Move over fat and obnoxious American tourists ... according to a new survey by Expedia.fr, the most obnoxious tourists from the Western world are ... the French!
... the study also describes the voyageur français as often unwilling or unable to communicate in foreign languages, and particularly disinclined to spend money when they don't have to — including those non compris tips. Overall, French travelers landed 19th out of 21 nations worldwide, far behind the first-place Japanese, considered the most polite, quiet and tidy. Following the Japanese as most-liked tourists were the Germans, British and Canadians. Americans finished in 11th place alongside the Thais.
Link - Thanks Geekazoid!
"Americans, by contrast, demand the same exceptional service they are used to at home, which is why they rank as the loudest, most inclined to complain and among the least polite."
I would also include Australians in this ;)
I've been living in Thailand and the apartment I'm living in is 80% or more japanese and they are the loudest and rudest people I've ever seen. They gather in groups and they just start talking. Even in nice quiet Italian restaurants, if there is a group of japanese (3 is enough). The whole restaurant can hear what they are saying! except we dont understand them.
I consider japanese people to be amongst the worst tourist.
When I went to japan for a trip it was completely different, they are nice and polite. They are even quiet in restaurants.
Maybe it's because they are in a different country and they just don't care??
I think the whole thing is a load of rubbish
(I am British BTW)
In France, service is ALWAYS comprised in the bill (15%), in bars, cafés and restaurants. Tipping is so only when you feel like, and often only a small amount (it's all extra in the waiter's pocket, who already has a decent (albeit not huge...) salary with social security and retirement plan).
So, abroad, French people don't realize immediately that waiters live in fact from tipping.
Sorry for the omission. Having said that two thirds of Canadians speaks English exclusively. French speakers only amount for a less than a quarter of Canada population and I don't think they were part of those who complained French tourists wouldn't speak the local language.
ahhhh i finally get to quote groundskeeper willie....
"Cocoricooooo!"
As a Canadian, I wouldn't be annoyed if a French person spoke French to me. We all learn the language in school, so it would be fun practice. I prefer "real" French anyway... I can't understand "Quebecois" (same language, horribly mangled accent).
I don't think the anti-French sentiment is as bad here as you think it is, anyway. That seems to be more of an American thing. And as far as them not speaking other languages, my sister found the opposite when she went to France. Everywhere she went, she'd start out in French and the people would automatically switch to English. Maybe they're more stubborn when they travel... I don't know.
I will agree about the Chinese, though. There are lots of them here (tourists and residents). A lot don't bother to learn the language. It's frustrating to have to deal with them in public. I always end up feeling like the stupid one because I can't understand them. Last time I checked, though, Chinese was not one of our official languages.
"Maybe it’s because they are in a different country and they just don’t care??"
Same goes for everybody. Look at the American military. They just get drunk, rape, and then go off and kill somebody the next day.
And Bah.. has a very good analysis of French tiping.
Actually, Québecois French is closer to the actual French root language. The Frence language in France continued its natural evolution and became what it is today whereas Québecois French evolved from the language spoken by the original colonists being mostly the rural, common or less aristocratic people of that period. If you research what French sounded like back in the 17th and 18th century, it would surprisingly sound close to Québecois.
19 out of 21 doesn't make them the worst. Who is the 21st?
I thought that the majority of the French settlers of the Quebec area were loyal to the aristocracy. I could very well be confused. I agree with the part about Quebecois French being closer to the original French root language. One thing that you can see is that the Revolution never changed the Quebecois French in the use of pronouns and using Catholic Church objects as swears.
In my own personal experience, the only tourists I've met that has left me with a bad impression were Lebanese (not exactly in the west, then) and that is because the lady I spoke with was particularly moody. But I concur with the survey, the japanese tourists I've met have been wonderful, because they wanted to know more about the regional culture. The swedes I've met have been very nice too.
Not many people know that and I'm glad you said it. Your statement is quite true.
Interesting side note, I've noticed that even tourists from different states within the US act differently. Just something to consider.
Well, I'm not in the 17th or 18th centuries, am I? History aside, it doesn't help me understand the language past the accent. (It's "farmer French"... LOL. I bet the folks in Quebec would take offense to that!)