Anonymous wrote:OP here - rent is easier for a young man than a young woman. Women need doorman buildings, men don’t -
Anonymous wrote:Nothing compares to NYC in your 20s.
Anonymous wrote:My large start up company was and still is 100 percent Remote.
In 2020-2023 we started hiring a lot of new hires fresh out of college. Fully remote from all over the country.
I say 70 percent of them relocated to NYC after graduation in a full remote job. They wanted a job in NYC or a remote job to allow them to move to NYC.
Many had roommates with NYC jobs and they joined them.
Eventually we rented a We-Works location so staff could hang out at work together and did Happy Hours for the NYC staff. In our fully remote company around 40 percent of company lived by NYC area. We were mainly young people and single people.
Eventually the same thing happened in London for our European young people.
The fully remote company now has a pretty big office in NYC and London. On Thirsty Thursdays they do once a month where they do free lunch and go to a bar happy hour fully paid by company the office is mobbed with young people. So much they started Bagels Wed and Pizza Fridays.
Old people forget what it was like to be young.
Anonymous wrote:Do you not have a brain? Millions of people live there and tens of millions of people visit it every year. It is up there with London, Paris, and Tokyo as one of the world's greatest cities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree - NYC is wonderful in your early 20s. So much to do, some many new people to meet. Even if you're poor.
Disagree. Sucks being poor there.
The people who truly enjoy it make great money or are subsidized by parents. Let’s be real.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree - NYC is wonderful in your early 20s. So much to do, some many new people to meet. Even if you're poor.
Disagree. Sucks being poor there.
Anonymous wrote:NYC is pretty much superior to DC in every way possible. How would you have any idea if you’ve never left DC?