Gigi Pizzuto When someone moves to a new area it does take time for them to assimilate. By that same regard it should also be the responsibility of his neighbors to show him how.
Had that moonshine lemonade but packed a punch. Whoa! Grew up with mostly southerners that came here for jobs and still use some of the terms and some still ask if I'm southern. My family was from Kentucky and my husband's N. Carolina. Y'all know that I picked up the twang a bit from them and say yall and eh like Canadians in the same sentence. If I hung out with other nationalities, it would be one weird accent. I tend to pick up accents easily without trying.
I have to say, the way the neighbors behaved, well that's not what I would call Southern Hospitality. Someone should have invited this poor man over gor some pie and sweet tea and explained to him what Southern BBQ is all about. He was trying to be neighborly, bless his heart.
@TheLovelyMissBeans Yes they should have explained all regional differences between Tennessee, NC, SC, Texas, and even that barbarian Alabama BBQ with white sauce, (shiver).
@mrgunn2726 yes, they should have. Even the white stuff. Because, while we have a lot of blessings in the south, we do have some harsh realities as well. We are not above sin. Some of us choose to atine for them by eating this God awful cause.
During the reenactment I was like "the wife looks a little... off. Did she get plastic surgery or something? Somethings wrong." Yall got the uncanny lookalike reenactors!!! Such a smart move! 🤣🤣🤣
In case y'all are wonderin, everything they show is legitimately what it is like to be born and raised in the South. Most stereotypes are true. I own multiple guns, I drive a truck, I smoke and grill meats on LUMP charcoal and wood, I have boots for formal occasions (black, full-quill ostrich), my Texas flag is above the American flag inside my house (because if Texas were to secede, I wouldn't be leaving which only proves where my loyalty lies), sweet tea, corn bread (no sugar), turnip greens, fried okra, mashed potatoes with brown giblet gravy, holding the door open for people often but always a lady, driving 15 over the speed limit. Can't think of anything else right now
@@MeadeSkeltonMusic I guess I might be slightly okay with that considering we wouldn't we classified as Northern either. You lump me in the same category as California and Washington, then we're gonna have a problem... If your state fought in the Confederate States of America, it's the south.
Haha, my mom would say something like that! I'm 36 and still can't even try it, it just looks weird to me. Not sure why.. I'm the proverbial black sheep of the family.
I used to LOVE watching Unsolved Mysteries, and this was a beautiful send-up. Ya'll even did the little VHS glitches! My husband and I were both laughing at this one--kudos to ya'll's video editing team, in addition to the cast. :)
UGH. I can't believe I missed that in proofreading. Today was a clumsy typing day for me, and I had small children calling for me as I was finishing up. T.T Thank you for catching that and correcting it. Don't take my Southern Card, please.
I'm from Baton Rouge, I wanted to see what it would be like from a Yankees point of view. The food is tasteless, snow is an everyday occurrence and gas costs $5.50 a gallon. This is no way to live.
I too made this mistake when I moved South over 20yrs ago. I learned a valuable lesson. Now I snicker when I hear my family referring to simple grilling-out as having a BBQ 😂
@Christine Taggart nope actually, my grandpa was a Portuguese immigrant. I was upset a year ago because of all the condescending people in these comments. We call what you call grilling out a barbeque and you don't need to state what you say as fact.
I'm 56 years old. I remember the first time that I went to the bbq house. The menu said ... chicken, pork , and beef.... In my innocent young 5 yr old voice, I said , " this ain't bbq where's the goat meat " ? Everyone in the restaurant erupted in laughter. Columbus, Ga. 1968.
I lived in Alabama, Tennessee and Mississippi for two years serving a mission for my Church. I remember getting home to Washington state and people would invite me for "bbq", it always ended in disappointment when I realized it was hamburgers and hot dogs. I relate to this 100%. If you've never lived in the South you just don't understand.
@Jessica B. words have meanings " grill " or " cookout " are acceptable terms for hamburger and hot dogs, but BBQ? that is like inviting a traditional italian family over for really good Italian food and taking them to the olive garden, or, and may Italy forgive me for saying this a *can* of chef boyarde spaghetti. that is just plain insulting.
Sir dudeness, in which Alabama ward(s) were you serving and when? Might have already met you! Non-LDS with a LDS spouse who served in England. "Two year mission" was a dead give away. ;-)
I'm from Alabama, lived in Alabama, Florida, Tennessee, Louisiana and Georgia. I live in Québec now, Barbecue up here is a rôtisserie chicken from Saint-Hubert, sauce is just some brown sauce. Trust me, it's insanity.
Honestly, if this was real I would consider his neighbours to be extremely rude and entitled. I know, I know. It is meant to be a joke but I just feel like it looks like bullying. And I'm not okay with that.
@Ben Adams-the funny thing was how a Pennsylvanian pronounced “y’all.” You have to listen carefully. Steve said it more like “U-all” two syllables rather than the way a Southerner would say it run together more like a single syllable with a diphthong vowel “Yahll”
When the kids were little one Christmas after all the 'damage' with wrapping; it was gathered up and thrown away. RIGHT about then someone said ... Where's the remote? lol It could not be found. Since then we put the remote in a separate spot so it DOESN'T get thrown away.
Run for the hills if the potato salad has cranberries/ almonds. It was NOT APPROVED by a grandmother or any other cookout veteran. If there is unbaked mac and cheese and no charcoal grills in sight, these are also good warning factors. Keep on the lookout, we need barbecue to maintain it's high standard of excellence.
If your potato salad lacks bacon and vinegar, it is not wisconsin approved. Lol who tf puts nuts in potatoe salad? Pallmetto hearts are one thing, but nuts? Nuts belong in a bowl, or in ice cream.
@@scottyj6226 I'll do you one worse. Some people put raisins in their potato salad. And bacon in potato salad? How come I've never heard of that, and how do I get some?
Amen! I might put cranberries and almonds in a chicken salad for myself, more likely to just go all Waldorf salad and skip the cranberries, but they have no business in a potato salad whatsoever. Those kind of folks are watching too many stupid cooking shows. Baked mac & cheese is the only kind that’s any good. If it ain’t baked, it ain’t finished.
I’m an old man but when I was a boy I overheard two New Yorkers talking. One asked the other if he had tasted BBQ before and said yes and described it to his friend as “roast beef with tomato sauce on it”.
Fantastic video like always! Those actors you got looked just like the actual people it took me a couple seconds to realize they weren't the real people! LOL
I love how they used their siblings for the recreation hahaha!! So hilarious and I didn't realise until someone mentioned it, just thought they looked a bit different. Justin sounds so similar to Adam.
The “yous guys” gets me every time 😂 I have a teacher from up north who says that all the time! The first time I heard her say it, I couldn’t believe anyone actually says that!
I’ve lived in Minnesota for over forty years. I don’t hear “youse guys” in the Twin Cities metro, but if you go up “nord” to rural “Minnesoota” you will hear it.
This is a spoof of a real crimes type of show where actors are used in the reenactment of the crime that happened so they can show the viewers. Therefore they used a different pair of actors dressed and looking similarly to the real Diana and Kevin to reenact that horrible day at the barbeque.
Excuse me. *...to reenact that horrible day at what some fools mistakenly call barbeque, thereby besmirching the name of barbeque with their malicious ignorance.
My first time to attend a New York "barbecue" caused major culture shock. It was all hot dogs and hamburgers. No one seemed to understand that it was a "cookout" and NOT a barbecue. NOT, I say, NOT!!
@Jessica B. Personally, I have no problem sampling different foods. I would not, however, call grits "oatmeal" or vice versa - so I continue to insist a cookout is not the same as a barbecue.
@Jessica B. Regardless of whether you are bothered, barbecuing, like grilling or smoking or broiling or poaching, is a method of cooking. It is not the same as merely cooking out. Doesn't matter if you do or do not like the finished product, either, it still is not the same. In the meantime, why not go ahead and call it a taffy-pull, even though no one will be cooking syrup for taffy and nobody is gonna pull it?
Amen its not BBQ unless theres ribs 1st off a bird 2nd the salw potato salad bakebeans grilled corncob then u get your lazy cousins to bring cornbread. 😎
First time I saw cornbread as a side at a BBQ joint I thought "WTF are they charging for cornbread when it comes with regular bread for free?" Then I realized it wasn't Jiffy mix. (The jalapenos were a bit of a surprise.)
@Jessica B. Bless your heart, but I think there's some hospitality in here remembering this is a parody and not necessarily real life. Hospitality is in offering to share what you got as-is; graciousness is in either accepting that or rejecting it humbly and nicely. They brought the beans- hospitable- but they ran off ungraciously as part of this being a parody. Now what would have happened in real life is that we'd of discussed this among ourselves and picked someone to be truly hospitable in going over to have 'a word of prayer' with the new neighbor, explaining that we'd simply expected something different so we were kind of shocked, but we'd have a hot dog with them anyway to show them we appreciated their hospitality. And they'd be cordially invited to attend our next barbecue. What we wouldn't let them see is our tossing the biggest part of out hot dogs over the fence or stuffing them in the lady's purse so we wouldn't have to eat the nasty things cause Southerners are nice like that- we ain't out to hurt anyone's feelings but if you're gonna live among us you're going to have to learn to be like us. And after they ate some real Barbeque then they'd understand, 'cause that and iced tea on a hot day is as close to Heaven as it gets and only Southerners can do those things right :)
I loled so hard at them putting together a puzzle at the beginning. Puzzles are part of a Southern's home decor. It's always in the quiet room with no tv or computer.
These videos are so well done: the concept, the writing, the acting, the photography. Many Hollywood movie studios and TV shows could learn lessons from these shorts.
This was fantastic 😂 I love every single one of y'alls videos!!! I literally watch every single one and I always show them to my family! You guys are amazing!!!
omg thank you ! i always hate it when someone mention BBQ and its just hot dogs and hamburgers . a BBq is ribs, kabobs, steak, chicken, aka food you dont throw in between bread.
This one made me laugh so hard. Being southern I relate to the emphasis placed on barbecue not being a verb. That was hilarious. Barbecue cooking contest are big down here. Memphis in May has the biggest one in the area. It’s almost a necessity to have a bib if it has enough sauce on it around here. Plenty of napkins are a must. Loved the video.
Around here, a barbecue means grilling up some hotdogs & maybe some burgers for the kids that haven't mastered peeling crawfish...or crawfish ain't in season.
Huh. I am trying to figure out why I have never heard of this channel before. Subbed. So funny that I literally laughed out loud. Rock on. Have a great day/night guys and gals.
I am now a subscriber to this channel. I was raised in the south and although I've been in Michigan for 12 years I still consider Tennessee my home. These videos are the next best thing! So hilarious and accurate at the same time!!!!!!!!!
our local BBQ lady in my small town cooked hers in the yard, in a pit lined with big hot rocks (fired for a couple of days before) Wood fire of course. and a big heavy tarp on top of the pig. Her restaura however looked like a good sneeze would bring it down. I grew up eating her whole hog BBQ and her amazing sauce and have never found any that can equal or exceed it. My uncle begged her for the sauce recipe but she refused to give it to anyone and took it to her grave. This uncle came armed with 2 litre bottles to take it back to Oklahoma, hot and regular; we had to warn her to make extra when we knew he was coming to visit.
Don't know how to respond when people don't know the difference of bar-b-que and grilled. I want to scream sometimes. Hopefully this video yall did will help people see the difference