Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I loved it! I lived in Troy (the troylet) in the early 90s.
I went to high school in Troylet!!! Better than Amsterdump, but still not great.
Anonymous wrote:Ha! Pretty funny. Buffalo does close down early, and they get a shit ton of snow. I once did a 180 on the interstate in Buffalo. Luckily there was no one around to hit me.
Essex, NY on Lake Champlain felt extremely isolated and dead when I was there. I was happy that we were boating back to Burlington.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain the characters at 1:23 in?
I get the opioids and lotto tickets but what’s with the rest?
A coin?, a dressed up racoon and orange thing (a basketball maybe ?)
FDR on the dime is from Hyde Park, NY
Roni the raccoon was the mascot from the Lake Placid Olympics.
Orange is Syracuse Orangemen
not sure about the borscht...
Anonymous wrote:I loved it! I lived in Troy (the troylet) in the early 90s.
Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain the characters at 1:23 in?
I get the opioids and lotto tickets but what’s with the rest?
A coin?, a dressed up racoon and orange thing (a basketball maybe ?)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain the characters at 1:23 in?
I get the opioids and lotto tickets but what’s with the rest?
A coin?, a dressed up racoon and orange thing (a basketball maybe ?)
Orange thing is, I assume, a reference to Syracuse U.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To this MD dwelling, PA native, it seems that they call every part of New York that isn’t NYC Upstate NY. Never made any sense to me!
As a non-New Yorker, what is considered Upstate then? I honestly thought every part that wasn't within normal commuting distance of NYC was upstate.
Technically, it's NY state that's divided into different regions. NYC, Long Island, and Hudson Valley are Downstate NY. The rest of NY state is considered upstate which is further subdivided into the regions of Central NY, Western NY, North Country, Southern Tier, Capital District, Finger Lakes, Mohawk Valley.
Yup.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ouch! Lived in Syracuse for 9 years and believe it or not loved it but that is not untrue.
On another note, people who live in northern New York get a little sensitive about calling places like Syracuse (Central New York) and Buffalo (Western New York) upstate New York.
And don't even get them started on places like Binghamton, which is technically Western NY.![]()
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Anonymous wrote:To this MD dwelling, PA native, it seems that they call every part of New York that isn’t NYC Upstate NY. Never made any sense to me!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To this MD dwelling, PA native, it seems that they call every part of New York that isn’t NYC Upstate NY. Never made any sense to me!
As a non-New Yorker, what is considered Upstate then? I honestly thought every part that wasn't within normal commuting distance of NYC was upstate.
Technically, it's NY state that's divided into different regions. NYC, Long Island, and Hudson Valley are Downstate NY. The rest of NY state is considered upstate which is further subdivided into the regions of Central NY, Western NY, North Country, Southern Tier, Capital District, Finger Lakes, Mohawk Valley.
