00:00Looks like we have some pies puddings scotch eggs and peas. I think it's only right to start with the
00:06scotch eggs
00:06Okay Lou, what's your favorite British food? I love a Yorkshire pudding me too. I love you
00:13microwaved anyway homemade
00:14I love it. Do you do bubbles and creak?
00:16I do bubbles and creak with beans and eggs. Faked beans? Mm-hmm. Nice. I like the style. The sticky
00:22toffee pudding is
00:23One of the finer things. You've never had it. It might just change your life. It might blow your mind
00:28You're a tea drinker tea. Yeah, you know that I love my coffee
00:31But tea tea before I go to bed what kind of tea for the English breakfast
00:34And you have an English breakfast before bed they'll just brew two sugars and before bed. This is nuts. Yeah,
00:40but I'm a child actor
00:41So caffeine just fuels me
00:44What's your favorite British slang? I'm knackered I
00:49Say that a lot too. There's loads isn't there my grandma and mom they'll say whenever they go to the
00:53loo
00:53They'll say I'm gonna go and spend a penny spend a penny would have been
00:56I guess when you had to pay to use the toilet in in public no way
01:00You say I'm gonna go and spend a penny for a piss or whatever my favorite
01:04Apples and pears. Cockney rhyming slang. Yeah, do you want to explain cockney rhyming slang to the
01:07So cockney rhyming slang I grew up hearing it. It's just basically different terminology for other things
01:13So apples and pears means stairs
01:15Rosie Lee means tea David Gower a shower
01:20So say with the stairs apples and pears you'll say I'm going up the apples. Yeah, I'm going up the
01:24apples
01:25So you miss out the second bit why be Murray curry? Yeah, gonna have a ruby wife would be trouble
01:30and strife
01:30Yeah, I gotta go on to the no trouble. What food or drink?
01:34Can you confidently say that England does best an English breakfast like a full English Americans don't do English? No
01:40I don't want fried chicken and pancakes breakfast. No, thank you. That's too much, isn't it?
01:44Too much too sweet if you had to explain Brits to a non-Brit with one saying what would it
01:50be? We're funnier than you
01:53I've got one not too bad
01:55Not too bad. How you doing?
01:57Can't complain. Yeah, that British stiff upper lip. Whereas like here you ask someone how they are
02:02They're like, oh my gosh, and like the sun's out and it's awesome. And that's why it's very nice sometimes
02:07to just hear a positive reaction
02:09What would you say that the most English thing about you is?
02:13I would say my banter. Yeah, like my humor just like I tease people but it's because I love you,
02:19right?
02:19I'm very honest and you have to be quite on your toes if you're missing a joke. I can concur.
02:25Yeah. Yeah, it's true
02:26He's very traditionally English. What era would you put me in? I could say maybe the 1800s
02:32He also like reads books and he's like old-timey English. You reckon? Yeah, don't you like write poems as
02:38well?
02:38When I feel sufficiently inspired if this were a pub
02:42I'd come back here. Well, that was delightful. And another thing that's delightful is Enola Holmes 3 which you can
02:47watch only on Netflix
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