British Expats

British Expats (https://britishexpats.com/forum/)
-   Canada (https://britishexpats.com/forum/canada-56/)
-   -   Pros and Cons of Emigrating to Canada from UK (https://britishexpats.com/forum/canada-56/pros-cons-emigrating-canada-uk-876925/)

act1980 Jul 11th 2016 5:38 am

Re: Pros and Cons of Emigrating to Canada from UK
 
:popcorn:

Stinkypup Jul 11th 2016 6:07 am

Re: Pros and Cons of Emigrating to Canada from UK
 

Originally Posted by act1980 (Post 11999812)
:popcorn:

Nah, shows over, we have all had a group cuddle and are BFFS again :lol:

Tirytory Jul 11th 2016 12:41 pm

Re: Pros and Cons of Emigrating to Canada from UK
 

Originally Posted by BristolUK (Post 11996593)
I think it's the way it's expressed. Plus Steve's habit of popping in every few days, dismissing opinions of others while giving the benefit of his wisdom and then disappearing again. It comes across as a bit annoying.

There's a lot of great American TV. It usually finds it's way onto British TV while there's a lot of great Brit TV that doesn't find its way onto North American TV.

There's a lot of great European TV that also finds its way onto British TV that either doesn't find its way onto American TV or gets remade to save the poor dears the trouble of reading subtitles. :p

:rofl:

Did you watch the French show Missing shown on the beeb? Loved it..

BristolUK Jul 11th 2016 2:12 pm

Re: Pros and Cons of Emigrating to Canada from UK
 

Originally Posted by Tirytory (Post 12000157)
Did you watch the French show Missing shown on the beeb? Loved it..

Do you mean BBC's The Missing (James Nesbitt) that took place in France? The kid who was taken?

Tirytory Jul 11th 2016 2:14 pm

Re: Pros and Cons of Emigrating to Canada from UK
 

Originally Posted by BristolUK (Post 12000188)
Do you mean BBC's The Missing (James Nesbitt) that took place in France? The kid who was taken?

No... It was on Iplayer- we've literally just watched it.. It was in French, with subtitles..

I like how subtitles make you think you can understand more French than you can...

BristolUK Jul 11th 2016 2:23 pm

Re: Pros and Cons of Emigrating to Canada from UK
 

Originally Posted by Tirytory (Post 12000189)
No... It was on Iplayer- we've literally just watched it.. It was in French, with subtitles..

I like how subtitles make you think you can understand more French than you can...

:lol:


I'll have another look...couldn't see anything just now.

My MIL and the stepkids will sometimes speak French and I can often at least get the gist. Granted it's partly down to body language and the occasional word I recognise. :lol:

It amuses me when one asks something of the other and I pick up on it and repeat the request in English as if it's complete coincidence. :sneaky:

BristolUK Jul 11th 2016 2:25 pm

Re: Pros and Cons of Emigrating to Canada from UK
 

Originally Posted by Tirytory (Post 12000189)
No... It was on Iplayer- we've literally just watched it.. It was in French, with subtitles..

Ah...you probably mean The Disappearance.

BristolUK Jul 11th 2016 2:32 pm

Re: Pros and Cons of Emigrating to Canada from UK
 
Just downloaded the first two parts to check out.

Shard Jul 12th 2016 4:11 am

Re: Pros and Cons of Emigrating to Canada from UK
 
[QUOTE=Tirytory;12000189]No... It was on Iplayer- we've literally just watched it.. It was in French, with subtitles..

I like how subtitles make you think you can understand more French than you can...[/QUOTE]

Ain't that the truth :nod:

Tirytory Jul 12th 2016 5:33 am

Re: Pros and Cons of Emigrating to Canada from UK
 

Originally Posted by BristolUK (Post 12000194)
Ah...you probably mean The Disappearance.

Ah that's the one! Often easier to find when you give the right title in the first place!

Oakvillian Jul 12th 2016 5:58 am

Re: Pros and Cons of Emigrating to Canada from UK
 

Originally Posted by act1980 (Post 11999812)
:popcorn:

Woah... blast from the past!!!

Welcome back, stranger.

Steve_ Jul 13th 2016 11:26 am

Re: Pros and Cons of Emigrating to Canada from UK
 

Originally Posted by BristolUK (Post 11996593)
I think it's the way it's expressed. Plus Steve's habit of popping in every few days, dismissing opinions of others while giving the benefit of his wisdom and then disappearing again. It comes across as a bit annoying.

It's called "having a life" I'm afraid. Like I said, I haven't got anything against BC particularly, my pet peeve is people making out it is somehow significantly better than the rest of Canada. It's not. I come across it all the time here, I think it's some sort of coping mechanism to get through the winter "I'll retire to BC". Where it's still pretty cold during the winter, or alternatively if you move to the Fraser Valley, you get huge amounts of rain. (While you're sitting in an endless traffic jam and paying for the privilege of doing so).

Don't ask me why that nurse said she'd seen so many people from BC at that clinic that day, no idea but my guess is that so many people moved here from BC they moved to be closer to their kids and the taxes are a bit lower.


while there's a lot of great Brit TV that doesn't find its way onto North American TV
Such as? I notice dbd33 did not provide an example. I suppose there's the odd BBC documentary that might not make it onto TV here but there isn't much.

Anyway, while I was away... I picked the number of USD$90,000 out of thin air and crunched the numbers on how much tax you would pay if you earned that much, i.e. including payroll taxes.

After taxes you would get:

Alberta: US$63,056 (assuming an exchange rate of 0.77)
UK: US$63,147 (assuming an exchange rate of 1.4)
US: $67,431 (not including State tax, which would apply in most States)

So in fact the difference between the UK and Alberta is tiny, at least at that income level but of course the UK has more taxes on other things, e.g. CGT is way higher, VAT is way higher, etc.

Btw, if you think I'm a bit annoying, you should meet me in person. :lol:

Steve_ Jul 13th 2016 11:33 am

Re: Pros and Cons of Emigrating to Canada from UK
 

Originally Posted by Tirytory (Post 12000189)
I like how subtitles make you think you can understand more French than you can...

Well maybe this is the difference, I can understand French (well, well enough to watch TV that is in French) so I watch the French channels sometimes like TV5. Although honestly the movies that TF1 turns out are crap. They do have some okay documentaries though. French home reno shows are much more interesting because it's usually some old farmhouse made with stone or whatever they're doing up.

dbd33 Jul 13th 2016 1:23 pm

Re: Pros and Cons of Emigrating to Canada from UK
 

Originally Posted by Steve_ (Post 12002003)
Such as? I notice dbd33 did not provide an example.

An example of Canadian TV being crap? Almost anything really but, if you want specific examples: Canadian Idol, Canada's Next Top Model, Real Housewives of Moosejaw, Little Mosque on the Prairie, Corner Gas. All except the last being lame localisations of programs from other countries. The last is local and lame.

Only Heartland offers hard hitting ethnically local drama and that, like all the rest, is rendered unwatchable by the constant advertisements.

BristolUK Jul 13th 2016 2:07 pm

Re: Pros and Cons of Emigrating to Canada from UK
 
while there's a lot of great Brit TV that doesn't find its way onto North American TV

Originally Posted by Steve_ (Post 12002003)
Such as?

I'm not sure it's worth giving examples but the first two shows I thought of were Happy Valley and Line of Duty. Neither of which went onto US TV other than Netflix and Hulu.

Another favourite from a couple of years ago was Utopia. I believe that didn't make it but HBO were going to make their own - why, heaven knows - but didn't.

Spooks was shown in the USA...renamed and edited to a shorter length and then they stopped taking it while other parts of the world carried on for the remaining 6 seasons.


All times are GMT -12. The time now is 7:26 am.

Powered by vBulletin: ©2000 - 2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.