Something I've been wondering about Arin recently: does he sound any different today? Accents aren't as easy to distinguish when you aren't from the country so to any American kiwis: do people from California sound significantly different from people from Florida? If so, does Arin sound more Californian now? Does Dan?
For reference, here's a video from 2008 (before he moved):
Here's a video from today:
Kind of random, I know, but I was just wondering.
Part of it has to do with age and time. Inflection and all that. Another is that there is accents in the US but Florida versus California isn't really a noticable one. Aside from the valley girl or bro accents (which I'm not sure if people even use anymore) the most accent differences is at most how you pronounce certain words. You can sometimes tell what part of the country someone is from based on how they pronounce a word or even what word they choose to call an item. Example: "Soda" vs "Pop" vs "Coke".
Or
"Jimmies" vs "Sprinkles"
Or
"Lollipop" vs "Sucker"
Mind you, I've only heard of people claiming some areas call all soda, 'coke'.
There are more obvious accents around the US. Like Southern accents, New Jersey accents, things like that. There are more but I can't recall them all off the top of my head.
A chunk of the US comes off as "accentless" as far as I know.
This isn't counting for race, which can obviously affect your accent. (Hispanic, Jewish, Middle Eastern, Black, Asian) Or where you're from, but that can change. RubberRoss, a friend of the grumps, is originally from Australia and due to living in the US for so long, he lost his Australian accent.
Note that this isn't the rule or anything. The US is diverse after all. I hear it's
~our strength~ or something gay like that.

(Spoiler: it's not)
Ironically, Arin and Dan have had a lot of these kinds of conversations in the past. How different areas of the US pronounce certain words. Being from New Jersey, Dan comments a lot about word choice and pronunciation in games they're playing since New Jersey has some verbal culture of their own.
Your eyes aren't prepared enough, I'm certain.
The only nice thing about this video is that the dislike bar is pretty big. Not as much as the like bar, but bigger than usual.