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[personal profile] beetiger
You can take the New Yorker out of the city, but you can't take the city out of the New Yorker, it seems.

When I was an undergraduate at a liberal arts institution in New Haven, sometimes my friends and I used to take the Metro-North train into The City. Other people, originally from other parts of the country, would be somewhere between confused and offended by our terminology. "We *are* in a city!", they'd complain.

We may have been self-centered and boorish. But, apparently, we weren't alone.

Date: 2003-06-16 08:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cowboy-r.livejournal.com
Kind of amusing that there's a big cluster of 'other' right around San Francisco, which isn't even on the list!

Date: 2003-06-16 09:57 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] perlandria.livejournal.com
Yup, thats The City to me.
Little conservative, hippie, wild, businesslike, mellow, caffiene fueled 1 mile county is the city size distilled essense of city you can walk across in an afternoon.
LOVE IT!

Date: 2003-06-16 10:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tuftears.livejournal.com
You got it, San Francisco is the City around here. ('gryn)

Date: 2003-06-16 08:44 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tikvah.livejournal.com
As another self-center and boorish native New Yawkah (born in Brooklyn), I'm glad I'm not alone.

On the phone a few days ago, I was describing some locations in the Dutchess/Rockland/etc counties in NY as "upstate" to a friend of mine who was raised not far from those areas, and he attempted to correct my geography. He forgot that I was a native New Yawkah, and when I reminded him, he gave up with exasperation in his voice. As you said, you can't take the city of the New Yawkah. :-)

Date: 2003-06-16 08:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] freeko.livejournal.com
Yeah same here, I feel as if I am still New Yawker at heart and my NY ways have a way of clashing with more reserved types, leading to misunderstandings!

Date: 2003-06-16 10:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] en-ki.livejournal.com
Even if I weren't born in New York, the fact remains that it's the nearest city where you can really get around on the subway, and its commuter rail takes in a substantially larger area than the state I'm currently living in. But then, there's only a handful of places in the US I'd call a city: Boston is marginal (more a cluster of towns linked by a desultory public transit system), Providence is a college town with a couple of skyscrapers, Hartford is a concrete zit, Santa Fe and Albuquerque are giant suburbs without an urb... besides New York, I think only Seattle and San Francisco count as city-cities in my mind.

Date: 2003-06-16 10:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] perlandria.livejournal.com
Portland is very city like, rail and everything.

Date: 2003-06-16 11:25 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tikvah.livejournal.com
Hartford is a concrete zit

I can see that you've been in town, then... [insert wry grin here]

Date: 2003-06-16 12:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] heron61.livejournal.com
Odd, I would have expected LA to come in a close second, but that's likely because I spent 4 years living in LA and have merely visited NYC for a few days.

City?

Date: 2003-06-16 02:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] varjohaltia.livejournal.com
What city? There's supposed to be a city somewhere amidst all these sprawling subdivisions? Is it where the newest mall is? Hm. Maybe I should spend an afternoon and find the city. An old relic, with crumbling skyscrapers and not a single person around! (Okay, Tampa isn't quite /that/ bad.)

Date: 2003-06-17 05:21 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lapis-lazuli.livejournal.com
When I was growing up in northern VA, D.C. was "the City". When I moved to NJ, New York became "the City".

But, when I lived in Ft. Lauderdale, Miami was never "the City".
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