He claims that the way he drops Ts when he speaks (e.g., moun'ain, foun'ain, impor'ant, etc) is his Pennsylvania accent, but I am skeptical. While I don't know many people from Scranton, I've met many from Pittsburgh and Philadelphia - both of which have very specific and very unique local accents, and no one from those parts of the state speaks that way. If anything, it's closer to a British Cockney accent, but regardless, he could drop it if he were to put forth the effort to work on it.
And while I'm talking about the way he speaks, can I complain about his "anywhos" catchphrase? It's a folksy take on "anyhow" or "anyway" and, whatever, I'm fine with that. My problem is that he's using it wrong! Those words are usually used to get back on track after a bit of a diversion. If he were to start by laying out his plans for the day, then tell a little related story which leads to a different less-related story which reminds him of something else totally unrelated, THEN it would make sense to say "Anywhos, let's go do this" to get back to the main topic, but that's not what he does! Instead, he just says what he's going to do in the video and then shoehorns in his stupid catchphrase. "Here's where I'm going to go today; anywhos, let's go do this."