Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chicago, the City of Broad Shoulders. That's where the shoulder pad was invented, because in the 80s there was an influx of weak-chinned, slope-shouldered folk from other parts of the country who felt inferior. When they put in the shoulder pads, though, they felt "Second to None." Hence the nickname Second City.
Can we get an emoji of someone just shaking their head "no"? Because this isn't even a little bit correct.
Also, I think the phrase is "City of Big Shoulders."
- Not a Chicagoan
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Philly -- massive insecurity re NYC. Constant need to prove that NYC isn't all that. In reality it's full of people who don't leave Philly bc they can't make it anywhere else; they need to be where they were born and raised bc preferential treatment re hiring is alive and well. Don't like outsiders. Not the brightest lights in the harbor. The only city that seems to look down on the ivy league school in its cities. 'Nova, Temple, Rutgers, and Penn State grads get hired constantly over UPenn grads bc UPenn students are thought of as elitists or outsiders -- even the ones that WANT to stay in Philly after college.
I'm pretty open minded and find Philly to be a pretty miserable place. For me it's the people there. Most are pretty rude and almost hostile. NYC and Boston, cities that most rank high on the rude and hostile meter, are great.
Really? I have loved Philly when i visited. It feels like a very low key place, kind of like DC before it gentrified. I was actually thinking of moving there
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Philly -- massive insecurity re NYC. Constant need to prove that NYC isn't all that. In reality it's full of people who don't leave Philly bc they can't make it anywhere else; they need to be where they were born and raised bc preferential treatment re hiring is alive and well. Don't like outsiders. Not the brightest lights in the harbor. The only city that seems to look down on the ivy league school in its cities. 'Nova, Temple, Rutgers, and Penn State grads get hired constantly over UPenn grads bc UPenn students are thought of as elitists or outsiders -- even the ones that WANT to stay in Philly after college.
I'm pretty open minded and find Philly to be a pretty miserable place. For me it's the people there. Most are pretty rude and almost hostile. NYC and Boston, cities that most rank high on the rude and hostile meter, are great.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Philly -- massive insecurity re NYC. Constant need to prove that NYC isn't all that. In reality it's full of people who don't leave Philly bc they can't make it anywhere else; they need to be where they were born and raised bc preferential treatment re hiring is alive and well. Don't like outsiders. Not the brightest lights in the harbor. The only city that seems to look down on the ivy league school in its cities. 'Nova, Temple, Rutgers, and Penn State grads get hired constantly over UPenn grads bc UPenn students are thought of as elitists or outsiders -- even the ones that WANT to stay in Philly after college.
I'm pretty open minded and find Philly to be a pretty miserable place. For me it's the people there. Most are pretty rude and almost hostile. NYC and Boston, cities that most rank high on the rude and hostile meter, are great.
Anonymous wrote:Seattle- Close to Canada = nice people and values.
Portland- Outdoorsy nice people, it's a Pacific Northwest thing!
SF/Palo Alto- Rich Nerds
LA - Hell hole (I live here)
DC - Blondeswith bobs who marry older men then SAHM and drive escapades. 40 year old women doing IVF.
Central coast of California- Smug annoying people who hashtag things like #IliveWhereYouVacation
Lafayette/Bakersfield/Mobile- Armpits of America
NYC - 40 year old women who won't grow up
Anywhere in Montana- Nice boring people who like mountains and the outdoors.
Detroit- Shantytown
Anonymous wrote:Philly -- massive insecurity re NYC. Constant need to prove that NYC isn't all that. In reality it's full of people who don't leave Philly bc they can't make it anywhere else; they need to be where they were born and raised bc preferential treatment re hiring is alive and well. Don't like outsiders. Not the brightest lights in the harbor. The only city that seems to look down on the ivy league school in its cities. 'Nova, Temple, Rutgers, and Penn State grads get hired constantly over UPenn grads bc UPenn students are thought of as elitists or outsiders -- even the ones that WANT to stay in Philly after college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Philly -- massive insecurity re NYC. Constant need to prove that NYC isn't all that. In reality it's full of people who don't leave Philly bc they can't make it anywhere else; they need to be where they were born and raised bc preferential treatment re hiring is alive and well. Don't like outsiders. Not the brightest lights in the harbor. The only city that seems to look down on the ivy league school in its cities. 'Nova, Temple, Rutgers, and Penn State grads get hired constantly over UPenn grads bc UPenn students are thought of as elitists or outsiders -- even the ones that WANT to stay in Philly after college.
+1. Philly is just insecure in general. No one cares about philly.
I dislike everyone I meet from Philly.
They are arrogant and egotistical, and racist. And so overly proud of their city, which is a crummy s-hole. Good food though!
Anonymous wrote:Richmond -- old southern gentry. The type that still ask you your mother's maiden name and which local (private) school you went to. Sure there are lots of newcomers that aren't generational families and have just moved for a good job, but if you truly want to get ahead in business or law, you need to be rubbing elbows at the country club and the local weddings, which you are only invited to as a generational family. So it's hard to break into the city for real, but if you can land yourself a 100k+ job and live happily in the suburbs, it's just like life in any other middle America suburb -- albeit more conservative values, more church going etc. Also a good city if you eschew all of the above and want to be a hipster; way easier to be a hipster there bc rent is cheap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do hunters drive subies???
I know a lot of people who refer to them as "lez-barus."
Anonymous wrote:Chicago, the City of Broad Shoulders. That's where the shoulder pad was invented, because in the 80s there was an influx of weak-chinned, slope-shouldered folk from other parts of the country who felt inferior. When they put in the shoulder pads, though, they felt "Second to None." Hence the nickname Second City.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Philly -- massive insecurity re NYC. Constant need to prove that NYC isn't all that. In reality it's full of people who don't leave Philly bc they can't make it anywhere else; they need to be where they were born and raised bc preferential treatment re hiring is alive and well. Don't like outsiders. Not the brightest lights in the harbor. The only city that seems to look down on the ivy league school in its cities. 'Nova, Temple, Rutgers, and Penn State grads get hired constantly over UPenn grads bc UPenn students are thought of as elitists or outsiders -- even the ones that WANT to stay in Philly after college.
+1. Philly is just insecure in general. No one cares about philly.
I dislike everyone I meet from Philly.
They are arrogant and egotistical, and racist. And so overly proud of their city, which is a crummy s-hole. Good food though!
I feel the same about Philly, which I always think of as Filthadelphia. I took Amtrak there from DC and it went through I swear shantytowns. The scene looked like a favela. It is criminal that they've allowed the public schools (not talking about surrounding suburbs) in Philly to fall to shit... much worse situation than DC. The people seemed very defensive; very proud townies who think Philly is the absolute best even though they've never been anywhere else. And I hate that weird accent they have.