Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The blue collar parts of NJ are closer to NYC so there is more interaction - in the city, your plumber or carpenter may be coming in from NJ but less likely so from CT.
Since a lot of pop culture originates from NYC, this perception has been amplified.
Then there's the Boss...who, by the way, has never held a blue collar job.
Lots of people come into NYC from CT, but I think they tend to be in white-collar professions.
My guess is media, though. Bruce Springsteen, for sure, but the NJ blue collar stereotype gets used all the time. And people outside of the area aren't familiar with either state, really, but they've likely heard of Greenwich as being very wealthy.
Anonymous wrote:The blue collar parts of NJ are closer to NYC so there is more interaction - in the city, your plumber or carpenter may be coming in from NJ but less likely so from CT.
Since a lot of pop culture originates from NYC, this perception has been amplified.
Then there's the Boss...who, by the way, has never held a blue collar job.
Anonymous wrote:Because NJ is made money and CT is old money. For the most part, and I do agree there's plenty of rough places in CT with blue collar workers.
Anonymous wrote:Big gap between perceptions and reality. Connecticut in particular is not true to its reputation, in my experience. When I was growing up, I thought CT would be so fancy (who’s the Boss!), but when I finally spent some time there in my college years/20s, it was solid middle class. Housing is super affordable too.
Anonymous wrote:Big gap between perceptions and reality. Connecticut in particular is not true to its reputation, in my experience. When I was growing up, I thought CT would be so fancy (who’s the Boss!), but when I finally spent some time there in my college years/20s, it was solid middle class. Housing is super affordable too.
Anonymous wrote:most outsiders are only familiar with Fairfield County CT