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We went out for our 2nd time ever to do street interviews back in August and asked people about what they really liked about Vancouver, conspiracy theories they actually believe in, and even some more serious questions around mental health.
We got some great answers. Every person is unique and that's what we love about Vancouver. What are your thoughts on people's answers? What should we ask next time?
More details:
We hit the streets of Vancouver to get real takes from real people. After doing two days of street interviews around English Bay, we sat down to react to everything we captured. From deeper conversations about mental health to wild conspiracy theories and everything in between.
Vancouver came up a lot, obviously. People talked about Vancouver nature and beaches, the incredible Vancouver sunsets, the brutal cost of living Vancouver residents deal with, and the housing crisis Vancouver can't seem to shake. We got perspectives from locals and visitors, including comparisons between Montreal vs Vancouver and even heard from students visiting from Germany and Italy experiencing major culture shock. The job market Vancouver offers (or doesn't) was another hot topic.
Healthcare Canada debate dominated several conversations. We discussed mental health Vancouver, mental health access Canada, and how difficult it actually is to get help when you need it. Natural medicine vs pharmaceuticals came up, and people shared thoughts on alternative medicine debate, medication dependence concerns, and pain management discussions. We heard serious illness journeys, non-traditional wellness stories, and emerging mental-health modalities that are changing how people think about healing. Plant-based wellness topics and mindfulness walking therapy were big themes too.
The pandemic lifestyle changes people made stuck around. Meditation and mindfulness became daily practices for some. Breath work walks turned into serious self-care routines. Gratitude and nature took on new meaning. People realized beaches vs winter weather actually impacts mental health, and vitamin D and mood are directly connected.
Social media addiction was huge. We talked about deleting social media, the difference between YouTube vs social media platforms, TikTok addiction destroying attention spans, and brain rot content taking over. One person went seven years without social media. Anonymous internet hate and online trolling problem came up—people are tired of the toxicity. Online civility does not exist anymore. We compared Reddit vs X (Twitter) and discussed why social media hiatus periods are becoming necessary.
CBC journalism Canada got defended by an actual former CBC reporter we interviewed. Tim Hortons employees discourse happened (those workers deserve respect). Immigration debate Canada came up naturally. Someone even mentioned language police Quebec which sent us down a rabbit hole.
Conspiracy theories discussion went wild. Aliens and UFOs, obviously. Avril Lavigne replacement theory versus John Lennon conspiracy. We debated inventions we regret—nukes, guns, AI concerns and future implications. ChatGPT education debate sparked disagreements about whether AI helps or hurts learning.
Public opinion vox pop style, we asked the invisible hypothetical question (what would you do if you woke up invisible?) and heard incredible acts of kindness stories that restored our faith in humanity.
Students and college life perspectives added younger voices. Canucks hockey fans showed up representing hard. Vancouver Canucks love is real, and Rogers Arena vibes are unmatched. Sports fandom community brings people together unlike anything else.
We kept it real, kept it Vancouver, and captured what people actually think when you put a mic in their face. Shoutout to everyone who stopped to chat with us at English Bay. And yeah, we referenced the NPC social media trend because we literally saw one in real life.
By LIMELIGHTWe went out for our 2nd time ever to do street interviews back in August and asked people about what they really liked about Vancouver, conspiracy theories they actually believe in, and even some more serious questions around mental health.
We got some great answers. Every person is unique and that's what we love about Vancouver. What are your thoughts on people's answers? What should we ask next time?
More details:
We hit the streets of Vancouver to get real takes from real people. After doing two days of street interviews around English Bay, we sat down to react to everything we captured. From deeper conversations about mental health to wild conspiracy theories and everything in between.
Vancouver came up a lot, obviously. People talked about Vancouver nature and beaches, the incredible Vancouver sunsets, the brutal cost of living Vancouver residents deal with, and the housing crisis Vancouver can't seem to shake. We got perspectives from locals and visitors, including comparisons between Montreal vs Vancouver and even heard from students visiting from Germany and Italy experiencing major culture shock. The job market Vancouver offers (or doesn't) was another hot topic.
Healthcare Canada debate dominated several conversations. We discussed mental health Vancouver, mental health access Canada, and how difficult it actually is to get help when you need it. Natural medicine vs pharmaceuticals came up, and people shared thoughts on alternative medicine debate, medication dependence concerns, and pain management discussions. We heard serious illness journeys, non-traditional wellness stories, and emerging mental-health modalities that are changing how people think about healing. Plant-based wellness topics and mindfulness walking therapy were big themes too.
The pandemic lifestyle changes people made stuck around. Meditation and mindfulness became daily practices for some. Breath work walks turned into serious self-care routines. Gratitude and nature took on new meaning. People realized beaches vs winter weather actually impacts mental health, and vitamin D and mood are directly connected.
Social media addiction was huge. We talked about deleting social media, the difference between YouTube vs social media platforms, TikTok addiction destroying attention spans, and brain rot content taking over. One person went seven years without social media. Anonymous internet hate and online trolling problem came up—people are tired of the toxicity. Online civility does not exist anymore. We compared Reddit vs X (Twitter) and discussed why social media hiatus periods are becoming necessary.
CBC journalism Canada got defended by an actual former CBC reporter we interviewed. Tim Hortons employees discourse happened (those workers deserve respect). Immigration debate Canada came up naturally. Someone even mentioned language police Quebec which sent us down a rabbit hole.
Conspiracy theories discussion went wild. Aliens and UFOs, obviously. Avril Lavigne replacement theory versus John Lennon conspiracy. We debated inventions we regret—nukes, guns, AI concerns and future implications. ChatGPT education debate sparked disagreements about whether AI helps or hurts learning.
Public opinion vox pop style, we asked the invisible hypothetical question (what would you do if you woke up invisible?) and heard incredible acts of kindness stories that restored our faith in humanity.
Students and college life perspectives added younger voices. Canucks hockey fans showed up representing hard. Vancouver Canucks love is real, and Rogers Arena vibes are unmatched. Sports fandom community brings people together unlike anything else.
We kept it real, kept it Vancouver, and captured what people actually think when you put a mic in their face. Shoutout to everyone who stopped to chat with us at English Bay. And yeah, we referenced the NPC social media trend because we literally saw one in real life.