@@chrissy9711 I understand he's 2nd generation American. But not knowing where your immigrant parents are from, especially when you visited their hometown????
In my life I've met so many asian Edwards. 2 Indonesian, 6 Filipinos, 4 Chinese and 3 Singaporean. ALL EDWARDS. Dustin, let me smack you for all the asian Edwards
Because Mexicans are technically Asian. Their is no such thing as a Mexican race its a culture. The Native Americans crossed the Bering Strait from East Asia. The Indigenous Mexicans are of Native Americans descent.
the mole did a fantastic job tbh. kept quiet to not incriminate himself for the most part but not too quiet to draw suspicion. if the game went on longer they may have caught on but for how it went he played it great
Honestly you winning was a bummer, as an asian, it felt unfair because you barely spoke. Well congrats though for winning edit : aka he wasnt entertaining enough to deserve that win
One of the best moles on Jubilee up to now, you came so well prepared and was undetected throughout the game!! Muy respetuoso y bien hablado, te felicito, saludos desde Uruguay!!
they're so wrong about eliminating justin first. it's really common (like 90 or 95% estimate) for Filipinos to have a white-sounding/western first name and a spanish last name! this is probably because we were colonized by the USA and Spain in the past.
They picked the most westernized person in the mix, but I think the fact he was Floridian thru everyone off. He wasn’t Californian/Tex/Hawaiian where they have allot of pinoys. So he didn’t seem to be as accustomed to any of the food/language etc
What does that mean ? I am from Brazil and both my parents and grand parents and great grandparents are from different countries? What are my roots? I am just happy with being Brazilian the past should stay in the past , where mixed people stand? Belonging nowhere?
@@Novafan you’re forgetting that with the exception of a few Latin American countries, all of them speak perfect Spanish. They can easily detect someone with the slightest accent.
The reason Justin has a Spanish sounding name is because they were colonized by the Spainards. They also have some of the same cultural backgrounds because of the influence.
I remember this filipino girl posted her debut on ticktock people in her comments section was like her gown is a quinceañera dress people had to tell them they had the some of the same culture with a debut & quinceañera
The token South Asian-ness did you in with nobody else knowing that Trisha is a Hindu name as well. I wish Jubilee included more South Asians for this very reason.
4:51 When George said that not many people know about Indonesia even though it's the 4th most populous country in the world, as an Indonesian I AGREE because the only thing anyone knows about Indonesia is Indomie, Rich Brian, Niki and Bali (some people don't even know that Bali is in Indonesia and think it's a country on its own 😭) Thank you George for repping Indos!! 🙏🙏
They did not need to blindfold everyone, the Mexican guy could pass for Indonesian, Singaporean, Cambodian, Vietnamese, Lao, Burma, Bhutia, Tibetan, Nepali, Filipino, Thai, or Malay! He could've said that his parents were from one of those countries but he immigrated to Japan as a child before coming to the US.
Trisha in Sanskrit means "Power of Three Seas." Its etymology is rooted in Sanskrit. However, given that Sanskrit is an Indo-European language, it's plausible that Trisha has European (Latin) origins as well. The root "TRI," meaning "three," is common in Sanskrit and other European languages. For instance, "TRIdent" in English and "TRIshul" in Sanskrit both refer to a three-pronged spear. Here is another name that sounds the same in Sanskrit and European languages NEEL (Sanskrit) and NEIL (European)
@@Ceerads it's fascinating to consider the etymology of the name Trisha. In Latin, Trisha might be a diminutive form of Patricia. However, in Sanskrit, Trisha (spelled as Trsa in the Devanagari script) has a different origin. In Sanskrit, the name sounds like "Trisa," but over time, it has evolved into "Trisha." The "r" in Sanskrit as an abugida, has an E vowel connection, but written with an I. Whether this similarity between the Latin and Sanskrit versions is etymologically connected or merely a coincidence remains an intriguing question.
@@incubusk8r Thank you. Very interesting. I know almost nothing about the origin of most words, especially non-English and non-Romance-language words. I am interested in words’ etymology. I like it when seemingly very different languages may have the same or connected roots. Language is all really amazing.
As a Japanese I can 100% say I’d be fooled by Adan, his voice when he’s pretending to be Japanese sounds soooo much like a Japanese guy speaking English
I think a Hispanic Odd One Out would be very difficult to guess the mole. But that’s if, and only if, every participant is from a different Hispanic country. Someone from Dominican Republic barely knows anything about someone from Chile or Uruguay.
@@1789Henrique the many definitions make it a bit confusing, but Brazilians are not Hispanic because their culture and/or language doesn’t have roots in Spain. Though they could be considered Latino, but that depends on how you define Latino. Some use it interchangeably with Hispanic, and on the other extreme some say it’s any nation that speaks a Romance language. Which would include France, Romania, Brazil, etc. Some people even bring race into the mix, which adds to the complexity. Like what are Haitians? Also some people in South America only identify with their pre-Columbus/pre-colonial identities.
True but the middle east isn't just in asia meaning that the west asian that goes on here either identifies as westasian or middle eastern or both as they techniqually are both and i know a couple of west asians that consider themselves middle eastern instead so it truly depends who u ask
@@user-jj2ox9mk2lI don't consider myself as middle-eastern tbh. I'm of turkish origin and I prefer eurasian and west-asian. Since it's more accurate too. I'm not of arab or jewish origin (both are semitic) and middle-east is mostly arabs (semites) so it doesn't make sense to call myself middle-eastern. Just my few cents about this complex issue~
@17:00 The game should be that the less people you remove from the box the more money in the coffers and as you kick ppl out the money you win decreases by a significant amount per person removed. This would make it more interesting for obvious reasons.
They do that. Idk if they always announce it, but lots of episodes they say from a certain point on, if you eliminate another wrong person, the prize money decreases
Not surprised they voted off the Filipino and Indian Asians first. I feel like we’re easily stereotyped and other Asian people don’t think we’re actually “Asian” enough :/ not saying they’re all like that but it happens.
East Asian Americans are notorious for peddling this trope. Not all but it's always them that claim East Asians are only Asians. It's such an American issue.
13:47 as a malayali born in the US, there aren’t many of us here and most americans don’t know we exist so I always get a little excited when I hear someone else speaking malayalam lol.
Thank you for doing another one. The last asian vs non Asian one, and the mole who happens to be Mexican too, did a horrible job 😅 And it’s great they included different background
South Asian and East Asian have virtually no similarities. That'd be like saying a group of Americans should include someone from New York and somebody from Uruguay. Just because they have the same location name in them doesn't mean they're in any way comparable apart from that
@@CyranoForever101 I dont think this "debate" will ever end because yes, South Asians are Asians geographically speaking but colloquially they are not referred to as 'Asian'. I wish there were a better term to encompass all people of Asia for this reason. And to be fair to south asians, there are parts of India that include "asian looking" people, not to mention culturally, especially through religion there are similarities because of cultural diffusion. I do wish that Jubilee actually fully commits to getting central and west asians though, if thats even possible.
@@CyranoForever101 But a group of Americans also do not have that much similarities with each other. China and India are one heck of a diverse country. You will find a Chinese looking guy(I don't mean to be racist) in North-East of India while a guy who is darker than Black Americans in South of India(I again don't mean to be racist).
@CyranoForever101 ok but south east asians and east asians also dont have that much in common then lol, other then they fact that they have some similar facial features
@@epicn the term you are looking for is, you guessed it, "Asian." "Asian" doesn't mean anything other than people who live on the continent. It is not an anthropological category afaik (correct me if Im wrong). So the problem would not be finding a new term to encompass such a diverse group of people. The problem is Americans changing their perception on the term "Asian." I do get your point though. It's like how Europeans get their own "continent" just coz they are 'different' from the rest of Asia yet other regions of Asia are clumped together despite being made of different people.