Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a DC native, I think we are less ambitious than people who move here for their career.
Yup from another DC native!
Definitely.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Twenty years from now, the answers will be, "You remember when
1) Jackson-Reed was called Wilson
2) Connecticut Ave used contra-flow during rush hour
3) CityLine was Fannie Mae
4) Georgetown Day and Sidwell had separated campuses
5) Rock Creek Park had car traffic north of Broad Branch
6) You used to watch movies as Mazza Gallerie
Real OGs watched movies at Union Station .
Those theaters opened in 1988.
Real OGs remember the creepy adult theaters that used to be down near Ford’s Theater, when that neighborhood was still burned out.
+1. And watched double features at the Biograph in Georgetown.
Or the Rocky Horror Picture Show at the Key!
Ding ding ding!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Twenty years from now, the answers will be, "You remember when
1) Jackson-Reed was called Wilson
2) Connecticut Ave used contra-flow during rush hour
3) CityLine was Fannie Mae
4) Georgetown Day and Sidwell had separated campuses
5) Rock Creek Park had car traffic north of Broad Branch
6) You used to watch movies as Mazza Gallerie
Real OGs watched movies at Union Station .
Those theaters opened in 1988.
Real OGs remember the creepy adult theaters that used to be down near Ford’s Theater, when that neighborhood was still burned out.
+1. And watched double features at the Biograph in Georgetown.
Or the Rocky Horror Picture Show at the Key!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Still Calls Reagan airport national
That’s me. Will never be anything but Washington National Airport.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Twenty years from now, the answers will be, "You remember when
1) Jackson-Reed was called Wilson
2) Connecticut Ave used contra-flow during rush hour
3) CityLine was Fannie Mae
4) Georgetown Day and Sidwell had separated campuses
5) Rock Creek Park had car traffic north of Broad Branch
6) You used to watch movies as Mazza Gallerie
Real OGs watched movies at Union Station .
Those theaters opened in 1988.
Real OGs remember the creepy adult theaters that used to be down near Ford’s Theater, when that neighborhood was still burned out.
+1. And watched double features at the Biograph in Georgetown.
Anonymous wrote:There is a DMV-Baltimore accent.
Anonymous wrote:Natives aren’t obsessed with being perceived as being in a big city, don’t refer to Virginia and Maryland as the “bridge and tunnel crowd”, don’t get all hot and bothered when someone from the MD side of Takoma says they’re from DC and insist they’re actually from Maryland and have nothing to do with DC, don’t care about your brush with some famous politician, doesn’t think “no one is from DC”, doesn’t think all cowboys fans are from Texas and knows why, and definitely doesn’t say DMV unless they mean the department of motor vehicles
Anonymous wrote:They are nice. It's really that simple.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can tell because DC natives will announce their native status every chance they get.
And the ones in NWDC and Chevy Chase think of all friendships and social engagements as networking. That is the most distinct trait. Networking networking rather than just being friends. It is quite a strange phenomenon. What can someone do
For them either now or on the future. I don’t view people like that.
Anonymous wrote:black DC natives--their grandparents or great parents are all from North Carolina, moved to DC to for work during WW2; they have a distinct accent that they don't share with other AAs; stick with each other, I think since they come from such large families, have many brothers, sisters, cousins in the area, really do no see need to expand social circle outward; dress in a particular way--I am AA, and feel very different from AA DC natives.
white DC natives (well white DC natives from SE DC)--grandparents or great grandparents moved from Appalachia or Northern Virginia or NC to work in DC during WW2
Anonymous wrote:You can tell because DC natives will announce their native status every chance they get.
Anonymous wrote:It was wild listening to the older generation talk about growing up in DC. How they hung out at a roller skating rink in the 60's and before that (during segregation) there were clubs that had no names and were basically downstairs of someone's home.