- This topic has 315 replies, 30 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 3 months ago by TuVu.
-
AuthorPosts
-
June 7, 2008 at 11:36 AM #219108June 7, 2008 at 12:27 PM #218971sandiegoParticipant
What would all of the bars and restaurants do if every Boston, Chicago, Bay Area, etc. transplant left? We wouldn’t have any whiny bartenders and waitresses complaining how much better it is “back home”.
Just keep serving me my cold beers and let me know when there is a mass migration from San Diego to these other “utopias”.
June 7, 2008 at 12:27 PM #219064sandiegoParticipantWhat would all of the bars and restaurants do if every Boston, Chicago, Bay Area, etc. transplant left? We wouldn’t have any whiny bartenders and waitresses complaining how much better it is “back home”.
Just keep serving me my cold beers and let me know when there is a mass migration from San Diego to these other “utopias”.
June 7, 2008 at 12:27 PM #219081sandiegoParticipantWhat would all of the bars and restaurants do if every Boston, Chicago, Bay Area, etc. transplant left? We wouldn’t have any whiny bartenders and waitresses complaining how much better it is “back home”.
Just keep serving me my cold beers and let me know when there is a mass migration from San Diego to these other “utopias”.
June 7, 2008 at 12:27 PM #219112sandiegoParticipantWhat would all of the bars and restaurants do if every Boston, Chicago, Bay Area, etc. transplant left? We wouldn’t have any whiny bartenders and waitresses complaining how much better it is “back home”.
Just keep serving me my cold beers and let me know when there is a mass migration from San Diego to these other “utopias”.
June 7, 2008 at 12:27 PM #219133sandiegoParticipantWhat would all of the bars and restaurants do if every Boston, Chicago, Bay Area, etc. transplant left? We wouldn’t have any whiny bartenders and waitresses complaining how much better it is “back home”.
Just keep serving me my cold beers and let me know when there is a mass migration from San Diego to these other “utopias”.
June 7, 2008 at 12:27 PM #218976TuVuParticipantFLU and you other people, I really appreciate the feedback. In my early 20s, I was in love with Manhattan, because I so wanted to have a book published. However, I never wanted to live there. The most I could stand were three-day visits, where I knew exactly how to act like a New Yorker…walk fast, carry a shopping bag instead of a briefcase/purse, don’t look anyone in the eyes. I now know a lot about the publishing industry, and I have succeeded (relatively) in it. If anyone has questions about writing a book or whatever, ask.
June 7, 2008 at 12:27 PM #219068TuVuParticipantFLU and you other people, I really appreciate the feedback. In my early 20s, I was in love with Manhattan, because I so wanted to have a book published. However, I never wanted to live there. The most I could stand were three-day visits, where I knew exactly how to act like a New Yorker…walk fast, carry a shopping bag instead of a briefcase/purse, don’t look anyone in the eyes. I now know a lot about the publishing industry, and I have succeeded (relatively) in it. If anyone has questions about writing a book or whatever, ask.
June 7, 2008 at 12:27 PM #219086TuVuParticipantFLU and you other people, I really appreciate the feedback. In my early 20s, I was in love with Manhattan, because I so wanted to have a book published. However, I never wanted to live there. The most I could stand were three-day visits, where I knew exactly how to act like a New Yorker…walk fast, carry a shopping bag instead of a briefcase/purse, don’t look anyone in the eyes. I now know a lot about the publishing industry, and I have succeeded (relatively) in it. If anyone has questions about writing a book or whatever, ask.
June 7, 2008 at 12:27 PM #219117TuVuParticipantFLU and you other people, I really appreciate the feedback. In my early 20s, I was in love with Manhattan, because I so wanted to have a book published. However, I never wanted to live there. The most I could stand were three-day visits, where I knew exactly how to act like a New Yorker…walk fast, carry a shopping bag instead of a briefcase/purse, don’t look anyone in the eyes. I now know a lot about the publishing industry, and I have succeeded (relatively) in it. If anyone has questions about writing a book or whatever, ask.
June 7, 2008 at 12:27 PM #219139TuVuParticipantFLU and you other people, I really appreciate the feedback. In my early 20s, I was in love with Manhattan, because I so wanted to have a book published. However, I never wanted to live there. The most I could stand were three-day visits, where I knew exactly how to act like a New Yorker…walk fast, carry a shopping bag instead of a briefcase/purse, don’t look anyone in the eyes. I now know a lot about the publishing industry, and I have succeeded (relatively) in it. If anyone has questions about writing a book or whatever, ask.
June 7, 2008 at 1:36 PM #218986ctr70ParticipantI agree with a lot of the posters, San Diego as a city is overrated. Take away the weather and this place is below average. It’s interesting, even though the weather isn’t perfect, people still want to live in places like Seattle, SF, Boston…b/c they are such cool cities w/ character, they overcome the weather.
SD lacks culture, there’s a lot of unsightly sprawl and suburbia. It has an “emptiness” to it. And the central beach communities are full of these dirtbag mental midgits. The Gaslamp is just a bunch of national chain restaurants each with 97 big screen TV’s and lacks character. Much of North County is souless, sterile, cookie cutter suburbia. And the beach crowd up there is just an extention of “plastic” Orange County.
And people who say Berkely has bad weather have to get a clue. Compared to what? The Bay Area is probably the 2nd best weather in the entire U.S. after SoCal. Compare it to Chicago, Boston, Seattle and it has awesome weather.
But the weather is so awesome in San Diego it keeps me here. SD is not a horrible place (like Phoenix or Dallas for example), but it overrated. And it gets annoying listening to people go so gaa-gaa over it.
I have this mismatch with weather and cities, I like warm weather, but all the cities I like are in the North (Seattle, Boston, SF, London, Paris). Most of the warm weather cities in the US are not that interesting (Phoenix, Houston, All of Florida pretty much sucks, Atlanta). And SoCal is also not that great in terms of cities.
Why can’t there be a Seattle, Boston, SF, London, or Paris in a nice climate like San Diego!!!!
June 7, 2008 at 1:36 PM #219078ctr70ParticipantI agree with a lot of the posters, San Diego as a city is overrated. Take away the weather and this place is below average. It’s interesting, even though the weather isn’t perfect, people still want to live in places like Seattle, SF, Boston…b/c they are such cool cities w/ character, they overcome the weather.
SD lacks culture, there’s a lot of unsightly sprawl and suburbia. It has an “emptiness” to it. And the central beach communities are full of these dirtbag mental midgits. The Gaslamp is just a bunch of national chain restaurants each with 97 big screen TV’s and lacks character. Much of North County is souless, sterile, cookie cutter suburbia. And the beach crowd up there is just an extention of “plastic” Orange County.
And people who say Berkely has bad weather have to get a clue. Compared to what? The Bay Area is probably the 2nd best weather in the entire U.S. after SoCal. Compare it to Chicago, Boston, Seattle and it has awesome weather.
But the weather is so awesome in San Diego it keeps me here. SD is not a horrible place (like Phoenix or Dallas for example), but it overrated. And it gets annoying listening to people go so gaa-gaa over it.
I have this mismatch with weather and cities, I like warm weather, but all the cities I like are in the North (Seattle, Boston, SF, London, Paris). Most of the warm weather cities in the US are not that interesting (Phoenix, Houston, All of Florida pretty much sucks, Atlanta). And SoCal is also not that great in terms of cities.
Why can’t there be a Seattle, Boston, SF, London, or Paris in a nice climate like San Diego!!!!
June 7, 2008 at 1:36 PM #219096ctr70ParticipantI agree with a lot of the posters, San Diego as a city is overrated. Take away the weather and this place is below average. It’s interesting, even though the weather isn’t perfect, people still want to live in places like Seattle, SF, Boston…b/c they are such cool cities w/ character, they overcome the weather.
SD lacks culture, there’s a lot of unsightly sprawl and suburbia. It has an “emptiness” to it. And the central beach communities are full of these dirtbag mental midgits. The Gaslamp is just a bunch of national chain restaurants each with 97 big screen TV’s and lacks character. Much of North County is souless, sterile, cookie cutter suburbia. And the beach crowd up there is just an extention of “plastic” Orange County.
And people who say Berkely has bad weather have to get a clue. Compared to what? The Bay Area is probably the 2nd best weather in the entire U.S. after SoCal. Compare it to Chicago, Boston, Seattle and it has awesome weather.
But the weather is so awesome in San Diego it keeps me here. SD is not a horrible place (like Phoenix or Dallas for example), but it overrated. And it gets annoying listening to people go so gaa-gaa over it.
I have this mismatch with weather and cities, I like warm weather, but all the cities I like are in the North (Seattle, Boston, SF, London, Paris). Most of the warm weather cities in the US are not that interesting (Phoenix, Houston, All of Florida pretty much sucks, Atlanta). And SoCal is also not that great in terms of cities.
Why can’t there be a Seattle, Boston, SF, London, or Paris in a nice climate like San Diego!!!!
June 7, 2008 at 1:36 PM #219129ctr70ParticipantI agree with a lot of the posters, San Diego as a city is overrated. Take away the weather and this place is below average. It’s interesting, even though the weather isn’t perfect, people still want to live in places like Seattle, SF, Boston…b/c they are such cool cities w/ character, they overcome the weather.
SD lacks culture, there’s a lot of unsightly sprawl and suburbia. It has an “emptiness” to it. And the central beach communities are full of these dirtbag mental midgits. The Gaslamp is just a bunch of national chain restaurants each with 97 big screen TV’s and lacks character. Much of North County is souless, sterile, cookie cutter suburbia. And the beach crowd up there is just an extention of “plastic” Orange County.
And people who say Berkely has bad weather have to get a clue. Compared to what? The Bay Area is probably the 2nd best weather in the entire U.S. after SoCal. Compare it to Chicago, Boston, Seattle and it has awesome weather.
But the weather is so awesome in San Diego it keeps me here. SD is not a horrible place (like Phoenix or Dallas for example), but it overrated. And it gets annoying listening to people go so gaa-gaa over it.
I have this mismatch with weather and cities, I like warm weather, but all the cities I like are in the North (Seattle, Boston, SF, London, Paris). Most of the warm weather cities in the US are not that interesting (Phoenix, Houston, All of Florida pretty much sucks, Atlanta). And SoCal is also not that great in terms of cities.
Why can’t there be a Seattle, Boston, SF, London, or Paris in a nice climate like San Diego!!!!
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.