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I don't have cities I would not live in, I have entire states, entire REGIONS I will never live in. In fact, everytime Mr. KR is approached by a headhunter trying to get him to change jobs, he knows he has to look at my "list" to see if the place is acceptable or not.
The list is as follows: Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire: YES Rhode Island: YES, as long it's near Newport Connecticut, New York, New Jersey (mainly because the in-laws live there), Delaware: NO Pennsylvania: YES, but only if it's west of Harrisburg or south of Butler County Virginia: YES if it's the Tidewater region, around Richmond or the S/W part of the state. NOVA is a big NONO Washington, D.C. NooooooooooWaaaaaaaaaaay Let's just say that a relative is a homicide detective there who owns a 5 bedroom McMansion and drives a high end Mercedes and an Escalade. I don't want to live in a place that has to pay its cops so much money that they live like sheiks. Lots of overtime = lots of murder. Um, no thanks, there. West Virginia: no thanks North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia: yes, but only certain areas Florida: maybe the Gulf Coast, particularly the Panhandle or JAX because we have friends there. Ohio, Alabama,maybe Indiana, Arkansas, Louisiana, Missouri, Illinois: NO Any state that hasn't yet been mentioned, is by default on my list of "states I'd chew glass before I'd allow myself to move there." |
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When I was little, maybe between ages of 2 and 5, we lived in Miami because my father was finishing up school there. It was a place called Libertyville or Liberty City or Liberty something! Do you know it? I don't know if that would be north Dade or south Dade. |
No offense, as always...I'm not in the biz of offending people.. These places suck:
Detroit, New Jersey, LA, All of Wisconsin, Miami, the entire country of France, Cinci, Cleveland, All of Ohio, Philly, Pittsburgh, again Pittsburgh, Boston, people who talk like they're from Boston, Houston, New Orleans, ________, Florida, and NYC(especially NYC)... D.C. and Atlanta both suck, but both have their redeeming non-thug qualities. |
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What people do not realize is the St Louis is just that St. Louis and actually small. But, the burbs are a lot different for sure. I remember when Chesterfield was fields until they built Chesterfield Mall. Then it started booming. The Hill for good Italian food is nice. Cant remember all of teh burbs names, but stayed in Sunset Hills when I travelled to St L every other week. Dionysis two things, do you remember Demetris in Chesterfield a great Greek Resturant and Florisent? N-S-E-W Florisent and all met at one intersection? Wow. That was strange!:D Clayton was pretty ritzy! |
I see various people here liked San Antonio. I loved it when I visited it. I saw the Riverwalk, the Alamo, the Mexican market, and the big Mall. I don't know if I would like to live there for good, but it is a wonderful place to visit and I can only say good things about it.
Atlanta- depends on the part. I like the suburbs (like Marietta and Smyrna). I like Buckhead. I did not like the southern part close to the airport. NYC is cool to visit, but I don't want to move there. Too expensive anyway. I really like Wisconsin. If it weren't so far away from my family, and if there were more things pertaining to my hobbies to do there, I would move there. I used to fantasize about going to work for Pleasant Company- and I still check their job listings every once in a while. I used to say that the state I would like the least to move to was Utah. I have been there before. Now I can think of many other nominees before Utah would show up. And I dreamed of Alaska last night, but have no interest in moving there. Still preferable to Hawaii, which does not appeal to me in the least bit. |
Atlanta. Just thinking about driving in that place gives me a headache. I hate the idea of sprawl, and it's not what I want culturally. Unfortunately, I have to go there for a conference for work next month. I will self-medicate with lots of Jack Daniels.
Panama City Beach, Florida. Dirty. Trashy. Dirty. Trashy. Los Angeles Some people love it; I can handle the suburbs. I guess I have an aversion to traffic. Charlotte. I like a little more culture in my cities, thanks. I'm ambivalent about St. Louis. The boy's from there, and the reason I wouldn't move there is because of the inevitable parents-in-our-business, not the actual city. I've been there enough to avoid the areas where I could get shot. |
Whole lotta hate on this thread...
New Jersey, like many states, has its good, its bad, and its ugly. I spent the morning at the Shore and am heading to a dance festival in Hoboken shortly. There are few places in this country where you can find all the culture and beauty that is found here in the Garden State! Personally, I would not want to live in *any* city; I prefer the suburbs. I enjoy being close to NYC and all the benefits it offers (like Sloan Kettering - given the recent cases of cancer in my family lately, living less than an hour away from THE best cancer hospital in the US is truly a blessing!). To answer whomever posted the question, I would agree that Newark, Camden, Trenton, Patterson, et al, are NJ cities to avoid. Please don't slam the entire state. [/soapbox] |
Cherry Hills is nice and close to Philly!:)
Great Greek Resturant, but had an Italian Belly dancer? What is with that?:confused: |
No Title.
New york!!!!! > One, too much urine. Two, too much litter. Three, WAY too many people. Finally, People exist there. They don't live. They don't just take the time to sit down and relax. Now honestly, How many people do you see Sitting outside on their porch talking to their neighbor or playing with their kids or grandkids? Or even stop moving for 2 seconds?? I'm From Mississippi. Yeah, the SOUTH. I swear, I HATE that stereotype That we're dumb and lazy. We just like to relax a little, and people from the North don't understand that. They move around too much! Well, I love you anyway. :D
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St. Louis and Memphis!
I watched a special about the New Madrid fault today. St. Louis and Memphis and anywhere within a 350 mile radius are screwed when that thing lets loose again! :eek: |
^Good call.
To Russ, I've been in and around NYC, but I honestly am not familiar enough to tell you much about places I liked or disliked. I def have not spent enough time there to know streets or many different areas. However, I just didnt like it, for a couple reasons... 1) Its kinda dirty, I know they've cleaned up crime and such, but I just prefer cleaner areas. 2) Concrete, too much. 3) Too much of a melting pot for me. 4) Class. I'm not saying the city is completely unclassy, but people were just different. A lot more vulgarity, and a lot more rude people. I know NY'ers don't mind, but I do. |
Errr... I hate to break this to you, but NY has been found to have the politest people in the world.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/13452608/from/ET/ |
I have interacted with two different people who were very blunt and overbearing bordering on rude. But others excused them for this saying "she's from New York". I refused to accept that excuse. After all, I would not want people not expecting me to meet high standards simply because of my hometown.
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