These things we take for granted are apparently completely foreign to people in other countries.
Americans definitely do things differently.
It probably doesn’t require a great deal of self-reflection to wrap your mind around the idea that America is a really strange place. If you grew up around immigrants or in an even slightly heterogeneous community, you’ve probably picked up on some totally American norms people from other parts of the world look at with disgust.
When I was growing up, one of the small things I took for granted, being born and raised here, was the strangeness of meal-accompanying beverages my mother always sought to point out. She mentioned early on how turned off she was by her college roommate’s desire for a Diet Coke with breakfast, and she was equally perplexed by the glass of milk the same woman enjoyed every evening with dinner.
So when people took to reddit to ask people from other countries what they found mind-blogging about American practices, the results did not disappoint. Read on to have your mind blown about our strange cultural practices, and to rethink 14 everyday norms you definitely take for granted.
Article continues below advertisement
Advertisement
They don’t see the big deal with drinking in public.
Source: iStock
Between open container citations and public intoxication laws, it’s definitely illegal — if not grossly frowned upon by your prudent friends who aren’t trying to get dragged into your antics — to drink alcohol in public in America.
But to people in the rest of the world, this concept is incredibly strange. When answering the question of what American norms are viewed differently in Japan, AsakiYumemiru didn’t see the logic behind “drinking alcohol in public being a huge deal.”
A Western redditor who frequently travels to Asia for work countered this observation by mentioning how “blown away” they were by the “level of midweek drunkenness among over-30 respectable business men and women” that goes on in Japan.
“You can drink beer like that in Germany!” added a European redditor. Having lived in Germany, I can vouch for the fact that even the public drinking there is carried out efficiently. “People leave their bottles beside trash cans so that people that scavenge them for recycling don’t have to dig through the trash instead. 10/10 respect,” writes Zerole00.
Prices are never what they say they are.
Source: istock
It can be incredibly frustrating to pick out something you want that costs one thing, and then learning it actually costs more than that once the cashier has rung it up.
“Not including tax in the price tags” is something that annoys many foreigners who visit America. User relayrider added, “yeah, that and tips…”
As an American, I’d be more than happy to get rid of these hidden costs as well. Like, how is one even supposed to know how much things truly cost? One unhelpful PM_ME_A_PLANE_TICKET responded, “sales tax is roughly 7% almost everywhere. Maybe 6.9% in county A, and 7.5% in county B. A $50 item would be $53 and change in both counties. You kind of do it in your head.”
Advertisement
Wow, good thing calculators come standard on phones nowadays.
Article continues below advertisement
We wear our shoes inside the house.
Source: iStock
We Americans are all, Why take off our shoes when we can trace everything we’ve stepped on throughout the day around our home?
As someone raised in an immigrant home, I was barely allowed inside the door without first taking my shoes off growing up, so this is a practice I truly don’t condone. But a surprising amount of Americans see no problem with only taking their shoes off to sleep. “For [Americans who don’t regularly experience downpours or heavy snow], shoes are kept in the bedroom and put on right after pants, and not removed until [it’s] time to disrobe,” explains kaihatsusha.
Foreign people, meanwhile, think wearing shoes inside the house is absolutely revolting. But that’s not all — at least in Japan, they have different inside-the-house slippers for summer than they do for winter.
Article continues below advertisement
Advertisement
We eat like crap.
Source: iStock
Fast food? Saturated fats? High-fructose corn syrup? It’s pretty safe to say these are all American inventions, or at least things that wouldn’t be as popular if it weren’t for out unabashed consumption.
But people in other parts of the world eat way fresher and better. According to crusoe, Americans can also feel way healthier by taking a tip or two out of their books: “I’ve switched to a more Japanese-style diet. More rice, vegetables, fish, chicken. I’ve lost twenty pounds and my guts have felt way better. Plus it’s super easy to cook … I find even their fried foods don’t feel as heavy.”
“In a country facing high obesity rates, the junk food is cheaper than the healthier stuff by quite a bit,” writes another redditor about the strange nutritional practices of Americans. It’s true that our fast food is insanely cheap while we basically have to choose between spending money on organic groceries or filling up our tanks to drive to work. “It’s so bizarre to see those ads that are like MASSIVE AMOUNTS OF CHICKEN NUGGETS FOR A DOLLAR!!!” echoed another foreigner.
Article continues below advertisement
Public bathrooms are too public.
Source: reddit
If you ever wondered why there is a gap between the door and frame of a public bathroom stall, you are not alone.
“Having weirdly large gaps in your toilet doors. It’s just not necessary guys,” one foreign redditor mused. Another agreed, sharing a photo of the future of American public restrooms. “This is in the Seattle Convention Center. When I was there just standing at the urinal you could see into the whole stall,” @McHaloKitty added. OMG. That is horrifying.
Article continues below advertisement
Advertisement
All of our drinks have sugar in them.
Source: iStock
You might say not all drinks in America have sugar, but I’d challenge you to come up with five non-water beverages. In other countries, and especially in Japan, there are far more options when you (and your waistline) aren’t dying to imbibe pure saccharine.
User AsakiYumemiru said it’s abhorrent for Asian people to see Westerners “putting sugar in green tea,” and also called out our lack of sugar-free beverages.
Even Americans lamented how “all of our drinks have sugar in them, except for water.” One even added that they’d “love to have sugar-free tasty drinks without artificial sugars in them too, the whole Stevia hype is so gross.”
You hear that, Coca-Cola?
Article continues below advertisement
Japanese people don’t know what to do with apples.
Source: istock
If you pull out an apple from your bag but don’t have a knife on you to peel it, you’re going to seem BIZARRE in Japan.
“My staff stared at me when I ate the skin on my apple,” writes DJFiregirl. “But they don’t bat an eye at raw fish…” Another tourist shared his experience in Japan: “One time I went to that yearly thing at the Imperial Palace where the Emperor stands and waves to people. I had an apple as a snack, and going through security, they were very alarmed by this, asking ‘Where’s your knife!’ I was confused until they clarified that, since I have an apple, it only stands to reason that I have a knife somewhere to peel it.”
Advertisement
This practice is especially hilarious to me after reading about mch026’s picnic: “We had bought food, including apples, at the grocery store on the way. We didn’t have knives to cut our apples, so our Japanese friends weren’t sure how to eat them.”
Article continues below advertisement
We’re really loud.
Source: iStock
The most common complaint from foreigners who are visiting the other countries? “Why is everyone so loud in public?”
Once you get down to the nitty-gritty, though, it seems Americans are the real culprits here. “That’s mostly Americans, you can hear them from miles away,” responded Aethien. Another non-Yankee added, “I think you guys have really bassy accents. TV doesn’t show it well. Heard an American live and my ears shook for days.”
Ouch. Some people came to America’s defense, claiming not ALL Americans are guilty. “I’m an American who doesn’t feel the need to project like a theater actor when I’m three feet away,” wrote one guy, while a Dutch redditor chimed in to say “We Westerners are perhaps relatively loud … but also a certain amount of Westerners are annoyed by publicly loud people, too.”
These people should probably not set foot in South America, to be quite honest.
Advertisement
Article continues below advertisement
American teenagers hang out too much.
Source: iStock
My foreign mom never understood why I wanted to stay late at school if I didn’t have some sort of club activity. Just sitting around with friends was never a good enough excuse, as that kind of hanging out was only something delinquents did back in her Latin American country.
Foreigners tend to side with my mom, it seems, much to the dismay of their American children. “I wasn’t allowed to hang out with friends after school, because apparently in Japan only delinquents and idiots hang out after school,” shared clockworkswrong.
“Teenagers shouldn’t be focusing on partying. [They should be] focused on getting better at school or club activities,” added another. “Not being able to hang out after school was a pain and a hindrance to teenage social life!” they continued. “I do remember trying to convince my mother [that] ‘all the other kids do it,’ … but she was adamant [that was] not ‘normal’ for a teenager, [even though it was] where we lived.”
Sigh, I feel your pain.
Article continues below advertisement
Advertisement
Work culture is really different.
Source: istock
I realize a lot of expats must move from America to other countries for work, and vice versa, but after reading through this thread of cultural differences in the workplace, it’s hard to understand how anyone can adjust.
For example, in Asia, wives don’t work, so you’ll stick out like a sore thumb if you’re a mom with a 9-to-5. But for men, things are really shockingly different there as well.
Like, 9-to-5? More like, 9-to-whenever. Americans’ “eagerness to leave the office on time” puts many people off in Japan, according to kurodon85. They even have a term for this rudeness — “teiji dasshu” — and are always in shock when they come to the U.S. and see people actually leave their desk after sitting at it for eight hours.
Meanwhile, Europeans think Americans work too hard. Danaldinho007 highlights this cultural norm: “I get 25 days paid leave as well as up to 10 days sick leave annually, as well as having the option to sacrifice a bit of my salary to get up to an extra 5 days annual leave. From what I hear, you Americans get nothing like this.”
Ha! You hear correctly. Just typing out all those European work perks made me cringe.
Article continues below advertisement
Advertisement
We are bad at sorting our trash.
Source: istock
I can’t think of how many times I’ve patted myself on the back just for properly disposing of my recycling, or how many times I’ve pulled out hair in frustration because I don’t fully “get” what is supposed to get composted and what isn’t.
In places like Japan, however, the trash sorting is truly next level.
“It depends on the city that you’re living in, but in my city it goes something like this,” explains AsakiYumemiru:
1) Flammable
2) Non-flammable
3) Non-flammable but with no organic waste on it (like plastic wrappings)
Advertisement
4) Cardboard/paper
5) Cloth
6) Aluminum Cans
7) Steel cans
8) Glass bottles (further sorted into transparent/other, green and brown bottles)
Advertisement
9) Batteries
10) Styrofoam trays/containers
11) Plastic trays/containers
12) Plastic bottles
13) Other miscellaneous items
Advertisement
No offense, but this is bananas.
Article continues below advertisement
Learning costs money.
Source: istock
This is an issue that truly grinds my gears as well, so I understand why it perplexes people who live abroad. “In some countries they pay students to go to college, or at least have free educations,” says TunturiLoitsija, so it really doesn’t make much sense how much debt we as a country to into just to learn.
And although Americans are quick to defend their stance, saying that people flock from all over the world to study in our prestigious universities, Ammear was quick to put them in their place: “While that is true, the majority of your population does not go to these universities. For overall development, it is better to have a well-educated majority population, than very well-educated significant minority. Not only does that improve economic growth, but also decreases social inequality (which, in turn, can further boost economic growth).”
*Drops mic*
Article continues below advertisement
Advertisement
American priorities are weird.
Source: istock
As one redditor succinctly pointed out about Americans, “Being fine with extreme violence on TV but freaking out over a nipple.” As expected, Americans defended their right to violent shows and videos games, responding, “Oh trust me, the moral puritans freak out over both. There were parents terrified that games like GTA would cause school shootings and the like,” and “That’s fake violence, the news will blur some real stuff. But fake p— is still p—. Also, violence is inherently more public than sex.” Right.
So next time you’re traveling abroad, make sure you don’t do any of the things that will make you stick out to everyone else as that obnoxious American.
In trying to explain the economic divide between Boomers and younger generations, one man figures out that the latter doesn’t benefit from work.
It feels like younger generations hear certain phrases from Boomers all the time about our work ethic, lifestyle, and expectations. Most of all, they call us “lazy” and say that we don’t want to work anymore. In reality, many of us have been working since we were teenagers and are still holding down challenging jobs.
Article continues below advertisement
These conversations can be especially tricky during the holidays when older family members blame us for any financial shortcomings. “At your age, I had already bought my second home and had a child,” they might say. Luckily, comedian Brendon Lemon was able to make the logical argument on TikTok as to why younger generations don’t actually benefit from work.
Advertisement
Source: Getty Images
Article continues below advertisement
Comedian Brendon Lemon figured out why younger generations don’t want to work — there’s no benefit.
When talking to his Boomer dad and uncles, Brendon made a point about the difference in generations and our expectations. “Why do people expect work to be good?” Brendon’s Boomer relatives tell him. “It’s not supposed to be. It’s not supposed to be comfortable, that’s why you call it work. We didn’t expect it to be comfortable, we labored in uncomfortable situations, and we did it in order to make a living. We didn’t expect luxuries. You guys expect luxuries.”
What luxuries do millennials and Gen Z expect? Sure, offices lure us in with nice coffee machines, ping pong tables, and in-office bars, but no one is asking for that. Those are all just distractions from low pay and even lower growth opportunities. Maybe if the office is nice, we won’t want to leave a job that takes us for granted as quickly. But at the end of the day, all people really want is enough money and time to have a life outside of work.
Article continues below advertisement
“Who’s telling them that we want luxury?” Brendon asks. “And that for some reason we’re unwilling to put up with uncomfortable situations? All of us worked through college! I don’t know a single person who didn’t have a job, who didn’t work almost full-time all the way through college, even though they were going to college full-time.”
Article continues below advertisement
Advertisement
“Secondly, most of us are just asking for healthcare and affordable housing. I don’t understand where the concept of luxury is coming from. A place to sleep and have some money to buy food and then maybe go out every once in a while is most of what people are asking for. And not to be terrified of future and retirement and dying poor and lonely.”
Article continues below advertisement
But an emotional argument can only take us so far. When Brendon gets into actual statistics, it’s terrifying what we can see and how the future looks for future generations. Since 2000, there has been 62.34 percent inflation total.
For example, something that would have cost $5.38 in 2000 now costs at least $8.73. The CPI (Consumer Price Index) has increased by 500 percent since 1970, and college tuition has increased by 1,550 percent. But there has only been a 10 percent increase in wages. That’s a recipe for disaster!
Article continues below advertisement
Advertisement
Not only that, but Brendon added the data about how Baby Boomers have blocked career progression and wage increases for younger generations by not retiring. All of this data shows one very important fact — it isn’t that millennials and Gen Z don’t want to work. It’s that working isn’t worth it anymore. Because even if we do everything our parents did, we won’t be able to afford even half the life they wanted for us.
One person even commented that they make more than their parents combined, who owned three houses, and they can’t even afford to buy one house. Others pointed out that the basic necessities of internet, cell phones, and a place to live are suddenly being equated with “luxuries.”
Article continues below advertisement
Someone else added that not only does work not benefit us, but it also doesn’t seem to benefit society. Most of the high-paying jobs are for large corporations who take advantage of the Earth’s natural resources and lower-rung employees, all while benefiting one rich guy at the top who donates to campaigns we disagree with.
Article continues below advertisement
Advertisement
Millennials have been working for at least a decade, if not longer. They would know by now if work was worth it, but if anything, many of our lives have gotten harder instead of easier.
Millennials had the technology to warn Gen Z, and they’re now learning the same thing and how to make money through other avenues, such as NFTs and influencer marketing, which may not seem like “work” to Boomers.
So yes, the Boomers are right, to a degree. We don’t want to work, because what’s the point?
It’s kind of hard to imagine Boomers struggling financially when they have things like three cars and one airplane parked in their driveway.
I think about money a lot. I’m definitely someone who has had to check their bank account before making any significant purchases. By the way in this scenario, significant can be anything from dinner to a concert ticket. There has rarely been a time in my life when I haven’t mostly lived paycheck-to-paycheck. Let’s just say, I know how to budget and cut a corner. My corners have been so cut I am living in a circle, baby!
Article continues below advertisement
My situation has often been exacerbated by the fact that my mother, who is a well-meaning and supportive member of the Boomer generation, doesn’t always understand my financial struggles. Despite the fact that she is now retired and living on a fixed income, a luxury I doubt I will ever see, she often thinks I’ve spent money incorrectly. This is why I understand the frustration felt by one TikToker who doesn’t need advice from Boomers when some of them have planes parked in their driveways.
Advertisement
Article continues below advertisement
Despite what you think, it’s not OK, Boomers.
Paige, who goes by @sheisapaigeturner on TikTok, is tired of explaining the ridiculous cost of living to a generation who kind of had a hand in making things bad. It seems as if any time Paige dares to express her concern over the astronomical price of childcare, some Boomer swoops in and demands she needs to “learn how to live within her means.”
It’s funny what kind of advice a person will give when they don’t have all the information. For example, if I wasn’t in possession of Paige’s entire financial portfolio I wouldn’t tell her that she’s spending her money incorrectly.
Article continues below advertisement
On a personal note, I do see that my mother is usually out of the loop because she doesn’t live almost exclusively online like I do. If or when the television is on, it’s turned to HGTV or something on a streaming service she’s watching at the moment. She has Facebook and never logs on. All this to say, I kind of get when Boomers have no idea what is happening outside of their own world.
Advertisement
Article continues below advertisement
Still, if you don’t know what’s happening then please don’t give unsolicited advice. And don’t filter someone else’s experiences through your own. This is the same kind of thinking that gets us the “I had to pay for college, so should you” crown when it comes to student loan forgiveness.
Paige then pulls from her own life to show just how out of touch Boomers are. Looking around her neighborhood, which she says is mostly members of that generation, Paige is able to deduce that they might not be on the same rung of the financial ladder.
Article continues below advertisement
Advertisement
The house across the street from Paige has three cars in the driveway, which isn’t so bad until she explains only two people live there. Other than Jay Leno, who has an extra car? One of the cars is a collector’s item. When someone casually collects something I use for utilitarian purposes, that’s how I know they have money.
Article continues below advertisement
That’s not the craziest part of this driveway. There is also an airplane in the driveway which begs the question, does Paige live across the street from John Travolta? Either that’s a big driveway or a very small plane.
Paige isn’t asking for a whole airplane at her house, she is merely on the hunt for affordable daycare. Gosh, maybe the neighbors can open up a facility in the plane. That would kill two birds with one stone.
Advertisement
Article continues below advertisement
In what feels like some sort of prank, Paige then moves onto the house next to the plane place. They have four cars and a boat. I’m now thinking she must live by some sort of dealership.
Article continues below advertisement
I’m going to say one thing in defense of these people. Unless I missed something, Paige is responding to other people who have told her to “stop being so materialistic.” A different group of Boomers have told Paige to curb her spending enthusiasm.
We have no idea who they are and how they reached such great heights, one of them literally. At the end of the day this is a systemic issue. Sadly we can’t control where we are or how we got here. We can only control, honestly nothing. Things are bleak!
SZA confirmed she underwent plastic surgery for a Brazilian butt lift, though her before and after photos show a noticeable difference in her face.
Source: Getty Images
The Gist:
Upon comparing photos of SZA from 2014 to now, you’ll notice a stark difference in her face.
SZA has not yet confirmed she underwent plastic surgery, on her face that is.
In 2023, however, SZA admitted to having a Brazilian butt lift.
Article continues below advertisement
Singer SZA looked absolutely stunning during her performance at the Lil Baby & Friends I.O.U. Tour at the Crypto.com arena in August 2023. But if you were to compare the singer’s photos to her selfies from, say, 2014, then you’d notice a drastic difference in some of her facial features.
If you’re like most of us, you’re probably wondering how that transformation happened. Did the musician land a makeup team of contouring experts, or did she actually go under the knife? Here’s what we know.
Advertisement
Article continues below advertisement
Source: Getty Images
SZA looked quite different when she started her career.
The singer’s career beginnings date back to around 2011 when she first crossed paths with Top Dawg Entertainment (TDE). The president, Terrence “Punch” Henderson, signed her after hearing her material and she started to build a following after the release of her first two EPs. This was SZA when she was just beginning to generate buzz in 2013.
Article continues below advertisement
At this point, she was already collaborating with several of her label-mates and in 2014, she released her EP, “Z.” By the following year, she started writing songs for other famous artists, including Nicki Minaj, Beyoncé, and Rihanna. Here’s how she looked in 2015 (which is pretty much the same).
Source: Getty Images
Article continues below advertisement
SZA’s features started to look different after her breakthrough.
In 2017, SZA released her debut album, “Ctrl,” which earned her a bunch of positive reviews and even more recognition. It debuted at No. 3 on the US Billboard 200 and was also certified platinum. It was even named the best album of 2017 by Time magazine. And around this time, the artist started to look quite different.
To be fair, though, SZA had lost some weight by then. This would definitely explain why her face appears to be smaller.
Advertisement
In a 2017 interview, she mentioned her weight loss while defending Kendrick Lamar’s controversial lyrics about stretch marks. She said: “If you want to support women, you should support all shapes of women… I used to be 200 pounds, and I have stretch marks all over my body. I find more comfort and solace with Kendrick reinforcing that I’m beautiful.”
Article continues below advertisement
Source: Getty Images
The breakthrough artist looked gorgeous when she made her appearance at the 2017 BET Awards. However, it looks like she might have had some work done on her nose and chin… Or perhaps it was just brilliant contouring?
Article continues below advertisement
Fans have pointed out the differences in SZA’s features.
Fans quickly took notice of SZA’s straighter nose and bigger chin, posting side-by-sides of the singer on social media to prove that she must’ve gone under the knife at least once. Even if it turns out that her nose was perfectly contoured, it’s kind of hard to explain how her chin changed…
Source: Twitter/@chelseabazz
Article continues below advertisement
Did SZA ever admit to having the plastic surgery?
The artist never spoke on these rumors directly, but fans do find it quite interesting that she has since deleted photos that outlets were using to prove she might have had surgery. For instance, in 2018, a photo of herself being honored by the City of Hope suggested that she definitely got a nose job.
Advertisement
She had captioned the pic: “Thank you so much for having me last night @cityofhope. Honored to have been recognized at an event for something as important as cancer research.” But after fans and outlets started using it to speculate about her surgery, the singer removed it. Hmm…
Article continues below advertisement
Source: Getty Images
Though she’s kept her lips sealed about possibly having plastic surgery, she’s been quite open about her weight loss transformation. While she attended Dove’s Launch of Girl Collective in 2018, she shared that she was always comfortable in her own skin.
Article continues below advertisement
“It’s all about where it starts in your mind,” she said. “I think there are a lot of standards that people told me about that I didn’t see. I started, I was 190 pounds, I only wore my dad’s big t-shirts and socks on stage, no shoes, and didn’t even notice; never complained or tripped about my makeup.”
The singer also commented on how she’s evolved since then.
Advertisement
She shared: “It was just a matter of where I was in my mind, but I did also come out of that space where I was like, I feel like I want to change. I want to be different. I want to grow. I want to learn. I think it’s one thing to be comfortable, but then it’s one thing to not see your full potential and your full picture. The standard should really come [from] within.”
Article continues below advertisement
As of now, it looks like we may never get confirmation on whether the singer actually got work done on her face, but we did learn in 2023 that she underwent surgery for a Brazilian butt lift.
During an interview with Elle, SZA admitted “I always wanted a really fat ass with less gym time.” She also noted that she “didn’t succumb to industry pressure.” Instead, the singer says she “succumbed to my own eyes in the mirror and [was] like, ‘No, I need some more ass.’”
It sounds like she’s happy and confident with the choices she’s made. And that’s all that matters! As long as she’s happy, we’re happy.
Usamos cookies en nuestro sitio web para brindarle la experiencia más relevante recordando sus preferencias y visitas repetidas. Al hacer clic en "Aceptar", acepta el uso de TODAS las cookies.
This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.