Europeans are crossing interstate HIGHWAYS? Americans Laugh

In April 2026, NJ Transit announced that round-trip train tickets to MetLife Stadium during the World Cup would cost $150 per fan — roughly twelve times the regular fare of $12.50 for the same nine-mile ride. The response from European fans was immediate and completely logical to them — if the train is that expensive, they would simply walk. A spokesperson for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey announced that any such attempt was "not safe or actually feasible." TikTok videos were less measured — "Europeans think they can walk to MetLife Stadium. Have Europeans ever seen what that route looks like? It is literally just freeways and swamps." And that reaction tells you everything you need to know about America. Because in Europe, walking to a stadium is not a wild idea — it is Tuesday. Stadiums are built inside cities, next to train stations, surrounded by pavements, bars, and people. In America, a stadium sits in the middle of a highway interchange in New Jersey, and the question of how to get there without a car or an overpriced train ticket genuinely has no good answer. This video is not really about a stadium. It is about a country that was built entirely around the car — and what happens when the rest of the world shows up and expects to be able to walk somewhere. #MetLifeStadium #WorldCup2026 #EuropeansInAmerica #WalkableCity #AmericaIsUnwalkable #CarDependency #OnlyInAmerica #AmericaVsEurope #WorldCupTravel #FIFAWorldCup #AmericanProblems #EuropeanReactions #AmericaExplained #UrbanPlanning