@JayHanley

If you enjoyed this video, please be sure to check out our travel channel over at https://www.youtube.com/homearoam thanks and enjoy! :)

@Konic_and_Snuckles

Plot twist: His full name is Bretney.

@SamChaneyProductions

Now I can't stop myself from saying this whenever I meet anyone named Bret or Brittany

@nicholasmena998

You left put the best part
"There's vikings there, right?"

"Ehhhh...yah"

@abbydoesstuffsometimes

Looking for this in 2020 thank you for hosting I'm laughing so hard!

@jpjorquiera2220

i am from Chile and i learnt english in nz. Sweet as bro

@resmarted

This scene is burned in my memory

@BUCHOvideo

Love this guy. He should be a guest star on Keth and Kem one day. ;)

@billbadson7598

Fun Fact: if you replace every single vowel in the english language with an "i" you sound almost indistinguishable from a normal new zealander.

@vincentxie3090

Watching this in 2024

@shadrach6299

When went to NZ, I only noticed that all of the /e/‘s were long /e/‘s. Like “special beds/speecial beads”.

@regenjo

gotta love them aussies

@anatolydyatlov963

That's like listening to VLDL

@spidermek5416

Bread like bread. No ! Bret ! Ooh, british ? No ! New Zealand.

@siskavard

He maybe did

@zaniac100

@Nancy99999 Hmm. He is a New Zealander. And sounds like a New Zealander. E --> I is a pretty well known NZ characteristic.

@georgiakelsey

so when if i said "bret" to an american do they think im saying brit? 

@stoicboy64

hahahahaha love it!

@Grummur

and it'd actually be prawn...

@bartosznarolski8540

mega mocne szczerze