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I love this, this is basic human interactions. Thousands of years ago, some groups of people also met funny groups of people that spoke funny words and they were probably laughing about it too. It's fun curiosity.
Panties soaked
Roles reversed Brits would get nauseated hearing Americans speak
Yup. I went to America at 18 to visit some family and at a graduation party, spent most of the evening with a group of my cousin’s friends just being asked to say random words with them all in fits of giggles. “SAY CRUMP-IT”, “SAY PO-TAY-TOW”. And the cliche questions, have you met the queen, Harry styles (it was 2012, One Direction were very popular at the time and in case you’re wondering the answer is not surprisingly no). Very nice people, and weird being with a group of 18-ish year olds who couldn’t drink. But the obsession with the accent and what ‘London’ was like was strange. I really think some Americans believe England is London, Buckingham Palace and Queens English, and then quaint villages. Not the varied cities and towns and different accents all over. Plus Scotland, wales, Ireland etc which is Britain and UK not just England…
https://i.redd.it/qygsugmuqdbh1.gif
https://preview.redd.it/omsv8pluqdbh1.png?width=660&format=png&auto=webp&s=2893715d31148be97d01dfa119c3a429df33fa26
There is a storyline in one of my favorite movies that has to be a fake take on. In Love Actually, a love starved British guy goes to Milwaukee, Wisconsin… and it happens just, and I mean JUST like this. Except the girls were Denise Richards, Shannon Elizabeth, January Jones and Elisha Cuthbert…
Why does this remind me of Scott Pilgrim?
Did they take him home?
I have a fairly broad Australia accent.
I got asked to repeat myself so someone else could hear at many many fast food places when I visited the States.


