Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It felt very safe at that time, I was in Manhattan a lot between 1998-2002 and culturally it was an exciting place to be. It had started to become a richer city - so all those warehouses on the Lower East Side had been transformed already into Bloomingdales and other chi-chi boutiques, but that also helped with the reduced crime. Guiliani was credited with "cleaning the city up" and considered a hero at that point. Oh how the mighty have fallen.
Rudy was considered a hero after 9/11.
A lot of New Yorkers saw a lot of his methods for 'cleaning up' as deeply flawed.
Sure but he cleaned it up nonetheless and everyone felt a lot safer, including me (and were you there or are you a DC commentator?)
You were there a lot for about four years. I was there pretty much every day for 18.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It felt very safe at that time, I was in Manhattan a lot between 1998-2002 and culturally it was an exciting place to be. It had started to become a richer city - so all those warehouses on the Lower East Side had been transformed already into Bloomingdales and other chi-chi boutiques, but that also helped with the reduced crime. Guiliani was credited with "cleaning the city up" and considered a hero at that point. Oh how the mighty have fallen.
Rudy was considered a hero after 9/11.
A lot of New Yorkers saw a lot of his methods for 'cleaning up' as deeply flawed.
Sure but he cleaned it up nonetheless and everyone felt a lot safer, including me (and were you there or are you a DC commentator?)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It felt very safe at that time, I was in Manhattan a lot between 1998-2002 and culturally it was an exciting place to be. It had started to become a richer city - so all those warehouses on the Lower East Side had been transformed already into Bloomingdales and other chi-chi boutiques, but that also helped with the reduced crime. Guiliani was credited with "cleaning the city up" and considered a hero at that point. Oh how the mighty have fallen.
Rudy was considered a hero after 9/11.
A lot of New Yorkers saw a lot of his methods for 'cleaning up' as deeply flawed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agreed felt very safe. I lived there when I graduated college in 2002. I never felt like I would get mugged or anything and um definitely made some poor laid night decisions.
Nice.
Anonymous wrote:Agreed felt very safe. I lived there when I graduated college in 2002. I never felt like I would get mugged or anything and um definitely made some poor laid night decisions.
Anonymous wrote:It felt very safe at that time, I was in Manhattan a lot between 1998-2002 and culturally it was an exciting place to be. It had started to become a richer city - so all those warehouses on the Lower East Side had been transformed already into Bloomingdales and other chi-chi boutiques, but that also helped with the reduced crime. Guiliani was credited with "cleaning the city up" and considered a hero at that point. Oh how the mighty have fallen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Speaking purely as a tourist, it was fantastic. The bad crime from the 70’s and 80’s didn’t seem to be a problem anymore, and it was obviously prior to the sea change that happened after 9/11. My college boyfriend lived in Long Island and I have many good memories of us taking the train into the city and bumming around Greenwich and the East Village going to record stores and vintage shops, eating at hole-in-the-wall restaurants. Sigh.
Sigh is right. Walking up one flight of stairs from 6th Ave near 8th street to get to this place immediately came to mind when I saw the title of this thread. A bygone era.
https://www.fatbeats.com/pages/about-us
Anonymous wrote:Speaking purely as a tourist, it was fantastic. The bad crime from the 70’s and 80’s didn’t seem to be a problem anymore, and it was obviously prior to the sea change that happened after 9/11. My college boyfriend lived in Long Island and I have many good memories of us taking the train into the city and bumming around Greenwich and the East Village going to record stores and vintage shops, eating at hole-in-the-wall restaurants. Sigh.