I was traveling from Italy to Slovakia last summer as a member of the U.S. Junior National Team in canoe slalom with a Slovak coach who was coaching Team Kazakhstan. The Kazakhs were borrowing the coach's black Mercedes van and needed it to drive their boats and luggage to Milan airport, so I had to ride with them to Milan. Riding around Italy in a black Mercedes van with a bunch of Kazakhs who (mostly) couldn't speak English seemed really sketchy at the time. Now that Peter has documented how people will hitch rides with strangers everywhere across Almaty without second thought, I completely understand why the Kazakh team was willing to let some American stranger hitch a ride with them on his way to Slovakia. We even swapped Team USA and Team Kazakhstan shirts as a mark of mutual respect. I fail to recall meeting a friendlier group of people than the Kazakhs, and they are a significant reason why I now want to travel to Kazakhstan in the near future.
Why: 290 likes, extraordinary personal story that perfectly mirrors the video's hospitality theme — swapping USA/Kazakhstan team jerseys in a Milan van is the kind of cross-cultural moment that could anchor a follow-up video or community post
Draft replyThis is one of the best comments I've ever gotten — the universe basically made you live the video before you even saw it. That jersey swap is exactly the spirit I found there. You have to go.
@patrickwilliam8060 · high↗ view Thank you for sharing your thoughts on the country. I've recently married in the states and my wife is originally from Atyrau, we are having a larger wedding ceremony in Almaty next May. I can't wait to visit brushing up on my Russian and keeping more about the culture will hopefully help enhance my stay there.
Why: Deeply personal stake — Almaty wedding coming up, learning Russian, wife from Kazakhstan; a warm public reply here builds community and may spark a collab or future video
Draft replyCongrats — an Almaty wedding is going to be something else. The city will treat you well. Keep at the Russian, even a little goes a long way with people there.
Петер за 6 минут рассказал так круто что за нашу независимость правительство не смогло рассказать за эти годы... thanks Peter
Why: 276 likes — the top Russian-language comment; says Peter communicated Kazakhstan's value better in 6 minutes than the government has in years of independence. A reply validates the local audience who found the video.
Draft replyThis means everything to me — thank you. You and your country made it easy to talk about. The place speaks for itself.
@liya4209 · high
Как приятно слышать от вас тёплые слова о нашей стране. Казахи довольно толерантный народ, наверное поэтому удаётся сохранить дружбу с разными народами и религиями. Приезжайте ещё, будем рады Вас сново видеть (отдельное спасибо за субтитры)
Why: 183 likes, specifically thanks for Russian subtitles — acknowledging this publicly signals to the audience that their language access matters to Peter
Draft replyThe subtitles felt necessary — this video was as much for Kazakhstanis as for everyone else. Thank you for the warm welcome, I hope to come back and see more of the country.
@franksthagen7186 · high↗ view Since I live in Sweden, I usually go by car to Ukraine for vacation. Last year, however, I was looking for cheap flights to Kyiv and "discovered" that hey - Almaty looks affordable. A city I mainly remembered from watching ice skating on TV as a child. So I went. And apart from getting ripped off in a classic tourist taxi scam, I can corroborate what Peter says here about Almaty. I felt pretty safe, and Almaty is a nice city to stroll around in. And even go up as high as 3200+ meters above sea level nearby. If I go again, I'll probably rent a car to go outside the city. Let's just hope for a democratic development in this beautiful country some day in the future.
Why: 142 likes, independent corroboration from someone who went on a whim — this is social proof gold; taxi scam note is honest and worth acknowledging
Draft replyThe taxi scam thing — yeah, standard move at the airport. Once you're past that you're fine. Glad it didn't sour the whole trip. Rent that car next time, the drive outside the city is worth it.
Thanks, Peter. But please never say "Nur-Sultan"... Say Astana! Nursultan is a decrepit dictator
Why: 55 likes and a politically charged correction — acknowledging it briefly and honestly shows Peter isn't afraid of nuance; ignoring it looks tone-deaf to local audience
Draft replyFair point — I recorded this when the name change was still new to me. Astana it is going forward.
Great video, absolutely love it! Borat has definitely had a negative impact on how the country is viewed and many people in Kazakhstan really dislike it for that. I'm pretty sure it was actually banned in Kazakhstan for a certain period of time! Personally, I dislike it, but it is after all just a comedic movie that isn't supposed to be taken seriously, only ever meant to point out the fact that Westerners are willing to believe anything at this point. Pity the movie had to prove that point through Kazakhstan, though. On the topic of 'stan' I find it hilarious and sad at the same time that it is grouped with Afghanistan and other such places. Someone once asked me where I'm from and upon responding "Kazakhstan" they immediately say "oh I'm so sorry for what's happening in your country". Please, we aren't Afghanistan!
Why: The 'I'm so sorry for what's happening in your country' anecdote is devastatingly funny and shareable — worth quoting back and amplifying
Draft reply"Oh I'm so sorry for what's happening in your country" — that actually made me laugh and cringe at the same time. That's exactly the misconception I was trying to chip away at. The ban detail I didn't know — that tracks.
Peter, thank you for making this video and showing people how beautiful my home country can be compared to Borat, which by the way was filmed in Romania and the main actor was speaking Hebrew most of the time and there was not a single Kazakh person in that movie. So yeah, thanks!
Why: Interesting factual detail (filmed in Romania, spoken in Hebrew) that many viewers won't know — Peter repeating this in a reply adds value and credibility to the Borat critique
Draft replyWait — Hebrew?? I didn't know that detail and it makes the whole thing even more absurd. Filmed in Romania, no Kazakh cast, Hebrew dialogue. The movie had nothing to do with the actual country.
Is Kazakhstan safe for Brown Asian?
Why: A genuine, specific safety question that many potential travelers share but won't ask — a direct public answer from Peter serves hundreds of lurkers
Draft replyFrom what I saw, yes — Almaty is genuinely cosmopolitan, lots of different ethnicities living and working together. I'd say go, walk around, and see for yourself, but I didn't notice hostility toward anyone.
Hi Peter, please stop encouraging people to visit Kazakhstan. I like that it's a more quirky destination off the main tourist trail. Joking a little here, and best wishes from Tajikistan.
Why: Playful, self-aware humor from someone in Tajikistan — a fun public exchange here could generate thread engagement and tees up a natural 'Tajikistan next?' moment
Draft replyHa — noted, I'll keep it quiet. And yes, Tajikistan is absolutely on the list.
@christopheroneill3810 · low↗ view Hi Peter, thanks for your video. I lived in Almaty for a couple of years and I can verify all you say is true. Thanks for letting people know. Almaty really is a great, quite modern city and the people are very friendly and open. The highlight for me is the spectacularly beautiful big mountains (up to 5000 metres high) so close by with skiing, climbing, hiking etc. The city itself can be a bit hot in the middle of summer (and a bit polluted in winter with all the coal fired central heating plants) but beautiful parks and fountains everywhere. Highly recommended!
Why: Two-year local adds honest detail (summer heat, winter coal pollution) that Peter didn't mention — acknowledging the nuance builds trust
Draft replyTwo years — you know it on a level I never could from a short visit. The winter pollution note is the kind of thing I couldn't speak to. Thanks for filling in the gaps honestly.
Honestly don't think Borat did any harm to the country's image. If anything it put them on the map and increased tourism. Beautiful country though! Definitely on the list to visit! 🇰🇿
Why: Genuine counterpoint to Peter's Borat critique — a short, fair reply shows Peter can hold two ideas at once and invites more discussion
Draft replyThere's probably something to that — any attention is attention. But I've heard from enough Kazakhstanis who wince at it that I think the feelings are mixed at best. Either way, the country itself settles the debate.