What do they think of Each other? Fact of Spanish Speaking Countries Today we wanted to see how they thought of each other! Hope you liked the video! 🇲🇽 @nataliafriass 🇨🇴 @kathycampo1 🇵🇦 @radharanilalita 🇪🇸 @andrea_ruizrodriguez
The Mexican girl speaks with a nice accent because she’s from the north. We in the north don’t speak the same from the last 5 southern states of Mexico with a slang that’s not proper to say to non-Mexicans( think on how the migrant farmers that come during a season then go back). A big reason on why the Mexicans from the north and south are different
She might be nervous because she’s new, also I have to say that people don’t know a lot about Panama and maybe the girl doesn’t speak too much. Espero que con el tiempo se abra mucho más y comente más cosas sobre Panamá, porque mi país no sólo es sol, playa, mamallena y patacón pisao y ella lo sabe. 😂😅😁 le deseo lo mejor, saludos desde Panamá 🇵🇦
@@enithcampbell507 Yo sigo impresionado con el acento de Lalita, tan parecido al Mexicano; ella dijo que fue por ver programas de México, pero realmente será ese el motivo??? :O
@@enriquesanchez2491 Tenlo por seguro. Mexico ha tenido mucha influencia en el resto de los países latinoamericanos. Hoy en día los latinos hablamos de manera más uniforme que aveces se me hace difícil distinguir los acentos.
@@donguadalucio1405 no, Lalita no tiene casi acento panameño, y tal vez el cantadito Mexicano le sale porque pasa tiempo con Mexicanos y se le ha pegado.
I’m Vietnamese and made a few Latino friends in college in the USA. I found out that Spanish speakers from Colombia and Venezuela speak really fast compared to those who are from Mexico and Central America. Mexican food is awesome, especially tacos al pastor, menudo, fajitas de camarones, coctel de camarones, mariscos al ajillo, tamales, gortitas, horchata drinks… Latino Americans are generally friendly and easy to talk with.
@Seran In origin, yes. Nevertheless, we Mexicans have our versions and adaptations. Let me remind you that several American ingredients and methods were integrated into Spanish cuisine, e.g. chocolate with churros. Furthermore, several of the most beloved dishes of that country have Roman or Middle Eastern origins, either in their preparation or ingredients. Don't you love for Mexicans to have our version of such foods? Then Spaniards should have stayed in their lands and never come to America!
@@xolotlmexihcah4671 yeah they should've stayed in their country instead of claiming it theirs and destroying the natives there but history teaches us that unfortunately humans never do that. And for the churro part the chocolate would be true but the pastry has it's own story and it probably isn't from Latin America. About the food we're actually more connected than many people would like to think of because many middle eastern dishes also exist in the balkans and the other way around.
@MinhNguyen-ff6xf, I respectfully disagree with you. I was raised with Colombian roots, and Spanish speakers from our country don't speak fast. Our accent is spoken more slowly. Spanish speakers from Venezuela, our eastern neighbor, their accent is not fast either, their accent is more musical just like Argentina. Just to give you my point of view.
The problem is that Panama is only famous by the canal, they don't export they culture, different from colombia, spain and mexico, everybody knows colombia for shakira, spain by history and mexico for his food, famous people and the novelas.
I think all of these four countries are pretty cool and have good food , people , culture , style and everything else , Panama i may know least , but seems great too
I'm Brazilian, and one fun thing is that usually people from tv use Spanish songs to represent our country, but this channel used brazillian samba in a talk with only Spanish speakers lol
I have a Brazilian friend and she's like, we don't go around in the supermarket samba-ing doing grocery shopping. hehehehe. it was a super funny visual people going around with the super tiny samba steps hehehehe,
@@umavozclamanodeserto4758 really? I mean, I guess I understand... there is a Mexican type of music here that almost nobody I know likes ("Banda" music). But I thought Samba was more liked in Brazil, or Axa?
@@alexmendez9792 La verdad, samba es muy clasico pero no es el genero musicale mas escuchado en Brasil. Estos son Funk and Sertanejo e abajo es Rap/Trap
It's funny because latin americans say spaniards are colder, just like "europeans are" (they say). But, then, in Europe people say "Yes, spaniards are warm, very friendly (even too much)...". The spaniards of Schrödinger.
It’s all relative. For example, people in other countries usually say that Americans are super friendly, but from the perspective of their neighbors down south, we Mexicans think they’re kinda cold, especially when it comes to facial expressions and hand gestures 😂
To miss Colombia, everyone I have met from spain were actually really open and very talkative, that is why Spain and Italy are my favorite European countries, all love ❤.
Depende de la región. En las ciudades grandes, especialmente en Madrid la gente vive muy estresada y a su mundo, y son mucho más cerrados y más bordes. En las ciudades más tranquilas, por contra, es más posible que te empiecen a hablar, incluso aunque parezcas muy ocupado.
I really enjoy when we have latin guests. They have a great humor, they are so talkative, friendly and they do have fun. Kudos to the panamenian girl 🇵🇦. We central american countries probably are the least known but, man, tiny countries with so many curiosities and nature!! Greetings from Costa Rica, Another central american country 🇨🇷 we love panamenians
Bueno no es como rivalidad en si, el canal es surcoreano, y también han mostrado las diferencia de los países anglosajones cómo Estados Unidos, Reino Unido, Canadá, Australia, etc
5:48 I think this is a misconception, Día de Muertos was originally not a "celebration of death" but a moment to remember, pay respect and even coexist with our dead ones...American film industry have changed the original meaning of the day even inside Mexico.
@@koiue.g8709 Yes, what I talk about Is that a lot of people now interpret the colorful and festive vibes of the Día de Muertos as if death for us Is a motive to party or that we don't suffer at all when a relative dies...some people even say that narcos are so violent because death Is part of the Mexican identity and Is not a sad thing to mexicans...I find this one disturbing.
I agree. Whenever non Mexicans talk about Dia de los Muertos, they exoticise us a lot. They think Mexicans attitudes on death is so different to them. Like we take it so casual, & like its not a tragedy & traumatic thing. In reality our attitude to death is almost exactly the same as any other people. And while our day of the dead came from our Indigenous people, many people around the world have similar days where they remember and honor loved ones that passed away.
Creo que llevaron recio a Andrea. Como es posible que solo conozcan la paella??? Y las croquetas y la tortilla española, y todos esos embutidos exquisitos que tienen allá como la butifarra, la morcilla, el jamón, los vinos, los aceites de oliva etc etc...
Estoy por creer eso también😂. Pero porqué escoger Panamá de tantos países que pudo inventar de dónde era? 🤔 Le faltaba alguien de Centroamérica para representar debe ser haha. Y ella quizás tendrá algún nexo con Panamá por algún familiar? No sé, estoy tratando de buscar algo lógico en todo esto 🙈🤣
I would love to hear them all speak more in Spanish, I think it’s cool to hear the difference in accents etc. but these videos are really entertaining!
@@eladbenm Probably because of the channel content. The people watching these videos likely to speak English or at least it's their second language or they just study for it. Maybe subtitles would help us to understand them, but I think some people, like me, just listening to it while doing other stuff.
no se si es mi percepción, pero yo casi no escucho que en Mexico usemos "acá" tanto como en otros países, pero creo que yo uso mas "aquí" vs "acá", se que significan lo mismo en muchas situaciones, y que da igual usarlas, pero casi siempre noto que alguien no es de "aquí" cuando dicen "acá", jejeje makes sense?
yo soy de Guadalajara, Jalisco. ¿tú dónde estás? claro que usamos "acá", pero para cosas específicas... como "ven para acá", pero no preguntamos "¿eres de acá?" o "¿qué hacen acá en el día de la independencia?" jejeje mis ejemplos bien de libro de texto@@Pikachu-ez1rm
@Javi Lopez loved Cabo ! been there twice ..good food, friendly people, awesome resorts. an all around great time if you wanna party and ride a jet ski or boat in the ocean !
Lalita, panamian girl is so cute 😄 Maybe cause i'm a north man and have lived on the north all my life, i have always liked women from southern countries - so funny, so cheerful, so smiling)
Pues los churros con chocolate ☕️ están triunfando en Corea del Sur 🇰🇷 porque la cantante coreana Jisoo los probó en una visita a Barcelona y ahora todos los surcoreanos los quieren probar también 😋😁
yo estaba super mega sorprendido cuando aprendí que los churros no eran de Mexico, son muy tradicionales aquí también. Si alguien quiere churros, lo que tiene que hacer es ir afuera de un templo y SEGURO encuentras a algún vendedor de churros. jejejeje, Arroz con Leche, de mis favoritos!
@@fuenrubio484 siii, el chocolate si :) es super raro ver que siendo algo de MX sean otros países mega famosos por sus chocolates como Suiza. Pero gracias a la persona que inventó los churros, me encantan :).
Pésimo comentario de la española diciendo que Colombia es todo acerca del polvo, ya sea blanco o café. Soy Mexicano y creo que ese comentario se lo podía haber reservado
All I know is that in Latin America, plantain territory starts from Honduras all the way to down to Ecuador, including the Latin Caribbean islands (Cuba, Haiti, Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico). In these regions, plantains are a staple, so almost every dish has it on the side, or incorporates plantains. Avocado also seems to be a staple throughout all of Latin America, except for the Southern Cone (maybe you'll find it in Chile and parts of tropical Argentina). Same with coffee. It grows in tropical countries, which most of Latin America is, except the Southern Cone. The Southern Cone, especially Argentina and Uruguay, have always been very different culinary-wise. While most of Latin America eats rice with beans, with some veggies like avocado and plantains, or a tomato, onion, cilantro and lime juice salsa with a bit of chili, on the side, Argentina and Uruguay prefer to eat bread and pasta, so wheat is their most consumed grain. In Mexico, Central America, and Northern South American countries (Colombia, Venezuela), they all seem to use a form of flatten circular disk dough like tortilla, usually made with either corn or wheat flour, as a staple to make dishes like tacos, burritos, enchiladas, chilaquiles, arepas, pupusas, baleadas. But we can all agree on is that corn, potatoes, and tomatoes are a staple native produce in all our cuisines, and everyone has their own version of chorizo and empanadas, which we inherited from Spain.
In Mexico, there's a saying: _"Sin maíz, no hay país"_ (without maize, there is no country). And fortunately, in the country, there is an active campaign to promote the healthy Milpa Diet, the Mesoamerican equivalent of the Mediterranean Diet. With oligarchs actively attempting to globalize the world, it's important to remember and preserve the autochthonous traditions.
@@xolotlmexihcah4671 Cool. I didn't know about the Milpa diet. But I always found traditional Mexican food to be healthy with its plethora of vegetables, especially love the combination of anything with lime, cilantro, and jalapeño. I think the issue right now is that globalization and industrialization is causing people to eat bad quality food. There is such a culture of eating quickly, so you can get back to work immediately, that people eat fast food out of convenience, since it is cheap, delicious, and quick. Literally, America is one of the few countries that has food deserts. I know Mexico has a higher consumption of Coke than even the US now, and that they are the country in Latin America with the highest obesity rate. Hopefully educating the public, and putting restrictions to these money-hungry franchises will promote healthy eating. Taking your time to eat quality meals is actually a very important thing for one's health, and I think that is missing these days.
@@lissandrafreljord7913no our food isn’t very much healthy when you think about it, I mean maybe it can be but we put salsa and limon on everything, we consume way too much sodium. The amount of Chile and extra spices we put on our food can wear out our appendix and they could burst. I’m only 20 and the way I have to watch what I eat is crazy. I started eating spicy foods at a young age and here I am now.
@@residentzero I feel like cumin is used throughout most of Hispanic America (don't know about Brazil, Haiti, etc.), as it was brought by Spain. The Spanish use cumin in their cuisine too. In my country, Argentina, it is common to use cumin in our empanadas. It is normally always complimentary to pimenton (paprika), but I tried it once without anything else on a Chinese lamb skewer, and that thing slaps. One of the best street foods I had. You actually get to enjoy the taste of the fatty meat and the quality of the cumin, without being drowned in other overpowering spices. Simplicity at its best.
Was eating burritos while watching this (homemade, with ground beef, corn, diced tomatoes, red and yellow bell peppers, mushrooms, with chili pepper and cumin). I got the gist of about half of what was said, and decided that the next step for me to get better at understanding Spanish is to chew more quietly.
It can't be that big of a surprise. There are more native Spanish speakers in North and South America combined than any other language, including English.
No puedo creer que Lalita mencionó la mama llena y dónde está el sancocho? Arroz con pollo? Aparte es un país muy cultural, muchas tradiciones por mencionar y también bailamos bien, así es que sí, de los 4 países no somos el que peor baila.
@@olychevalier5012 La verdad es que sí le falta saber más de la cultura panameña. Hice la tarea y descubrí que vive en Corea, la chica tiene 20 añitos, así es que asumo que no toda su vida la ha pasado acá en Panamá.
Síí, he estado todo el vídeo pensando "pero a esta muchacha le falta calle o no ha vivido en Panamá 😐". De hecho no suena casi nada a panameña. Supongo que sus padres son extranjeros tal vez; pero coincido con ambos, con que deben buscar a personas quizá más locales que conozcan bien a su país.
Exacto. Esa chica quizás de a milagro nació aquí o quizás uno o ambos de sus padres, porque dudo que ella creciera aquí o rodeada de nuestra cultura. Cuando habla español no suena a ningún acento conocido de Panamá y que decir de su poco conocimiento del país 🙈 Creo que solo dijo ser de aquí para participar 😅 Btw, imagínate Panamá es considerado de los países "bailadores" por su cultura caribeña. O sea, país donde nació el reggae en español y con uno de los máximo representante del mundo de la salsa. Esa chica no nos conoce ni nos ha representado bien, tristemente 😢 Tras que no somos muy conocidos internacionalmente, se perdió una gran oportunidad para una verdadera exposición y representación 🤦🏽♀️
Verdad....Lalita...desconoce completamente a nuestro Istmo ....ni su gente, ni su comida, ni mucho menos nuestra len gua y cultura.... será que visito Bocas del toro de vacaciones y. le dieron la oportunidad de representarnos...no sé!
Mexico : Food , Women , Men , Football , Novels , Tourism , Enthusiasm , Chocolate ( in particular 'cause was invented there ) , country with most spanish speakers , anyway , many things , but especially culture
I'm a little bit desappointed for Lalita cuz of the poor representation, i guess it is cuz is her first time, but she got a great GREAT GREAT HUGE point with the mamallena
I love these girls. Each one has a very unique personality and they compliment one another so well. But then I'm gringo from California who loves all latin women anyway so I really don't know how valuable my opinion isl 😆
Buenas. Las chicas de México y Colombia son bastantito buenas al momento de hablar sobre su país pero la chica de Panamá no sabe mucho sobre su propia cultura porque al momento de tener la Palabra para nutrir a los otros sobre su país solo dice poco y no ilustra correctamente sobre su país de origen. Deberían de buscar a otra chica de Panamá que sepa más de su propia cultura para que hable porque la que está no nos ilustra mucho sobre su país. Cuando le preguntan cómo son los panameños ella no dice nada sino estupideces envés de decir que somos personas muy alegres, con diversidad cultural, nos gusta vivir cómodos y bien, nos gusta mucho el dinero, trabajadores, somos muy amigables, amables y nos quejamos de todo en nuestro pais entre otras cosas ahahahahah. Saludos desde Panamá, puente del mundo ! 🇵🇦😉👋🏻
I don't want to sound rude, but I kinda wonder if Lalita is really from Panama? I mean, maybe she was born here or one of her parents or maybe both are Panamanians; so that makes her a Panamanian too. But maybe she's lived abroad her whole life or most of it 🤔? I'm saying this because her accent when she speaks Spanish is really confusing. It doesn't sound like any of our accents. And in this video and mostly in another one she was too, she kinda gave the idea that she doesn't know our culture that well. For example, when she translated straw as "bombilla" instead of "carrizo"; we would never say that in Panama 🙈 Btw, her name seems like an Indian name, right? There's a large community of India here in 🇵🇦, that could be a reason why her culture or experiences differ a bit from other Panamanians 🤔
You are absolutely right hihi but she is fine. She is training to be honest about what she thinks. We are very calm, but we are not watching tv all day, my lord! Here we are always doing something! she is talking about older people. Even so, Lalita is cute and speaks very well. Good luck!
So they took their time to speak about each country until it was Panama's turn she only spoke about them being chill people aaaaaand that's it cut everything else, next subject...wtf?
Famous celebrities from Mexico that nobody's even bothered to mention. Salma Hayek being one. Marco de la o who played el chapo. There's so many more but I can't think right now.
So inhibited and boring conversation, so many interesting things to say about Spain, Mexico yet all they talk about is Tequila and Paella etc, how insulting
Estoy de acuerdo y lo comenté en este y otro video 🙈 Creo que ella quizás nació aquí, o es de padres panameños o tal vez vivió un tiempo aquí y por eso la.pusieron como representante de 🇵🇦? Pero ni su acento ni conocimiento de nuestra cultura suena como a una panameña regular. Es más, su nombre es como de La India; a lo mejor es indostana y ha crecido apartada de nuestra cultura panameña 🤔