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in 2009 I went to Atlanta to watch the Vols-VaTech Chick-fil-a bowl. Afterwards the wife and I snuck into the WSMFP NYE show at Phillips Arena. It was a great time. Didn't get back to our hotel until nearly 4am though because we couldn't find a damn taxi in downtown atlanta. There were no bars or anything open after the show so we just stood on the street in the cold slowly sobering up and trying to get a ride. At one point a friend chased a cab down the road screaming "how do i get a ride with your company?" It was weird being in a big city downtown that was totally dead, especially on NYE.
You just have to know where to go. But that’s true of every city.
Nah. My roommate skipped WSMFP to go drinking, and we met up with him after the show. it wasn't a case of "not knowing where to go" The WSMFP show ended around 1:30ish and by the time we got out of the arena the two places we stopped at were having last call. I think most people were staying in hotels downtown, because the streets just completely emptied. I guess this is more an indictment of the taxi situation in atlanta, because from like 2:30-3:30am we just could not get a cab and the #'s were always busy/not answering. uber/lyft weren't even invented yet. It sucked.
i still think NYC is the obvious winner, but i'm kind of hoping New Orleans low key taco bells itself to the #1 slot.
As a New Yorker, I'm here to make top 3, but I have ZERO feelings because New York City has made me a hollowed person who would tell you never to come here.
i still think NYC is the obvious winner, but i'm kind of hoping New Orleans low key taco bells itself to the #1 slot.
As a New Yorker, I'm here to make top 3, but I have ZERO feelings because New York City has made me a hollowed person who would tell you never to come here.
But it's GREAT. It's FUCKING GREAT.
Ahhhh you went with monthly payment for your April 1 name I love it!
As a New Yorker, I'm here to make top 3, but I have ZERO feelings because New York City has made me a hollowed person who would tell you never to come here.
But it's GREAT. It's FUCKING GREAT.
Ahhhh you went with monthly payment for your April 1 name I love it!
I'm always going to choose the illumanati now that people are confused who I am
i still think NYC is the obvious winner, but i'm kind of hoping New Orleans low key taco bells itself to the #1 slot.
As a New Yorker, I'm here to make top 3, but I have ZERO feelings because New York City has made me a hollowed person who would tell you never to come here.
But it's GREAT. It's FUCKING GREAT.
also as a non-new yorker i love this and it feels right.
One of my best friends regularly will post some comment about watching someone poop in the street or catcall/insult her in the same statement, but then follows it with something like, "God I love this city!"
Welcome back Bonz, but I do not find it strange that your presence being requested in the Orgy thread and then you showing up, like it was the quacking Bonzai Bat Signal.
i still think NYC is the obvious winner, but i'm kind of hoping New Orleans low key taco bells itself to the #1 slot.
As a New Yorker, I'm here to make top 3, but I have ZERO feelings because New York City has made me a hollowed person who would tell you never to come here.
But it's GREAT. It's FUCKING GREAT.
Ha ha ha exactly. Everyone who doesn't live here has a vision of it that, for us, has been dashed to bits. But also, where else would we go?
Portland. Maybe Minneapolis. Just...somewhere with a yard? LA? Sigh.
Post by jorgeandthekraken on Apr 1, 2022 9:27:07 GMT -5
I’ve kept it relatively chill so far, but if/when it does get competitive for NYC, I’m finna go off, as I think the young people say. That’s what I heard on the TikToks, anyway. Excelsior.
As a New Yorker, I'm here to make top 3, but I have ZERO feelings because New York City has made me a hollowed person who would tell you never to come here.
But it's GREAT. It's FUCKING GREAT.
Ha ha ha exactly. Everyone who doesn't live here has a vision of it that, for us, has been dashed to bits. But also, where else would we go?
Portland. Maybe Minneapolis. Just...somewhere with a yard? LA? Sigh.
Real talk, this is why so many people swept out of the city during the heights of COVID --- they literally just had more money and cars to move out of the city. So yes a lot of major cities can blame us for their sprawl of infuriating wealthy people and hipsters. Right now this city is in full survival mode and I know from the motion of living in the same area for 11 years and knowing the things that have shifted dramatically. I have my limitations personally, and unless your ass has a car and somewhere to go with family, why would you leave nyc?
I’ve kept it relatively chill so far, but if/when it does get competitive for NYC, I’m finna go off, as I think the young people say. That’s what I heard on the TikToks, anyway. Excelsior.
Real talk, this is why so many people swept out of the city during the heights of COVID --- they literally just had more money and cars to move out of the city. So yes a lot of major cities can blame us for their sprawl of infuriating wealthy people and hipsters. Right now this city is in full survival mode and I know from the motion of living in the same area for 11 years and knowing the things that have shifted dramatically. I have my limitations personally, and unless your ass has a car and somewhere to go with family, why would you leave nyc?
Oh we're stuck here unless we come into serious money (I guess if someone were to...die?) or someone got a gig out of the city. I've been an essential worker this whole time (because that's the service industry in NYC babyyyy) and I dream about somehow being a fully-funded artist who lives in Santa-Fe, but I also love living here. Like, you'd have to give me a prize for me to leave, I guess. That's what 16 years of city livin' does - total Stockholm Syndrome.
Also how else can I have dipping Udon right before hanging out at Barcade and then taking public transit home?
Real talk, this is why so many people swept out of the city during the heights of COVID --- they literally just had more money and cars to move out of the city. So yes a lot of major cities can blame us for their sprawl of infuriating wealthy people and hipsters. Right now this city is in full survival mode and I know from the motion of living in the same area for 11 years and knowing the things that have shifted dramatically. I have my limitations personally, and unless your ass has a car and somewhere to go with family, why would you leave nyc?
Oh we're stuck here unless we come into serious money (I guess if someone were to...die?) or someone got a gig out of the city. I've been an essential worker this whole time (because that's the service industry in NYC babyyyy) and I dream about somehow being a fully-funded artist who lives in Santa-Fe, but I also love living here. Like, you'd have to give me a prize for me to leave, I guess. That's what 16 years of city livin' does - total Stockholm Syndrome.
Also how else can I have dipping Udon right before hanging out at Barcade and then taking public transit home?
NYC+... our worst foods are still better than some cities best takes. It'll just cost you all of your livelihood to enjoy it because 16$ burgers are the norm.
I am a native NYer and longtime former NYC resident in multiple boroughs and live elsewhere now. When it gets to crunch time I will explain how I'm voting and why.
For me - I can separate the core appeal of the city with what the appeal is for a city based on where you are at with life/career
Real talk, this is why so many people swept out of the city during the heights of COVID --- they literally just had more money and cars to move out of the city. So yes a lot of major cities can blame us for their sprawl of infuriating wealthy people and hipsters. Right now this city is in full survival mode and I know from the motion of living in the same area for 11 years and knowing the things that have shifted dramatically. I have my limitations personally, and unless your ass has a car and somewhere to go with family, why would you leave nyc?
Oh we're stuck here unless we come into serious money (I guess if someone were to...die?) or someone got a gig out of the city. I've been an essential worker this whole time (because that's the service industry in NYC babyyyy) and I dream about somehow being a fully-funded artist who lives in Santa-Fe, but I also love living here. Like, you'd have to give me a prize for me to leave, I guess. That's what 16 years of city livin' does - total Stockholm Syndrome.
Also how else can I have dipping Udon right before hanging out at Barcade and then taking public transit home?
We're Getting The Hell Out Of This Sewer,' Entire Populace Reports
NEW YORK—At 4:32 p.m. Tuesday, every single resident of New York City decided to evacuate the famed metropolis, having realized it was nothing more than a massive, trash-ridden hellhole that slowly sucks the life out of every one of its inhabitants.
With audible murmurs of "This is no way to live," "What the hell am I doing here—I hate it here," and "Fuck this place. Fuck this horrible place," all 8.4 million citizens in each of the five boroughs packed up their belongings and told reporters they would rather blow their brains out with a shotgun than spend another waking moment in this festering cesspool of filth and scum and sadness.
By 5:15 p.m. there was gridlock traffic on the outbound sides of the Holland and Lincoln tunnels, and the area's three major airports were flooded with New Yorkers, all of whom said they wanted to go anyplace where the pressure of 20 million tons of concrete wasn't constantly suffocating them.
"I always had this perverted sense of pride because I was managing to scrape by here," said Brooklyn resident Andrew McQuade, who, after watching two subway rats gnawing on a third bloody rat carcass, finally determined that New York City was a giant sprawling cancer. "Well, fuck that. I don't need to pay $2,000 a month to share a doghouse-sized apartment with some random Craigslist dipshit to prove my worth. I want to live like a goddamn human being."
"You see this?" added McQuade, pointing at a real estate listing for a duplex in Hagerstown, MD. "Two bedrooms, two baths, a den—a fucking den—and a patio. Twelve hundred a month. That's total, not per person."
According to residents, the mass exodus was triggered by a number of normal, everyday New York City events. For Erin Caldwell of Manhattan, an endlessly honking car horn sent her over the edge, causing her to go into a blind rage and scream "shut up!" at the vehicle as loud as she could until her voice went hoarse; for Danny Tremba of Queens it was being cursed at for walking too slow; and for Paul Ogden, also of Queens, it was his overreaction to somebody walking too slow.
Other incidents that prompted citizens to pick up and leave included the sight of garbage bags stacked 5 feet high on the sidewalk; the realization that being alone among millions of anonymous people is actually quite horrifying; a blaring siren that droned on and fucking on; muddy, refuse-filled puddles that have inexplicably not dried in three years; the thought of growing into a person whose meanness and cynicism is cloaked in a kind of holier-than-thou brand of sarcasm that the rest of the world finds nauseating; and all the goddamn people.
In addition, 3 million New Yorkers reportedly left the city because they realized the phrase "Only in New York" is actually just a defense mechanism used to convince themselves that seeing a naked man take a shit on a park bench is somehow endearing, or part of some shared cultural experience.
"I was sitting on my stoop, drinking coffee, and out of nowhere this crazy-looking woman just starts screaming, 'I am inside all of you,' over and over," Bronx resident Sarah Perez, 37, said. "Then, we both had this moment where we looked at each other and realized, okay, we have to get out of here."
"This place sucks," Manhattan resident Woody Allen, 74, told reporters. "It just fucking sucks."
When fleeing New Yorkers were asked if they would miss the city's iconic landmarks, most responded that Central Park is just a pathetic excuse for experiencing actual nature, that the Brooklyn Bridge is great but it's just a fucking bridge, that nobody goes to the Met anyway, and that living in a dingy, grime-caked apartment while exhaust fumes from an idling truck seep through your bedroom window isn't worth slightly bigger bagels.
"This is no place to raise a kid, that's for sure," said 32-year-old Brandon Rushing, a lifelong New Yorker. "I grew up here and I turned into a giant asshole. Why would I want that for my son?"
"Plus, we're the place most likely to get nuked by a dirty bomb in a terrorist attack," he added. "So that's great. Also, it smells like shit here, and I'm not exaggerating. You'll just be walking around and it starts smelling like human shit, and it just fills your nostrils and you breathe in shit for like 20 seconds."
Before departing by private helicopter, Mayor Michael Bloomberg spoke with members of the media to address the situation.
"You know what the greatest city in the world is?" Bloomberg asked reporters. "Scottsdale, Arizona. It's clean, it's not too big, it's got a couple streets with shops and restaurants, and the people there aren't fucking insane. This place is fucking insane. And by the way, that's not a reason to like it. Anyone who says that is a delusional dirtbag."
By Tuesday night, New York was completely abandoned. At press time, however, some 10 million Los Angeles–area residents, tired of their self-centered, laid-back culture and lack of four distinct seasons, and yearning for the hustle and bustle of East Coast life, had already begun repopulating the city.
i share this at least once a year but it's a brilliant piece of comedy writing and one of my favorite onion pieces.
i still think NYC is the obvious winner, but i'm kind of hoping New Orleans low key taco bells itself to the #1 slot.
As a New Yorker, I'm here to make top 3, but I have ZERO feelings because New York City has made me a hollowed person who would tell you never to come here.
Also, if you live in the ass end of Queens like I did, you sure as shit need a car, which is a hell all into itself
But it's GREAT. It's FUCKING GREAT.
I left NYC 4 years ago because it got to be too much for me, but I am in my 40s, and I miss it constantly. Denver's good enough, but I tell anyone that asks that they owe it to themselves to spend at least a year in NYC to really see what is about