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you're wonderful but CT is mostly a boring impediment between Boston/Providence and NYC, filled with white people who love working for insurance companies
I’ve never been there but all I think of it is rich white people, UConn and ESPN.
don't forget america's second shittiest family, the McMahons
Unless you want city living full-time, I'd take being the rest stop any day. I like having access to the big cities, but not living there. We're well-populated and easy to get everywhere pretty quickly, but yet still have trees and outdoors.
Pizza is definitely the best, but obviously depends on your style. If you want to go to the big three in their OG locations, yeah lines like crazy. But there are plenty of other good places and 2 of the main places are now making themselves chains. There's a Pepe's in my town and there will be a Sally's soon. Arguably not as good as OG places, but definitely still amazing and easier access.
Generally agree with most of what LD said. I don't really experience much traffic unless I am on 95 in Fairfield County which is basically NYC anyway. But I live in a very urban suburban area, full of everything but not too trafficy (but, to be fair, I rarely go on the highway. I just live happily in my little bubble).
EDIT: I basically grew up on NY and Greek pizza (Greek is also regional) and didn't discover New Haven-style until I was older, but I became an immediate convert. So it's not just bias, at least for me.
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.
Oklahoma where the wind come sweeping down the plain. And the wavin' wheat can sure smell sweet when the wind comes right behind the rain. Oklahoma e'ry night my honey lamb (!) and I sit alone and talk and watch a hawk making lazy circles in the sky. We know we belong to the land. And the land we belong to is grand. And when we say a-yo-ah-yip-ay-yo-ay-yay. We're only saying you're doing fine Oklahoma. Oklahoma OK.
Eh. I don't really want to sit alone and talk with my honey lamb and watch hawks making lazy circles in the sky. Certainly not e'ry night. Maybe that's just me.
CT and NJ share a lot of the same positives. They're fun punching bags on some level but I know many (most?) people in my former orbit who moved out of NYC proper for more room and better schools and trade some commuting convenience for a better quantity of life. Some went to Westchester or LI, but even more went to CT and NJ. And these are not uniformly vanilla people - it's a fairly equal distribution of people who lived in the city in the old days.
CT and NJ share a lot of the same positives. They're fun punching bags on some level but I know many (most?) people in my former orbit who moved out of NYC proper for more room and better schools and trade some commuting convenience for a better quantity of life. Some went to Westchester or LI, but even more went to CT and NJ. And these are not uniformly vanilla people - it's a fairly equal distribution of people who lived in the city in the old days.
I work with a guy from NJ that moved down here and now all of his family is trying to follow him.
CT and NJ share a lot of the same positives. They're fun punching bags on some level but I know many (most?) people in my former orbit who moved out of NYC proper for more room and better schools and trade some commuting convenience for a better quantity of life. Some went to Westchester or LI, but even more went to CT and NJ. And these are not uniformly vanilla people - it's a fairly equal distribution of people who lived in the city in the old days.
I work with a guy from NJ that moved down here and now all of his family is trying to follow him.
CT and NJ share a lot of the same positives. They're fun punching bags on some level but I know many (most?) people in my former orbit who moved out of NYC proper for more room and better schools and trade some commuting convenience for a better quantity of life. Some went to Westchester or LI, but even more went to CT and NJ. And these are not uniformly vanilla people - it's a fairly equal distribution of people who lived in the city in the old days.
I work with a guy from NJ that moved down here and now all of his family is trying to follow him.