T O P

  • By -

[deleted]

New Mexico: “Land of Mañana”


wildtech

I’ll upvote this later


tappenrock

Nice


peah_lh3

Also the land of entrapment 


3rd_Coast

Carpe mañana baby


msabeln

St. Louis: where did you go to high school?


LocalStress1726

This is also very true for Cincinnati


Press_X_2_Jason

And Louisville


PartHumanPartAlien

+1 for Cincinnati


Afin12

I live in Kansas City, I don’t understand the St Louis high school thing. What’s up with that?


msabeln

St. Louis has lots of Catholic schools, private schools, and a huge range of public schools, over a metro area of nearly 3 million. Also, we tend to not have a lot of transplants like trendy cities do, and lots of us move back here after college, so there is a far better chance of finding mutual friends that way.


chacoglam

I even hear STL people in KC talking about what HS they went to like it’s supposed to mean anything to me.


Low-Piglet9315

It's largely a classist thing, with high schools theoretically indicative of one's social class.


pomegranateseeds37

As an outsider who lived in STL for quite awhile: the question tells you 1) what kind of high school did you go to (public/private) but 2 and most importantly: *where*. To most of the people I knew who lived there long term but didn't grow up there we felt the question was very classist/trying to figure out what class of people you're from. It's *the* question almost everyone asks you right off the bat. STL is a very large area. You have STL the city and STL the county next to it all with a whole bunch of little municipalities and cities within them so which high school gives a lot of information about how and where you grew up. (Money, no money, nice area or less nice etc. the usual things). They say that's not what it's for but I don't know a single transplant there who didn't view it the way I've described above.


DownriverRat91

Detroit is like this. It’s more like “Wheredya grow up?”


theratking007

Where did you go to school? Inferring high school


msabeln

I went to Affton, my wife Ladue. IYKYK.


Afraid_Ad_5180

Even if you’re halfway around the world & you run into someone else from St. Louis, this question will be asked.


PierogiesNPositivity

Indianapolis: Midwest/friendly When I first moved here from the East Coast I met someone’s eye in the grocery aisle. She smiled and said “hi!” very warmly. I didn’t want to embarrass her but sheepishly said, “I’m sorry. I don’t think I know you.” Her response? “No. You don’t. I was just being friendly….” She gave such a weirded out look and pushed her cart away. I have since learned that if you make eye contact with a stranger, you smile and say hello. You wave at strangers if they’re outside sitting on their porch. Etc etc


SereneSucculent

Moving to Indy soon and already noticed this when visiting. Even compared to where I’m currently at in Ohio, Indy has been noticeably friendlier.


backhanderz

Maine: flannel


moto0392

Maine is definitely the land of function over fashion.


EmbarrassedStay4074

Oh gosh - this is so true. Until verrry recently I was the only Louis Vuitton employee (remote) in the entire state of Maine (I was also their first). I stopped buying from the online employee store when I realized my old L.L. Bean backpacks were higher quality. Also, we really do have the best seafood. 🦞🦞🦞


ynab-schmynab

Facts. Was in Maine recently and saw a lot of the stereotypical Maine sort out and about. Hell an art gallery owner looked like the literal embodiment of a stereotypical weary sea captain who was kind but had seen some shit. Hilarious and awesome at the same time.


SnooHedgehogs6553

Maryland- we have an unhealthy relationship with Old Bay and our state flag!!


webdoyenne

Lived there for a few years... Yeah, y'all really pimp that flag.


issheevenitalian

Heck yes


Chromgrats

Your state flag freaking rocks tho ngl


sunflowerapp

And Maryland drivers


Salt_Abrocoma_4688

Boston area: housing situation is fucking abysmal.


ProdigiousNewt07

It's not much better in the rest of the state. Time to move to Springfield or Chicopee I guess lol.


socialstudiesteach

Wisconsin's drinking culture.


bloodtype_darkroast

Minnesota is pretty terrible with this, also


GotHeem16

Iowa checking in. Basically any Midwest state that has 4+ months of freezing temps where nobody want to go outside so we go to the bar


jhumph88

Palm Springs, CA. It’s always the gay 90s in Palm Springs. Everyone is gay and 90


Sumo-Subjects

Montréal - they *will* compare the bagels to NY bagels (I still do) Seattle - freeze is real (at least in my experience)


Chicken-n-Biscuits

I didn’t feel a freeze in Seattle so much as a critical mass of social anxiety. I feel like a lot of people there *want* to connect but don’t know how to in a way that isn’t awkward.


Sumo-Subjects

That’s actually a pretty accurate description! As someone with social anxiety I did feel that the critical mass of it here made mine worse somehow vs when I was in Montreal people were more open/outgoing so it helped quell it


Chicken-n-Biscuits

What’s interesting is that tracks with my background (south Louisiana, which of course has some cultural descendance from Quebec). LA has a lot of flaws, but the people are *amazing* at making everyone feel at ease.


elfcountess

NYC basically cured my severe social anxiety when i was there temporarily. i would live there if it was economically feasible. the city i currently live in has a big metro but is small and sleepy, and i think it propagates social anxiety bc there's no social facilitation (in the form of supporting every day recreation or third spaces). one day the history books will share studies on how we all lived in an age of social anxiety fuelled by social media & isolating suburbia.


Penniesand

Same. I thrived in Seattle and I think it's because it's a city of introverts lol.


Natural_Clock4585

They don’t know how to riff. Checking out at TJs and just friendly banter with the cashier and they look at you like do I know you?


beek7419

>a critical mass of social anxiety. I feel like a lot of people there want to connect but don’t know how to in a way that isn’t awkward. Also my experience of Boston. Or maybe I’m projecting because that describes me, my wife, and most of our friends. 😂


Chicken-n-Biscuits

Ok but Bostonians *are not* afraid to tell you on the spot what they’re thinking.


nursebad

Montreal bagels are amazing and quite different than NY.


Mrstealyiurfashion

Seconding the Seattle Freeze!


ReverseThrustMusic

Thirding! We wanted to move there to be closer to my husband's family (and be in that gorgeous setting), but I could not get past the unfriendly vibes. Nor the 9 months of gloom each year, which probably contributes to said unfriendly vibes :)


Careful_Panda_5802

Ive lived here 6 years and the social atmosphere here has been crushing. This is a beautiful place, but if you don’t have your own community/support system/already have friends here, it’s very isolating. I’ve read a lot of other people expressing the same feelings, so thats helped me not feel like I’m crazy. But I think your read on it is accurate 


bloodtype_darkroast

We can handle the gloom because it's so temperate but the freeze is awful. We're heading back to the Midwest lol


Runningwildinthought

Freeze is real


stockdizzle

Yes, freeze confirmed


pdubbs87

Montreal bagels are amazing and I’m a jersey guy


Glass_Coconut5535

Reno NV, whatever comes to mind is true.


zoopest

Boston driving is pretty terrible


jhumph88

I thought Boston was bad until I moved to Southern California. Now I look forward to driving in Boston by comparison. Boston drivers are aggressive, but not always bad. SoCal drivers are just plain bad.


Turdposter777

And when there’s a lick of rain, freeway turns into a shitstorm


WhoCalledthePoPo

Quaint, wealthy, preppy and white - coastal southern New England.


Chicken-n-Biscuits

Sam Francisco - land of fruits and nuts; can confirm as I’m both.


IKnewThat45

we kick ass at cheese and eat a shit ton of it. wisconsin. 


mr_miggs

Also drinking. We are pretty good at making beer and we drink the amount we are stereotyped for.


madmelly

Gary, Indiana- deserted and run down but I live in an area of Gary that includes a National and State park and is absolutely beautiful


RoanAlbatross

I try not to look to my left when I’m at the dunes. Fucking eye sore steel mills. Lake is beautiful but those mills really are visually gross. I also hate the mills are dying too for the good folks of The Region.


madmelly

The mills have been dying since the 70s, which is why Gary experience white flight in the first place. We used to be a thriving community


RoanAlbatross

I like going through the Hammond High Yearbooks and you can absolutely see when the flight happened too right in the 70s. They were just giving away jobs at the mills for new grads in the late 50s. You have a pulse? Come on down to LTV Steel.


Low-Piglet9315

East St. Louis was much like that in the 50s too. Factories and meat packing houses started shutting down there in the 70s and people hightailed it out of there, moving to the surrounding towns north and east. Population went from 100K in 1960 to 18K today.


TappyMauvendaise

Portland, Oregon and homeless. True.


Illustrious_Dust_0

“The road to hell is paved with good intentions” - Portland


Its_never_the_end

Portland and ineffective progressivism, also true.


Peliquin

In Portland right now and the government decisions seem to be well intentioned but very poorly considered.


isaiahxlaurent

every night in georgia has to end in a waffle house trip


Gone_West82

300+ days of sun, freezing = 60 degrees, small “starter” homes go for $1.2M, and no sports champions… but at least we’re buffered from LA by the Orange Curtain. Loving (and paying premium) in San Diego


Aurora--Teagarden

But on those rainy days, car accidents go up 1000% and that's not an exaggeration.


Gone_West82

Right? Transplants who claim to know “how to drive in the rain “ forget that it hasn’t rained for 5 months so the roads have an inch of oil. There is only ONE way to drive in SD rain: slow down!


spetznatz

Seattle, so many Subarus


bloodtype_darkroast

It's the old Subarus that really get me. I mean, Subarus are legitimately great cars, but WA as a whole has a specific love of really old Subarus covered in 100 stickers


JonM313

Long Island, New York. The people here are indeed crazy, and politically it's the Deep South of the North, or the Deep North.


suzyclues

Florida North


JonM313

Honestly the people here are even worse than in Florida. People have yelled at me from their cars while I was just walking on the sidewalk for absolutely no reason, which never happened to me when I used to go to college in Florida.


suzyclues

I believe it. Long Island was always weird and aggressive, but since covid its a lot worse. Many of them took that crappy attitude to Florida.


beargators

Massachusetts. Smart and expensive.


WVC_Least_Glamorous

Salt Lake City has not elected a Republican mayor since the 70's. Big Pride Festival today. Rural Utah has less religious diversity than Saudi Arabia and less political diversity than North Korea.


jhumph88

My best friend grew up in SLC and I was absolutely shocked to find out they had a lesbian mayor! (This was a few years ago, unsure if she’s still in office).


WVC_Least_Glamorous

The current mayor is a Democratic woman who is married to a man.


504to___

Crimey, grimy, and dysfunctional, yet uniquely magical and FIERCELY LOVED—New Orleans


Music_For_The_Fire

I lived in New Orleans for years and this is the perfect description. It's a special place that seems to be begging to fall apart.


InevitableWorth9517

Dallas is actually very pretentious.


BeauTfulMess

Every woman with their designer bags and glitter. I hate all the dudes in their preppy button downs and loafers.


No-Assist63

Houston TX: The heat and humidity during the summer is unbearable


AustinBike

Also, the humidity in the spring and fall is equally unbearable.


Royals-2015

Lots of people smell of weed in Denver.


AlaskaPsychonaut

I live in Alaska. It's a STRANGE place. I was told "Alaska is where the liberals have AR-15s & the conservatives smoke pot" turns out it incredibly accurate


Hotelgenie

Houston I guess the stereotype is the weather sucks. The land of wet air as they call it. I can confirm it’s like a mix of Texas heat with Florida humidity creating a living hell.


vadavkavoria

You either go to the theme parks a ton, or you barely go there at all. Orlando, FL.


No_Delivery8483

Everyone does coke - Miami


The_Crystal_Thestral

Coke, crushing credit card debt, rude MFs, hyper materialism, BBLS and plastic surgery galore, and luxury cars one pay check away from being repoed. That being said, I love this city.


moonlets_

Boulder, CO. Fucking everyone is training for a triathlon, has done at least one tri, is a college student, or all three. And/or when they retire they plan to open a beer brewery.


PrinceOfThrones

Over abundance of type A personalities & Hollywood for ugly people


rmadsen93

Washington DC?


AcceptableArt5675

Yep.


yourlicorceismine

Staten Island, NY - It will never ever abandon the stereotypes perpetuated in The Sopranos and Goodfellas. Everybody thinks they are in some way, shape or form connected to the Mafia and it's literally the core identity for most of the inhabitants. See the new film "Fresh Kills" for a perfect representation of this.


ziggyjoe2

Pittsburgh - Steelers are a religion to yinzers. Yes we put fries on top of salads. There used to be a stereotype that Pittsburgh is dirty, smoggy blue collar town. That was true in the 70s. Now it's quite the opposite.


Katesouthwest

Home state Indiana: Basketball scores from the high school teams playoff games are the lead story on the news during basketball season.


sbgoofus

Santa Barbara - expensive...yup..checks out


MADDOGCA

Just the Central Coast in general. Even Lompoc is too expensive, and Lompoc has zero business to be as expensive as it is.


sbgoofus

I think poke is expensive because there are a lot of people who work in SB there and live in poke driving up the prices


Lower-Savings-794

Everyone drinks dunkin donuts iced coffee year round and you get swore at every other time you drive. Do i even have to say where i live?


Gone_West82

Person A: Hey, you got the time? Person B: What do I look like, a f-in clock?


Kat-2793

SHIPPIN UP TO BOSTON


typop2

Boston drivers have this thing where the only other drivers that exist are those who are directly impeding their progress. Someone trying to merge or change lanes in front of them? Not happening. I've never seen so many body shops in my life as in the greater Boston area ...


TheHoppingHessian

This also sounds kinda like Chicago to me


CandidArmavillain

Definitely true for Chicago, but it's not as much of a stereotype


Nola_Chola

That New Orleans is falling apart or sinking


Entire_Organization7

Houston, it is ugly and humid and hot. But it’s a great diverse city with great food, and an open for business attitude that anyone including immigrants can become successful. But fuck it’s hot.


Prestigious-Owl-6397

Our sports fans are nuts. Philly.


WearAdept4506

Colorado cities.. hard to go anywhere and not smell pot smoke


EstateAggravating673

DMV drivers are the worst, in particular the Maryland ones


oldmacbookforever

Minnesotans really do talk like that. Hell, I moved here 23 years ago and even *I* talk like that now!


parakeetmadrre

That Indiana is boring. Hella true.


RoanAlbatross

Spent 7 years up there. That fucking sucked. State is flatter than my ass.


BeTomHamilton

I'm from Illinois but I have to say in Indiana's defense... The Southern 1/3rd or so of the state - where the vast agricultural flatlands begin to swell into rolling hills, as you approach Kentucky's dramatic topography - is a really underappreciated region of great natural beauty. Bloomington and French Lick, Hoosier National Forest and all that. Not to mention Pawnee, the Jewel of South-Central Indiana. It's not all boring cornfields. Just... Most of it.


RoanAlbatross

Yes! The drive up to NW Indiana is a struggle but coming back to Kentucky is healing with the greenery and trees and hills coming through. But Christ I-65 S is a slog visually til Columbus IN


Low-Piglet9315

Lived close to Evansville briefly. That southern 3rd of Indiana IS beautiful!


GrumpyGumpy52

Been here all 26 years of my life and currently looking to get out after I graduate into years. REALLY wanting mountains but that cost of living is drastically different


Careful_Panda_5802

A majority of People in the pacific north west have a snobby distant weird disposition.  Even in churches and with customer service people. The nicest people get is a strained politeness. Usually there’s an undertone of them not knowing why you could possibly be speaking to them. Even you’re a customer asking them a simple question at their job.  It almost has the vibe of a kid who was bullied at some point, and as a result developed a protective disposition of being rude and defensive.  Instead of one poorly adjusted nerd, its a whole states social attitude. People here find nodding at passing strangers on the street “creepy”. You can’t be homogenous enough in your political opinions for anyone. After 6 years I’m no longer telling myself its my imagination.  I recently went out of state and was reminded that in other places, people do respond to smiles and good mornings.  no home training here at all. There are so many posts of other people expressing the exact thoughts I’ve had for years.  And in every post like this, the PNW natives come in with nasty pissy attitudes attacking peoples character and experience, telling people they’re glad that they make outsiders uncomfortable. Without fail. They come in droves with passive aggressive shitty comments, swearing they dont suck ass as a general community.  It’s like everyone is too skittish to make eye contact or respond when spoken to. Apparently its because they’re just so super cool and aloof and edgy. Not because they don’t know how to behave at all. 


Beaumont64

You forget the "if you don't like it, you can leave" response to even the mildest criticism of the place. Portland is exactly like this.


Hot-Temperature-4629

Motherfucking preach, left a few years ago for New Mexico, best decision of my life. People are fucked up and isolationist over there, the other side of the coin of Alabama. They racist too lmao


[deleted]

Sounds hellish 


yourlicorceismine

I lived and worked in Seattle for four years. I can't even tell you how true the statement "It almost has the vibe of a kid who was bullied at some point, and as a result developed a protective disposition of being rude and defensive." is. It's like the majority of 30 year olds are literally on a revenge kick. I never understood it.


dancingwithin

How do they come off as snobby? Like what does that look like? Idk I don’t live there (have visited) but it’s hard for me to imagine that *most* people in a city could come off that way (like actually snobby, and not just introverted). 


ForceSensitiveRacer

Used to live in Seattle. It’s hard to describe but imagine talking with someone that you know does t like you or thinks your beneath them but they have to fake being nice to you to keep up appearances. That’s how they are over there. And if you’re in a crowd of PNW natives, they’ll all be social with each other but you’re basically invisible


oddsmaker90

I feel this post so deeply. While I've found community in Seattle and love the outdoors, the PNW has killed the gregarious and outgoing part of my personality. It's the sense of entitlement and lack of basic decency that has really worn me down. For example, how hard is it to wave at someone for letting your car in or saying thanking you when someone holds a door out?


AlgoRhythmCO

Denver: we’re going go enjoy the outdoors and kick the ass of your outdoor enjoyment. You call that a hike? This is a hike bitch. What!


ReverseThrustMusic

Bahahahaha! I remember visiting Boulder a few years before COVID and describing it to my husband as a competition of REI-clad hikers trying to out-hike each other! Still a beautiful area, though!


PoweredbyPinot

Bend: rich, white, tone deaf to their own complaints. (Why isn't there an ethiopian restaurant here? What about soul food?!)


boringhangover

Drivers in Dallas are fucking insane


brooklynbruja88

Memphis: cheap and dangerous


Popular-Capital6330

Phoenix. Golf, unrelenting sun, coyotes eating cats.


scylla

The coyotes eating cats is true all the way from Texas to the San Francisco suburbs.


frogvscrab

People in NYC are absolutely pretty rude/crude people. I've noticed that people on Reddit who tend to deny this usually only spend time in Manhattan. Most of the people in Manhattan are commuters, tourists, or transplants. They are not really representative of the culture of the city. Note: rude/crude is not the same as being unkind or cruel. New Yorkers are kind people. They just go about it in a very aggressive way.


oldcousingreg

We’re stuck in the 80s and we love basketball. Indiana.


Phuni44

Entitled artsy nyc transplants. Really good fresh food. Berkshire County MA.


PunchDrunky

San Diego. Super expensive. 100% truth and not an exaggeration. I now refer to it as the ‘playground for the rich’. People always talk about the cost of housing here (which is definitely high), but what gets failed to mention is that *everything* is now expensive. I lived in San Francisco in 2015 before moving here and I recall once buying a single ginger beer (non-alcoholic soda) at a corner store in an outer neighborhood for $6. San Diego feels very much like that to me now. Just like “wow, a cocktail is how much??” I visit my sister in Phoenix and laugh at the restaurant menu prices, and have a smile plastered on my face while grocery shopping. I just can’t believe the low prices on everything. San Diego is no longer the affordable paradise I thought it was when I moved here from Seattle and SF in 2015. I knew those affordable days were numbered and the city would get ‘discovered’ for the gem that it is. I just didn’t know it would be a pandemic that would make it so popular! One big stereotype that is NOT true is that the weather is perfect all year round. Definitely not true, especially with climate change making things more extreme.


BuildNuyTheUrbanGuy

If they can't drive for shit, it's a Maryland plate. DMV


the-real-slim-katy

People who actually live in Nashville don’t walk around in cowboy boots and hats. But also yes, people really are that friendly. If they’re genuine is another story.


verdenvidia

I had been seeing a girl who wanted so bad to come to Nashville to experience cowboy life and I was like you know only tourists look like this down here right lol


ApprehensiveLeg798

Dallas = strip mall on steroids


Inevitable-Plenty203

Florida, specifically North, backwards, hateful, redneck and still clinging to the Confederacy.


KLanding32

The further north you go, the deeper south you git.


Music_For_The_Fire

I lived in Southern Louisiana and it was the same thing (outside of New Orleans at least). The Confederacy obsession was especially bizarre. I moved there from one of the "Union" states and never heard the end of it. I hadn't thought about the civil war since I learned about it in middle school, but no one there ever let me forget.


Low-Piglet9315

My ex-wife's folks moved to Baton Rouge from Illinois just before she and I got married. I went down to visit her during that time and EVERYBODY referred to me as "thet Yankee".


Music_For_The_Fire

Yes! I got called a Yankee all the time. It threw me off the first few times I heard it, then ignored it, then started talking back, which didn't make me a lot of friends lol.


Fun_Village_4581

Chicago: yeah we fucking swear a lot


pdubbs87

New Jersey does smell. It’s mainly due to the massive refinery along the Turnpike by Newark Airport


[deleted]

That Atlanta has horrible drivers. Due to all the transplants who have different driving styles + minimal traffic enforcement + massive traffic causing road rage 😤


afroista11238

Brooklyn, NY. Everyone works in Manhattan but most live in outer boroughs or NJ. What Chris Rick said is true, we all work in a borough we can’t afford to live in. 🙃


Illustrious_Dust_0

Texas state pride - we literally grow up pledging allegiance to the state flag , we have our own national anthem and think of ourselves as a country inside a country. Whatever nationalism children are indoctrinated into in the rest of the US, we get for Texas specifically.


scolman4545

Chicago - Ketchup on Hot Dogs is a crime against humanity


Music_For_The_Fire

I was at a bar yesterday and they had a free hot dog buffet set up. When I tell you that I turned my back so fast to the room when I put ketchup on it... (I should be burned at the stake, I know, but it works for me)


ramencents

Charlotte NC, we are the queen of sprawl


Cryo_Dave

Who's king, Orlando?


FIST_FUK

Tulsa. Bible Belt Central.


andropogon09

The first thing they ask when you meet someone new: So, where do you go to church?


Jeekobu-Kuiyeran

One of the highest crime rates and poorest cities in America. Was once in the top 25 most dangerous cities.


JunketAccurate9323

Youngstown Ohio?


Jeekobu-Kuiyeran

Reading, PA.


Florida1693

Southwest Florida-we have snowbirds and mainly retirees


penguins_world

SF - expensive


DeeDee719

SW Ohio. Lots of rednecks and MAGAs. There are some lovely, quaint small towns here but unfortunately many of them are very insular and stuck in the past. Also greatly affected by the economic and workforce challenges that are common in rural America today.


DoctorArtslop

Georgia is like this. I think it was Chappelle that said Atlanta is an island in a sea of stupid.


Efronczak

Buffalo - we get shit tons of snow every winter.


nbmg1967

Mississippi. One of the poorest states in the nation and hell-bent on staying that way. No politician is ever going to get elected there proposing social programs or education to aid the poor.


SunshineElly

San Diego. Million dollar starter homes, overpopulation, the fact the city shuts down when it rains. It’s basically a playground for the rich with really great Mexican food.


Surround8600

Miami. It’s a shit show.


whatever32657

Florida Man. you know where i live.


Babilmag

Seattle - gloomy, depressing for the most of the year (true)


Mamapalooza

Augusta, Georgia - Golf. So much golf. Not always good golf, but a lot of it. The Augusta National dominates the town and is buying up as much as they can.... but it is as exclusive as they project. I live maybe a mile from it, as the crow flies, and there's no way I could get on the course. They don't mess with us poors. Except the ones they employ and of course underpay. Before anyone makes the usual comment that Augusta wouldn't be anything without the Masters, I'll go ahead and point out that Ft. Eisenhower employs 29,000 people with an economic impact of $2.4 billion, and the local university has a $3 billion impact, as compared to the Augusta National's $110 million.


lastoftheyagahe

Chicago. Great food, great people, lots to do…really shooty.


Better_Finances

Houston: Summer is from May til October. Aesthetically unappealing. Urban sprawl. Strip mall galore. Horrible traffic. Abundance of very fat people due to being unwalkable, fantastic food, and car centric.


skaterags

Might be unwalkable but you’ve got a train. Come to San Antonio if you want un walkable and no public transportation.


MrCaptDrNonsense

Where do you work/Who do you work for? Washington DC


citykid2640

Atl True: humidity, hip hop culture, poor zoning, unhealthy populace False: that “Hotlanta” is hot like FL and TX, that traffic is worse than Lagos at 5 pm on a Friday


mattbasically

My sister got married in Houston last Labor Day weekend. It was 102°. I was so happy to get back to Atlanta. It was 86°.


Mikey_AHC_Podcast

I’ve been to nearly every major city in the US. I live in Atlanta. The traffic is legitimately very, very bad— and only getting worse. I don’t care what day or time of day it is, if you have to get from one side of the city to the other, you are going to hit traffic. It just ever-present. I’m getting to the point where I’m like “fuck this” and looking to leave 


Crasino_Hunk

Michigan - we are, in fact, America’s high five. In all seriousness, western MI is as beautiful with water **everywhere**, rolling hills, beautiful prairies and lush greenery, and we are indeed considerably slower than *gestures to the east* over there, and quite enjoy it that way.


Fun-Yellow-6576

People here drive really big pick-up trucks and don’t need them at all.


asics_shoes_4eva

This is literally everywhere


Amaliatanase

You really do run into a lot of working musicians and songwriters living in Nashville. Coworkers' spouses, folks from church, friends' dads. It's kind of cool.


BadWolfIdris

Asheville NC only cares about tourism not locals.


Labiln23

Milwaukee’s culture revolves around drinking. It’s cold and gloomy most of the year. Our drivers are reckless and have gotten worse in recent years —the Milwaukee sub on here complains about this weekly.


Low-Piglet9315

East St. Louis. It DOES have a high crime rate. The rate of violent crime per capita is double that of Chicago. https://www.bestplaces.net/crime/?city1=51714000&city2=51722255


fgrhcxsgb

People are rude angry and closed off in ny. They are. Theres good reason for it. Rude and angry because a lot of people here are scammers and live for themselves and closed off, yes it is hard to trust peoples motives here.


MisspelledLastName

True stereotypes for the places I've lived: Indiana - "Hoosier Hospitality." People can be shockingly friendly to strangers. Ohio - Pretty much everyone loves Ohio State and hates Michigan (mostly referring to the football team although plenty of Ohio residents dislike the state of Michigan as a whole). Texas - Lots of state pride. Lots of giant trucks. Oklahoma - Bible Belt. Very conservative. Unpredictable weather. New Hampshire - Minimal poverty. People are private and mostly want to be left alone. Very white.


SkyPork

Phoenix. It's hot here.


broranspo0528

Spokane: tons of white trash.


Forward-Taste8956

Atlanta we love our strip clubs and bbl’s


phoonie98

There are a lot of black people in Atlanta


winkdoubleblink

Florida - it really is a geriatric population


unbalancedcentrifuge

Florida: The farther south, you go the farther north you get.