Not a single person I’ve ever met in Managua would recommend anyone live there. “It’s dangerous” “even in a condominium, someone will rob you” Nice to see some good content
Yo vivo en managua ,viajo al lugar al que haces referencia todos los días a mi trabajo todo el municipio y sus condominios son mi lugar al q salgo a vender, tengo 6 años de hacerlo y asta el momento nada me a pasado....aquí todo a cambiado.hay más patrullaje .....no t niego q puede pasarme o pasarle algo a alguien quizá podría ser......pero ya no es como antes....además en todo lugar del mundo podría haber peligro....si me preguntaran a mi si es posible vivir allí.diria q si por q es más seguro ahora...además mi jefe vive allí.y vive tranquilo
Súper interesting to see a plaza over there please show more of that if you are allowed to. Also, I’ve been checking your channel over and over to see if you’ve uploaded the live news episode. I want to see it. Hurry up jk LOL!!!! Congrats on your channel !
Congratulations Scott!! It takes a lot of guts to sit in front of a camera and communicate in a different language. I know what I'm talking about. I'm argentinian and moved to Canada 30 years ago. Your spanish is coming along very well. My husband and I, would love to retire in Nicaragua. We'll be there in September to get to know that beautiful country. Un gran saludo desde Niagara Falls, Canada!!
Carls jr has opened in leon.its next to tiptop old carnivore pizza rest.had dinner there 2 nite.your always asking to buy you a coffee,you can buy me a carls jr.😊
That mall nonsense really hit home ma man! Ive been struggling with it for years as well with my channel... my technique is to hold the camera as if im not using it to walk around and talking into the camera seldomly when there's no security nearby hahahha smh 🤦
LOL, well likely you are North American. I speak with a lot of Mexican, Guatemalan and Spanish influence in my Spanish. I learned Mexican Spanish in high school, and I first lived in Spain and Panama where I practiced my spoken Spanish. And I do a ton of Duolingo, which is Guatemalan (Latin American neutral.) So I tend towards a slow, simple Spanish that has accents and lexicon familiar to most American taught Spanish speakers. But the host is Nicaraguan and speaks fast, complex, and with a very strong colonial accent and lexicon. Very few Americans ever get exposure to Nicaraguan spanish, which is quite different from nearly anywhere else. It's the oldest and most "colonial" of all Spanish dialects in the world.
@@dallasbarkman1261 i get your meaning. i'm not concerned per se. just disappointed as i think it's a lost opportunity for a country where people often awesome this stuff doesn't exist
Lots of places do all of those things better. And without the negative of all the expats. Granada is the highest cost city in the country. You get so much less for what you spend there. And while it's got some highlights, the negative of never being treated as anything but a tourist gets real old, real fast. by far the last city I'd want to live in in the country. It's where I lived first and we almost ruined Nicaragua for ourselves. Had to work hard to convince myself that not all Nicaragua was like Granada - expensive and "tourist facade." Those things make it so much less fun to live in. it's a cool city to visit. But it's like living in Venice or Orlando. Sounds cool... until you try it, then you realize what it is like being a permanent tourist.