1) Having watched the whole series of Sharpe (90's Napoleonic war tales starring Sean Bean), I read one American reviewer's comments concerning his difficulty in understanding the various accents - the main characters were from Yorkshire and Ireland, although there was the occasional Scot alongside the Cornishman and upper class Londoners. My question is: are British regional accents so hard to distinguish? Can you (Americans) tell Manchester from Liverpool, Newcastle and Birmingham? Can you tell Northern Irish from Southern, and from Scots (BTW don't include Sean Connery's attempt at Irish in The Untouchables - not even close to being accurate)? Or do you still think we all sound like Hugh Grant or Dick van Dyke?
(Before the Brits get carried away - can you tell Shropshire from Worcestershire? I can't!)
2) From the other side, there are some very distinctive American regional variations: the New York Bronx (although in many movies the Jewish and Italian intonation seems very similar), the Texan drawl, Alabama/Mississippi, the upper class Boston - but can one tell that someone is from say, Washington state rather than Oregon? North v South Dakota? Kansas v Iowa? Or does the mid-West all melt into one?
