Italian Grandmother Learning to Use Google Home

Ben Actis · 2026-05-22 ·▶ Watch on YouTube ·via captions

An Italian grandmother attempts to use a Google Home smart speaker for the first time, struggling with the wake word while charming everyone with her reactions and personality. A short, lighthearted family moment. ---

Key Concepts

ConceptDefinition
Wake wordThe phrase ("Hey Google" or "Okay Google") required to activate the Google Home device before issuing a command
Google HomeA voice-activated smart speaker that responds to natural language queries for weather, music, etc.

Notes

First Contact

  • Grandmother addresses the device as "Goo goo" throughout
  • Surprised and alarmed when it responds — interprets the voice as a real woman
  • "Is a woman?" — genuinely unsettled by the human-sounding voice

Struggling with the Wake Word

  • Family member explains she must say "Hey Google" or "Okay Google" first
  • She attempts variations: "Hey, okay. Google." / "Hey no Google." / "Okay. Google."
  • Taps the device thinking it needs physical activation
  • Frequently forgets or mangles the wake phrase, causing the device to not respond

Successful Interactions

  • Successfully asks about the weather — device reports showers, high 65°F / low 56°F in Flagler Beach
  • Device accidentally triggers and reads London weather, causing confusion
  • Attempts to request "Piemontesina bella" (a traditional Piedmontese Italian song)

Grandmother's Frustration

  • Scolds the device directly: *"You're stupid 'cause I can understand everything I'm saying to you"*
  • Treats it as a misbehaving person rather than a machine

Actionable Takeaways

  1. When introducing smart speakers to elderly or first-time users, drill the wake word repeatedly before anything else
  2. Accidental triggers (device activating unprompted) can cause significant confusion — consider muting when not in use during onboarding

Quotes Worth Keeping

You're stupid 'cause I can understand everything I'm saying to you.
Is a woman?