazil where there are many descendants of Italians from the region of Veneto (the region of Venice) where the word comes from. Ciao comes from the Veneto word sciavo which means slave. So when people were using it they were basically saying I am your slave. You just write it differently because the « ch « sound is written differently in Italian and Portuguese. Tschüss comes from the French word adieu.
The misunderstanding for "Latte" is probably derived from the foreign abbreviation of "Caffellatte" (i.e. "Coffee-milk") that is practically another way to say cappuccino.
Caffelatte and Cappuccino are actually not exact the same. In Caffelatte milk is not whipped so it doesn’t have the creaminess of cappuccino. They are not use interchangeably in Italian.
@@marty8895 Surely caffellatte, then shortened in latte, was commercialized in USA with that name before cappuccino spread over the country. That's the misunderstanding I guess.
@@pile333 I wasn’t arguing about that. I believe you that caffelatte came before in the USA than cappuccino. I just pointed out that cappuccino and Caffelatte are not the same thing as you stated in your comment. If you ask for a Caffelatte they don’t give you a cappuccino. Two different drinks even though they both have the same ingredients but prepared in two different ways. The miss understanding is that in the USA and everywhere in the world a Latte is coffee + milk but in Italy nobody calls a Caffelatte just Latte because it just means milk. If you want a Latte in Italy you have to say the full word “Caffelatte” or even better order a latte macchiato.
Café con leche or literally coffee with milk in Mexico, usually the same as in Spain (largo or long, corto or short, depending on the proportion) but as Italian coffee becomes more popular via the US if you order using the spanish words you'll receive a long stare from the waitress.
In Brazil, this issue of free bathrooms depends on the establishment and the moment. If there is a party happening nearby, for example, many establishments that normally even let you use the Bathrooms start charging fees, either you consume something or pay directly. I buy a candy 😂
I was very surprised she said that, too. When I was learning Japanese (in the 80s and 90s), one of the things we were told was that it's normal in Japan to make noises when eating (especially ramen, as you say) and that it might even be considered impolite if you don't, because people might think you don't like the food. I also experienced this when I visited Japan. The slurping sounds (which would be considered very rude and unmannerly in Germany) in a ramen restaurant created an interesting soundscape! I wonder if this is something that has changed recently.
It is neither milk nor coffee. The problem is when these two foods are ingested together that chemically everything becomes difficult to digest. In fact, even in the morning, as an Italian, I don't recommend the cappuccino ❤
If anyone seen “Produce 48” juri and the Japanese had culture shock in Korea. Back then she didn’t speak Korea but she was popular among korean audience, coming close to becoming a member of izone. Now she seemed to be very familiar and fluent with korean.
"you can have parties on sunday, there's no law" girl are you really german? 😂 its literally the law and you can call the police on people who are loud on sundays! even though you usually just go to the neighbors and ask them to be more quiet
10:07 No, that's wrong, on Sundays restaurants are open and so are museums and other places where you can spend your time and the convenience stores she is talking about are known as "Kiosk" or Späti" (in Berlin) and sell not just alcohol but chips / crisps, soda and other stuff and of course gas stations aren't closed either.
Eu acho esse tipo de comentário de uma vergonha alheia enorme, um mico se os estrangeiros ver isso, é de uma arrogância ridícula, pq quem mais fala e elogia os brs são os próprios, se eu fosse de outro país reviraria os olhos. Não se diminui os outros, ponto.
@@nataliearaujo3095 kkkkkkkkkkkk. Quando eu vejo os comentários dos brasileiros na sessão de comentários, parecem crianças falando besteira na frente de estranhos e as mães falando: "Não fale assim, vai me deixar com vergonha". HAHAHAHAHAH!
Not really, spaghetti bolognese is a classic italian dish but we don’t call it that way, if that is what you want to order at a restaurant you need to say you want “pasta al ragù”
it exists & its a very authentic italian dish, but its called spaghetti/pasta “al ragú” , ragú is the name of the meat sauce that u call Bolognese. Ig the reason is, bc another dish called “Lasagne alla Bolognese” that also contains ragú but they are not the same dish & Bolognese is an adjective that indicates from which city the dish “Lasagne alla Bolognese” comes from. Btw we eat pasta al ragú a lot here in italy, i ate it today at lunch
Teensy little correction: most public bathrooms cost 70 cents in Germany. For that they are usually very clean. Okay, maybe not as clean as I imagine them to be in Japan. But still very clean. The most you will see these at Sanifair along the German Autobahn, the interstate system of roads. Usually you also receive a voucher for 50 cents that can be used for anything you buy at the reststop.
That's not true. Yes, the Sanifair toilets do cost 70 cents, but most public toilets in cities still cost 50 cents or 1€. You rarely see any bathrooms with 70 cents.
This was really fun and very informative. Thank you for having Juri and Yeonhee. 💜 Hope to see them here again in the futre. 💜 0:26, 8:26 Haha. Juri's reaction is so cute. 0:51 Juri is good at this. xD 1:08 She really is. 💖 2:42, 5:39, 15:06 Yeonhee is so cute. 2:59 Where's Dahyun when you need her? 3:15 Wait. Juri is really good at this! 😮 12:02 Juri is so cute. 13:19 She's so pretty. 13:57 Oh no. 😅
The Sundays in Germany are not different from the Sundays in pretty much every village, town or mid size city here in Portugal. The only things that are open are the restaurants (but not all), the cafés (but not all), the supermarkets, the pharmacy that's on duty during the weekend (there's always one open) and the shopping centres (if they exist), everything else is closed. Construction work is also non-existent on Sundays AND Saturdays.
for the construction work, I don't know if she meant businesses which are closed on Sundays anyways, but even with your own house/garden it is often frowned upon in Germany to do noisy work on Sunday, like hammering, vacuuming even, lawn-mowing, using chainsaws or loud machines... The neighbours can be very judgy about that and if you host a too loud of a party they can call the cops on you for "noise harassment" (Lärmbelästigung) or "disrupting the peace" (Ruhestörung)
Now that I think about it, it's so nice that the pharmacies agree to always have at least one always open, it could lead to some serious emergencies if they all closed, that's really nice
@@FatShork - In the cities or towns that have multiple pharmacies there is a monthly schedule indicating which one is open, during the night on week days, during the weekends and on official holidays.
It is in a few states of Germany possible to buy groceries on Sundays. Examples : "verkaufsoffene Sonntage" (Open Sundays) at city festivities. In Schleswig-Holstein (the northernmost state of Germany) is a regulation that supermarkets (groceries stores) are open on Sundays from 11 am to 5 pm in selected holiday regions from Easter to October. In some federal states , supermarkets at airports or railway stations are allowed to be open all year round. Yes restaurants has open at weekends, but the most of them have a closed day from Monday to Friday.
Pelo que vi em alguns vídeos dela no tik tok ela foi com a família bem nova para Coreia, voltaram para o Brasil mas ela não quis ficar aqui por muito tempo e retornou.
the changing in language from english to korean i love it also i moved out from brasil to norway and ive been so shocked by how things works here like theres a day specially for taco and we only get our grades in january and people use ketchup for their sandwich not mayonaisse or butter. Also the same thing in korea no shoes inside the house because of the snow and people usually take care of farms and stuff so it gets shitty and norwegians likes keeping things clean. I also was very shocked how my friends go out at 7pm and come back at like 9pm or midnight.
In Poland we used to have open shops on Sunday, but now, almost all shops are closed. There are open only some small shops like ,,Żabka" or restaurants and etc. And also everything can be opened on Sunday when there is the last Sunday before holiday like Christmas or before 1-th September (because of children's which may need sth for the first day at school) Also, In Poland you also have to pay for the toilets, but it is not that bad as in Germany I think. In restaurants you have to buy sth, it's true and many public toilets aren't free, but sometimes you can find free toi toi's (portable toilets?) (rarely, but they exist) and also at the gas stations and at the shopping malles are free. When I was in Germany, I was surprised, because even in the gas station you had to pay for going to the toilet.
its interesting how many people say its not free to use a public restroom in germany. i have only seen that once and even then i was able to just walk past the guy who was sitting next to the "2€" sign. i live in the west, so maybe its different in other parts of germany.
Same for me. I also live in the west and we have even free bathrooms in our city, so with no person sittin in front of the toilettes. The only time, I had to pay was the shopping house of Karststadt.
if Rocket Punch ever goes make a show in Brazil, Im totally: 1- traveling despite every thing, Id go by swimming if need be 2- Id teach a lot of bad words to Juri rofl 2- Id take Yeonhee to eat with me at Rancho da Pamonha. lol
I had to laugh so hard about the Italian. He had that chill vibe that is so typical for Italians. But when he was asked about the cheese on fish thing, his startled reaction was also so typical for Italians and their seriousness about food. Loved it! Also, i must be a secret Italian i guess. No coffee after 2pm. And my answer for why you don’t pair cheese and fsh was exactly his. It‘s two strong flavors. No need to combine them, enjoy each of them in their own way.
I agree with the cheese thing, it doesn't need to go on everything. Kutos to you if you like to put it on everything but I think it's a flavor profile that masks everything else and isn't necessary. I usually opt into seasonings and salsas before adding in other strong single profile ingredients. It's really cool to see their reactions to everyone else's culture
As a German I gotta say I rarely experienced restrooms that aren't free, apart from like "Raststättentoilletten" (Restrooms in the middle of nowhere on the autobahn), most are completely free, though some have the cleaning personnel sitting outside kind of expecting tips lol