Scholarship table
Springfield was a one company town.International Harvester.Springfield was ravaged in the 80's.
Robinsonville? Tunica Resorts? Mark it down. I’m not much of a gambler though. I have a friend who feels the same way about Hattiesburg. He can’t stand it. Funny thing is I had a friend who lived in Jackson for a time. (news anchor) Wish we had kept in touch better so I can have a better answer in this moment.
Actually I was thinking about the Hollywood Cafe. Great food and music. Granted I have not been in a long time. It’s the place referenced in the song Walking in Memphis.
Nah. You're a Negative Nancy.. That's gotta be exhausting.You're also a bit loose and obsessive with the term contrarian. Seems like some projection going on there. Maybe you're just unhappy and argumentative.Like I said I've never been to a bad place. That isn't saying something contrarian to anything. What is contrarian though is your follow up to it. If that works.for you, great. But that isn't me,
I’m sure my friends that grew up in a depressing dead end town where going to a good college was a unique escape are just negative nancies too. They should be more like uninformed strangers.The majority of my posts in this thread are praising places and giving recommendations for such places. I literally agreed with your points about cities and pointed out exceptions. You, having never been there, assured us we were wrong and now label me a negative person and that I’m unhappy and argumentative… right. It’s also rich to call me argumentative coming from the person who shotguns 1000 words into a post if someone besmirches his hometown or favorite baseball team.
Been to Gary, Indiana much?
Or East St. Louis?One of my parents grew up there, and the other one in Jackson, MS. Needless to say, they aren't in any hurry to get back to either of those places.
To be fair, anyone who thinks St. Louis is actually a nice place is probably going to think there aren’t any bad places.
I’m anything if consistent when it comes to not bashing places. Your trolling isn’t going to change that I also think Milwaukee and Chicago are nice places and all of the other towns in Il and WI that compile the 75% plus Marquette student body. A lot of people here seem to pick on you, so I’ll let you go. It’s gotta be tough on you daily to be that miserable. It’s the same few negative people, every time here.
Tribal
Brother Lens:Last year, I moved from Chicago's Northern Suburbs to Vero Beach, FL. My deal with Ms. Dgies is we come back to Chicago in the summer and I get to go to at least one home game at FiServ.We came back to Chicago in July and am here through this weekend. For the first time in our lives, we lived in the city itself. Yes, we heard the same crime reports you have and they stirred a healthy caution in us. But....The experience has been wonderful. Other than one petty crime incident, we have had no problems. No, I don't go roaming the west side at 3:00 a.m., but we live in a nice community (Broadway, Clark and Diversey) with lots of nearby restaurants, bars, wine cellars and a host of everything else. It is what I wanted Chicago to be. Only downside is there's an occasional Badger in the neighborhood.You'll live unless you troll the west or south side at 3:00 a.m., and if you, have your car fitted for armor plating and bullet proof glass.
I can say fully that Springfield, OH is a bad place. The smallish factory town I’ve visited outside Surat, India with total poverty, basically owned by a old school brutal tycoon types, so bad that even the meager paid factory workers chose to commute from 20 min away rather than live there…is a bad place.The meth haven in rural Southern PA near where my old roommate was from that felt like it was out of a movie when I visited…is a bad place.Now if we are talking major cities? Then I agree. Even the worst most mockable have redeeming qualities and areas. For example, Cleveland is often a punchline. I personally thought Joachim Noah’s joke about vacationing there was hilarious. But I actually adore Cleveland and was beyond surprised by how much I enjoyed it there at various stages of my life. But there are some truly bad places, even if they have some good people there. Might actually be an interesting thread
Hey now. I've spent more time in Tupelo, Oxford, Starkville and all the small towns between Memphis and Tuscaloosa.
Big fan of Cleveland. Back in the day, we would hit up the Flats, see a game at the Jake, and eat some great food. My longest friend and her entire family live in Olmsted Falls. Underrated city imo
Agreed. Fantastic food scene in some of the traditional ethnic neighborhood pockets. A diverse and unpretentious yet eclectic bar scene. Lot to like. And it’s only continuing to evolve and develop from its industrial wasteland days. Also, I get a kick out of Dgies the retiree spending the summer in a notorious new grad/young 20s landing spot. But at the same time, it’s a great area with tons to do and still makes total sense for that type of demographic. I spent my first year in Chicago a few blocks west at a Lincoln and Diversey.
Also, I get a kick out of Dgies the retiree spending the summer in a notorious new grad/young 20s landing spot. But at the same time, it’s a great area with tons to do and still makes total sense for that type of demographic. I spent my first year in Chicago a few blocks west at a Lincoln and Diversey.
Our plan at retirement is a series of AirBnB's. First year is winter in Manhattan, next year is winter in Manhattan Beach. From there i can see us spending a winter in San Francisco, Seattle, Portland, Boston (maybe even Philly!) etc.
Several years back, we knew a couple who "lived" on cruise ships for nearly 2 years!
https://www.usatoday.com/story/travel/cruises/2015/01/19/woman-pays-164k-per-year-to-live-on-luxury-cruise-ship/22030011/This is from 2015, but I think the only thing that stopped her was Covid. So 12 years living on a cruise ship.