Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Princeton has its share of bros including a fair number of Laxers from the Apha schools (Landon, Prep, Gonzaga). Certainly closer to Duke that it is to MIT, Chicago or Cal Tech.
They used to be found at Cottage Club and Tiger Inn. Maybe they still are. There are enough of them to scare off some kids from going there, just as at Duke.
OTOH, the math/physics/engineering kids are there, too. Many come from schools like TJ, Stuyvesant, Bronx HS of Science, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Princeton has its share of bros including a fair number of Laxers from the Apha schools (Landon, Prep, Gonzaga). Certainly closer to Duke that it is to MIT, Chicago or Cal Tech.
Anonymous wrote:Princeton has its share of bros including a fair number of Laxers from the Apha schools (Landon, Prep, Gonzaga). Certainly closer to Duke that it is to MIT, Chicago or Cal Tech.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another poster coined the term "bro quotient" defined (by her) as:
"Low bro quotient" = quiet schools with no frats, there are few parties, and where no one cares about either college or professional sports.
What top schools stand out for exceptional low or high bro quotient?
Among Top 25 schools, I'd say Duke, USC, UVA, Vanderbilt and maybe Dartmouth have the highest bro quotient.
Chicago, Cal Tech, MIT, Johns Hopkins are probably lowest.
Yes, Chicago, CalTech, MIT, Johns Hopkins, plus Harvard and Yale (as someone else noted), Columbia, stanford, and hell, probably almost all of the top 15 schools except for Duke and Virginia (is Virginia in top 15?). This Q does seem to get asked a lot. oP, if your kid gets into a top school, it is not likely to have a high "bro" quotient.
Anonymous wrote:I would have thought Hopkins, being mostly male and having a LAX tradition, was moderately to high bro.
Anonymous wrote:Another poster coined the term "bro quotient" defined (by her) as:
"Low bro quotient" = quiet schools with no frats, there are few parties, and where no one cares about either college or professional sports.
What top schools stand out for exceptional low or high bro quotient?
Among Top 25 schools, I'd say Duke, USC, UVA, Vanderbilt and maybe Dartmouth have the highest bro quotient.
Chicago, Cal Tech, MIT, Johns Hopkins are probably lowest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ha. I thought that was a thinly-veiled reference to the fact that Pitt was in urban, diverse, Oakland. (So, high-bro?).
No - OP in this thread summarized the intent. An East Coast "bro" would typically be a white male from a suburb like Upper Merion or Mt. Lebanon, PA, Great Neck, NY, Bethesda, MD or Vienna, VA.
Yep. Think backwards ball caps, an affinity for crappy beer, moderate marijuana use, ESPN junkies, listen to Dave Mathews Bland (typo intentional), unironic fist bumps, etc.
Were you following me around college in the early 90's? You just described all the guys I dated back then (and I ended up marrying one who was not personally or professionally harmed by his high-bro qualities!).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ha. I thought that was a thinly-veiled reference to the fact that Pitt was in urban, diverse, Oakland. (So, high-bro?).
No - OP in this thread summarized the intent. An East Coast "bro" would typically be a white male from a suburb like Upper Merion or Mt. Lebanon, PA, Great Neck, NY, Bethesda, MD or Vienna, VA.
Yep. Think backwards ball caps, an affinity for crappy beer, moderate marijuana use, ESPN junkies, listen to Dave Mathews Bland (typo intentional), unironic fist bumps, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ha. I thought that was a thinly-veiled reference to the fact that Pitt was in urban, diverse, Oakland. (So, high-bro?).
No - OP in this thread summarized the intent. An East Coast "bro" would typically be a white male from a suburb like Upper Merion or Mt. Lebanon, PA, Great Neck, NY, Bethesda, MD or Vienna, VA.
Yep. Think backwards ball caps, an affinity for crappy beer, moderate marijuana use, ESPN junkies, listen to Dave Mathews Bland (typo intentional), unironic fist bumps, etc.
NPR had a funny column about Bros a while back.
http://www.npr.org/blogs/codeswitch/2013/06/21/193881290/jeah-we-mapped-out-the-four-basic-aspects-of-being-a-bro