Pea visits Walmart for the first time and walks aisle by aisle comparing American products, prices, and shopping culture to what's available in the Philippines. The video doubles as a practical price-comparison guide for Filipinos considering what to buy in the US versus back home, and ends with a standalone segment on the biggest culture shocks Pea has experienced since arriving in the American Southeast.
Pea's first impression of Walmart is sheer overwhelm at the size and product variety โ
- Says she could get lost inside; describes it as having "everything from donuts to dipsticks"
- Many brands and products she's never seen before, making her feel like she's "been living in an alternate universe"
Skincare and personal care products are dramatically cheaper โ
- Nivea cream: the Philippines only carries a tiny tin for about $3; Walmart has a large size for $1.38 โ less than half the price
- Vaseline comes in sizes she calls "ginormous" compared to Philippine options
- Sunscreen costs $20โ$30 in the Philippines but only $10.97 at Walmart
- Jokes about "nudie Rudy berrylicious soap with cloudberry extract" โ tells Americans "you have too much time on your hands"
- Notices cannabis rescue oil in a moisturizer, amused by the variety
Tanning lotion is a product that literally doesn't exist in Philippine stores โ
Explains that Filipinos want to whiten their skin, the exact opposite of American tanning culture
Says "you'll never see this in the Philippines"
Walmart sells adult toys โ Pea's reaction: "Shame on you Walmart โ I'll take two"
Spots "sweet peas" (the vegetable) and jokes they're selling her sisters for only 98 cents: "I didn't realize we are that cheap"
Frozen food section is a major culture-shock moment โ
- Frozen food is "almost impossible" to find in most of the Philippines; might be available at specialty stores like SNR in Manila or Cebu
- The sheer variety explains to her why Americans "don't cook anymore" โ "the art of cooking is dying because of this convenience"
- Points out that most Filipinos don't own microwave ovens, so this entire product category is alien
- Filipinos cook from scratch by default; Pea wants to try frozen pizza anyway
Sugar-free chocolate blows her mind โ
- In the Philippines, "everything is loaded with sugar โ even spaghetti," referencing Jollibee's famously sweet spaghetti
- Americans have healthy options readily available; Filipinos essentially don't
Electronics are where the price gap gets extreme โ
- Samsung 75-inch TV: $1,298 at Walmart vs. approximately $2,500 at Robinson's in the Philippines โ literally double
- Attributes the Philippine markup to government taxes
- Laptops follow the same pattern: a $494 Walmart laptop would cost twice as much in the Philippines, and Philippine warranties are worse
- Fantasizes about buying electronics in bulk to resell in the Philippines but acknowledges immigration would stop her
Pet food variety is absurdly better in the US โ
- Philippines carries maybe two flavors of Temptations cat treats and occasionally a party mix; Walmart has an entire aisle
- Jokes: "You've got puppy uppers, you've got doggy downers โ all your pets are so spoiled"
Toilet paper gets a cultural deep-dive โ
"You Americans and your toilet paper โ you have a very strong relationship, you can't survive without the other"
Most Filipinos use the "tabo system" (soap and water with a dipper) instead of toilet paper
Philippine grocery stores carry minimal toilet paper variety โ "maybe this much and then maybe two stacks"
Notes that Charmin was a Survivor reward challenge prize and jokes "if it's good enough for your American butts, it's good enough for me"
Kayaks being sold at Walmart surprises her โ "one thing we could learn from you Americans is how to have fun"
Self-checkout is a novelty she's never experienced โ
- Says the Philippines could really use these to avoid long queues
- Walks through the process step by step, excited about scanning items herself
- Total purchase: $24.72, pays cash
Brief interaction with a Walmart greeter โ
- Pea tells the greeter she works online, is on vacation, and it's her first time in the US
- Greeter confirms there are "quite a few" Filipinos in the area
- Pea calls her a star: "Welcome to Walmart, I love you"
Overall verdict: Pea loves Walmart and doesn't understand the American love-hate relationship with it โ
- "Great selection and inexpensive prices"
- Says if one Walmart opened in the Philippines, "it would put all the other stores out of business"
BONUS SEGMENT: Culture shocks since arriving in the US Southeast โ
Acknowledges she's very dark from a beach interview the day before โ jokes about turning "almost black" from one day in the sun
The concept of space is the biggest shock
- Everything in the US feels "stretched out" โ houses aren't jammed against businesses, there's open green space everywhere
- A grocery store might be 10 miles away but reachable in 15 minutes; in the Philippines, 5 miles can take 30 minutes due to traffic (says she's not exaggerating)
- Driving between states gives you a sense of the country's sheer size
- Roads "go on and on" and driving is so smooth you risk falling asleep โ the opposite of the Philippines where "if you blink you're dead because of all the obstacles"
- Mentions almost falling asleep driving from Saint Augustine; saved by coffee
Americans take road rules seriously
- Everyone knows etiquette like U-turn rules and four-way stop order
- Complete opposite of the Philippines where "the most aggressive driver gets to go first," bigger cars dominate, and "traffic laws are basically just suggestions"
- Pea prefers the American system: "everything is so orderly and efficient"
- Still learning American merging and lane customs
Where are all the people?
- Streets feel empty compared to the Philippines
- Even a store at "normal" shopper capacity felt "virtually empty" to her
- Philippines has 10x the population density of the US
- Does the math: "if you added nine more Americans for every one you see, that's what it feels like in the Philippines"
- Calls herself a hermit who finds it perfect, but says an average Filipino would find it very strange
The silence is eerie
- Can walk outside and hear "literally not a single thing โ nothing but birds or maybe a few insects"
- This is in the middle of a neighborhood in a city, not a remote farm
- Didn't realize how noisy the Philippines is until experiencing this quiet
- Jokes: "If your Filipina comes to visit, you might have to get a recording of barking dogs just so she can sleep at night"
American money is confusing
- All bills are the same size and color โ she finds it "kind of dull"
- Trying to learn which presidents are on which bills
- Coins are especially confusing: a nickel is bigger than a dime, and a penny weighs more than a dime
- Philippine currency comes in six different colors, making it easy to tell apart
- Shows her Philippine bills and says she likes Filipino paper money better than "greenbacks" because it's more colorful
- Acknowledges Philippine coins are "a mess" but still prefers the paper money aesthetics