Dutch Hospitality is Shockingly DIFFERENT! πŸ‡³πŸ‡±

Dutch people share the truth about why Dutch dinner parties can shock a foreigner.

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Filmed in:
Amsterdam, Utrecht

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  • @ClickUp says:

    Such things should be communicated in advance. I couldn’t ever think of charging my guests anything, ever.

    • @umapuma says:

      I was invited to a Danish birthday dinner, and had to pay for my dinner lol. For a German celebration dinner also, payed for my dinner. Both times I was surprised. If I knew maybe one of those times I wouldn’t come because I was in a financially bad situation.

      In Croatia if we invite you out for a dinner to celebrate something or if you come to our house, you will not be allowed to pay for anything whatsoever. If you even try, Croatians will be super insulted.

      But this hospitality, or however one can give, is then expected back.

      What I experienced in Germany is that I always throw wild feasts for parties and always greet everyone with everything their heart can wish for, weather only for 1 friend or for 30, and when I come to them I have to bring everything I want to consume…

      Very difficult cultural crash. I felt used a few times.

    • @elpresidente6553 says:

      @@umapumame as a German can only slightly relate. I would never ask people to pay me for a celebration I host, and also most people I know wouldn’t. Also I would never expect anyone to bring their own food/drink. I was raised this way. But maybe it can be a regional difference or just from my circle of people. Tho bringing something yourself voluntarily, that’s totally a thing here, I agree, especially at more β€žcasualβ€œ events. I think it is a nice gesture to the host as a little thank you for the invitation/hosting the event.

      Edit: if it works both ways, obviously. May I ask which German region you had the event?

    • @xxxxxx-ql9he says:

      ​@@elpresidente6553I lived in Germany and never anyone made me pay for food or drinks when I was invited. I mean invited in someone’s house as a guest, if you go out with a group of friends I don’t expect them to pay for me.

    • @francescoromito198 says:

      Sharing is caring. All pay

  • @merlionsin8129 says:

    Would the men ask for partial condom reimbursement? After all it’s for the benefit of both.

  • @burgersuperking says:

    Do they pay taxes afterwards? I guess such cases should be reported πŸ™‚ also, if they were provided food for guests, do they have a restaurant license and all necessary sanitary checks?

  • @Frivals says:

    The question is how they have asked for money before electronic money

    • @jeanjacqueslundi3502 says:

      Bingo. I want to understand the real implications of this mindset in their culture.

    • @wakyIIsr says:

      Probably rob, rape and plunder. No doubt the Dutch are the cheapest. Rumor has it, they perfected the Tikkie when they colonized, rape and plundered Indonesia, Suriname, etc for centuries

  • @cedricnicholson7446 says:

    Hold on I’m confused! They host a party and invite people to the party and then charge them? Did I get that right?

    • @hirsch4155 says:

      Welcome to Holland 😊

    • @choosyduchess25 says:

      crazy, isn’t it? I would be shookt. If I were the guest, I would still pay out of repect but I won’t see them again. πŸ˜‚ πŸ˜‚

    • @DenUitvreter says:

      No, nor did the video. ‘I’ve heard….]

    • @hirsch4155 says:

      @@choosyduchess25 I was a new student and my new neighbour in my building invited me for pancakes , I thought great, that’s friendly, then after charged me lol, he was a nice guy but it seemed like such a small sum to ask for returned not worth asking. But it was the way so I just went with it.

    • @choosyduchess25 says:

      @@hirsch4155 wow, just wow! I could never do that to a guest especially to a new neighbor.

  • @AroLiberteSquad says:

    That is SO wrong. In Poland (and a lot of other countries I suppose) on parties there are always tables full of food, and people will demand from you to eat more and more

    • @ahmaddwikipradany2843 says:

      Then stay in where you are?

    • @cheesecake7274 says:

      It is not wrong, its a cultural difference…. I used to think this way, payed for everything, but others send me a tikkie. Now I have spent hundreds to thousands of euros on friends and never got it back. You have to do it.

    • @AsifSaifuddinAuvipy says:

      What is the point of invitation if the invitee have to pay? They can just eat somewhere else

    • @arspoetica5479 says:

      ​@@ahmaddwikipradany2843And you come back to your homeland which is not Netherlands:) ,,Ahmad” is not dutch nameπŸ˜†πŸ€£

    • @arspoetica5479 says:

      ​@@ahmaddwikipradany2843go back to your homeland. Ahmad name sounds so “dutch” xDπŸ˜‚

  • @einunbekannter498 says:

    Charging someone you invited is almost as awful as tipping culture in the USA.

  • @marioskomnos4661 says:

    This is insane! I’m from Greece and there’s absolutely no time that someone, anyone, friend or stranger will step a foot in my house even for 5min and not treat them with something, either a sweet, a drink, coffee, even just water if they deny by politeness. I invite friends to my house or we gather there spontaneously and I feed/treat them. Quite many times, for breakfast, lunch, dinner. For no reason. Just for the company. And it feels so nice. I’ve learned hospitality. This is just crazy, demanding money. Unbelievable!

  • @Mottleydude1 says:

    I believe this. I used to have a Dutch sports car. It would stop on a dime. Pick it up too. πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚

  • @rituparna6133 says:

    Ah so that’s how dutch word for splitting bills cameπŸ˜‚

  • @mamababycats says:

    Jeez that is so cheap, these people are not friends at all πŸ˜…

  • @icascone says:

    That’s worse than here in Australia young people make an invite but for a bbq and then ask people to bring their food and even their own chair!!!

    • @rvail136 says:

      When I was in school, for holidays that people couldn’t go home to families, we “stayers” would get together, everyone bringing a dish. I’ve done many a Christmas and (american) Thanksgiving meal together. Your dish is your contribution

    • @icascone says:

      Did they have to bring their own chair though? @@rvail136

    • @filippos4648 says:

      It’s a bit different for a BBQ, because they tend to attract a large number of people and the host is also a twenty year old that can’t afford to feed all of them. In the case I think it’s excused, but the chair thing is a bit weirdπŸ˜…, never heard that before.

    • @dwillbecancelledsoon4086 says:

      Having a BYO bbq is fine because everyone knows prior what to expect. Even if it’s BYO, the host will still usually provide snags and burgers at the very least. And will usually have soft drinks and beer, even if it’s still polite for guests to bring a few stubbies (or whatever they prefer).

      But the idea of going to a bbq at someone’s house and then they invoice you later is laughable. Ridiculous tightass culture

    • @dwillbecancelledsoon4086 says:

      @filippos4648 The outdoor chair thing is only for public bbqs at a park or if it’s expected that everyone will eat outdoors. That same 20yo isn’t gonna have 30 chairs just lying around in storage, nor would most 30 or 40yo

  • @ESUSAMEX says:

    This is crazy. If you invite someone over to your home for a party, you are responsible to pay for it. Sometimes I will offer to kick some cash if the food was a pizza, sub sandwiches or wings, but normally the host will fund everything. The only exception may be alcohol. In that case, they will tell you beforehand to bring your own beer or whatever.

  • @Micsq4lv says:

    I would not pay them. That’s is intentionally manipulative to spring that on someone AFTER they attended. Also, exceptionally insincere, ungracious, and selfish.
    If you need other people to cover the cost of your party in your own home, ask ahead who consents to pay in order to attend your home – and expect to share the receipts to them as proof of costs incurred. Or, just don’t run an illegal restaurant 3 feet away from your bedroom. What an unattractive quality.

    • @wakyIIsr says:

      No doubt the Dutch are the cheapest. Rumor has it, they perfected the Tikkie when they colonized, rape and plundered Indonesia, Suriname, etc for centuries

    • @dwillbecancelledsoon4086 says:

      It’s a disgusting cheapskate culture. If i had lunch at someone’s house and they sent me a bill for it afterwards, I’d delete and block such a person from my life

    • @asamicat8323 says:

      That tells a lot about their people in general

  • @antoniosvidakis says:

    If you do this in Greece, your whole village/town/city will be laughing at you next day..We have certain “nicknames” for such behavior. Omg, this is sad…

  • @AsifSaifuddinAuvipy says:

    Charging after inviting its too cheap

  • @nicossbots says:

    as somebody who worked with dutchies before, they seem the kind of people who wouldn’t go out of their way to do something selfless, it’s always ‘what’s in it for me?’

  • @jaynebarry5658 says:

    If you are going to act like a restaurant, don’t lie and call it a party.

  • @normarndelathassologenesis2967 says:

    I’ve never imagined a culture could be devoid of the most basic gracious hospitality 😳😧, especially towards outsiders or family. Combine that with their well known brutal bluntness, and I don’t think many would visit them if not for their more questionable or debauched industries.

  • @linthoi6456 says:

    If you invite someone to your party, you pay. Period!!

    But if you all decide to have a party, you all contribute for the party!!

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