American and Australian React to Hardest Aussie Accents To Understand!!

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Published 2022-10-09

All Comments (21)
  • @mgbell4917
    In Australia its not uncommon to hear one person speak all these accents XD the 'posh' or cultivated accent when you're in a professional setting, the most common or general accent just everyday use (what Hemsworth speaks) and then the broad accent with a flavour of bogan is saved for your mates. Also at times i may speak with somewhat of a wog accent if im in a passionate argument with my cousins.
  • @ookayokay
    First one, the mate guy.. they should have played more of the interview, the clip is a funny legend.
    Also Irwin was a legend and his son Robert followed in his footsteps and doing good work to save animal life.
  • @rongt859
    How long has the Aussie Mia been in the USA , that Aussie accent of hers is almost gone
  • @Iamtheboss510
    How many times do you wanna use “like”?
    Mia: Yes
  • Hemsworth has the very affected NIDA-type (drama school) accent where they're trained to annunciate words similar to a Cultivated accent so they can be understood abroad but emphasise some features of a 'typical' Australian accent for audiences overseas as a point of difference.
    Other examples:
    Russell Crowe
    Heath Ledger
    Hugh Jackman
    Milly Alcock

    Stars who don't:
    Eric Bana
    Margot Robbie
    Rebel Wilson
    Ben Mendelsohn
    Sam Worthington
  • The Australian girl Mia explained so nicely not only for Christina but for the entire world. She has knowledge. That's what we need
  • The key area missed in this was the variants of accent from Western Australia and South Australia to Eastern Australia, vastly different accents.
  • @kristhars
    I really like this kind of videos. It would be amazing to see the same with Spanish accents within countries. Like, for example, north and south in Spain.
  • @flashton30
    The new york analogy to superwogs accent was actually a perfect example
  • @Noah_ol11
    I love and it's funny for me the way that the Australian girl say the word "so" 🤣
  • @cagoliver
    I can’t believe I knew it was Cate Blanchett speaking without them saying it was Cate Blanchett
  • @henri191
    For me it's kind of a mix between Us accent and UK accent and also short versions of many words and sounds 🇭🇲 , I understood some words and parts
  • @tonyvelez4483
    Just discovered this channel absolutely love it. Love to hear the different difference between different countries under accept.
  • @EarlJohn61
    Just for fun...

    In 2017, aged 56, I was on a hiking holiday in Somerset (UK) and spent an evening/night in a town called Shepton Mallet.
    While there I stopped off for a drink at the local pub.
    I spent some time chatting to the publican, when suddenly he said, "I've got it! I know where you're from."
    "You do," I Asked?
    "Yes, you're from a farm, in the Upper Mid North of South Australia."

    To say I was shocked would be an understatement, others on the trip had variously described me as being A South African, A New Zealander & An Aussie (this last being the most accurate), but NONE had given this level of precision...
    Oh & I was born in a railway town in the Upper Mid North of SA & spent the first 17 years of my life on a farm there, before moving to Port Adelaide for employment 39 years prior to this event.
  • Would've been interesting to hear Toni Collette. She does so many American projects I almost didn't believe she's Australian!
  • @alika9568
    aussi like was like liking the like word like
  • @FreddyWangNX
    so when I was in gold coast QLD,I met an gentleman whose probably in his 60s on the train, his accent is so thick that the aussie dude next to me can't even understand him, but he seems to be understanding the both of us fine.(he uses a nokia!)
  • @zyndr_
    I'm British, and I'm sure that I can't be the only person to be taken aback by the fact that Aussies openly use the word wog. It has such a pejorative meaning in the UK.
  • I was surprised how well some Aussie actors do American accents. To the point that I didn't know beforehand that they were not American. Good examples are Toni Collette, Mel Gibson, Hugh Jackman, Rachel Griffiths, Russell Crowe, Simon Baker, and Naomi Watts.