What's it like where you live?

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Fiz_The_Toaster

books, Books, BOOKS
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Jan 19, 2011
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Well, I live in Arizona, so my answer is simple.

Really really really fucking hot. Other people in my country are enjoying cooler weather and actual seasons, but not me. It's over 100F right now and I'm just glad the AC is keeping me from melting.

Other than that, there's not a whole lot to do in my area. I have to drive to some place like Tempe, or Phoenix to do anything exciting.
 

an annoyed writer

Exalted Lady of The Meep :3
Jun 21, 2012
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I live in a small town in the middle of nowhere in the midwest US. It kinda sucks here if you don't like farms, temperamental weather, homophobic jerks, and spartan technology. Needless to say I don't like any of those all that much, and would much rather be somewhere else. There are upsides: off-roading is pretty fun if you have the right vehicle for it like I do, and quiet nights are good for sleeping. I'd rather be somewhere where I don't have to put up with the BS I do around here though.
 

Thyunda

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May 4, 2009
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Johnnyseven said:
I visited Valencia but only for a very short time when I went on holiday, seemed like a great place, spent time around the cathedral area and in a park with some giant trees. There was also a guy who trained a monkey to help pickpocket people, which was cool.

As for me. I live in Barnsley and as someone who doesn't really drink, smoke or care at all about football I don't enjoy it at all. Its in South Yorkshire, England. Its the place that got the BNP its first seats in the European Parliament

I typed Barnsley into youtube, the first non-football related video summed it up quite well. The comments are icing.

Holy shit an actual person from Barnsley. This might sound strange...uh...I played a FIFA tournament with my friends and discovered bellowing BARNSLEY upon shooting at goal made me win. Also I kind of had an attachment to the Barnsley team for no reason.

Also it's a great name for a dog.

I'm from Stoke-on-Trent, England. A city with all the ingredients to become Manchester or Birmingham...but somehow stagnated and became a sad sack of nothing. Before I was born, Stoke was the place to be. It was all industry, steelworks and pottery, this was where you came if you had no educational advantages and were short of employment. As a result, the people here are either former potters, miners or steelworkers, or the children of those. Generations of a family will live in the same house, and it's a city notorious for the fact that if you're born here, you'll die here. And that's slightly terrifying.

Our claims to fame are the founder of Motorhead and...eh...Robbie Williams, for entertainment. A Stoke man designed the Spitfire, the WWII warplane that became synonymous with the Battle of Britain. As entertainment goes round here though...there's whole sections of the city centre of this and neighbouring Newcastle-Under-Lyme devoted to clubs, with The Manhattan Bar and Revolution playing standard club music, Reflex looking back on the 80s, and my two metal clubs, the Rigger in Newcastle and Bunker 13 - an underground club dressed up to look like a nuclear bunker - in Hanley. Bunker has had more money spent on it and is more popular, but is also in Hanley. Which is shitty. The Rigger has older visitors, but is situated in a better area and has a better atmosphere.

If you want to drink in the daytime, Stoke has you covered. Everybody does it. Not really a stigma round these parts.


Finally there's some culture, I suppose. The Italian Gardens in Trentham are quite nice, and there's Westport Lake, which is a lake with an overpriced café and not much else. Honestly, Stoke doesn't have much going for it...yet it really should. There is no reason for it to be as shit as it is...except the corrupt and incompetent City Council - a council so awful the area of Trentham decided it wanted to be included in Stafford's jurisdiction and NOT Stoke's.
 

Kevlar Eater

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Sep 27, 2009
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I live in Sebastian, Florida. Not much to say about this town, other than:

Cantankerous old people who should not be behind the wheel, but are
A bunch of Walmarts

All the entertainment is in Vero Beach. I plan on moving there.
 

A BigCup of Tea

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Nov 19, 2009
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Esotera said:
Well here is the lovely view outside my bedroom window, taken last Saturday morning:


But in all seriousness, I love where I live (Bath, UK). It can get a bit hilly going into the city centre but pretty much everything I need is at the top of the hill. This also makes cycling to the university really easy, as it's only a couple of miles and basically flat. It can get a bit expensive eating out/drinking but I never do that. What you're left with is a beautiful world heritage site surrounded by some of the nicest countryside in the UK.

Ahh in this first picture we have your local wildlife..the local chav as you can see it feeds on a mix of relentless and beer (can't really tell) and most likely cigarettes, the wear caps with the hood of there jumpers up to scare people from getting to close, beware as you approach as you may get stabbed or "shanked" as they call it, in ones or twos they are pretty harmless but in a group are deadly!

well i live in aylesbury and it's terrible, this is how the high street typically goes off licencek betting shop, little casino,random food shop,betting shop,cafe,phone shop,cafe and betting shope there are other shops but it's mosty these and hundereds of pubs and the majority of the population are scum!
 

Mithcha

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Oct 21, 2011
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Live in Thornton Heath (oh it sounds so pleasant and idyllic) pronounced locally as Fort Neath South London, Croydon North. Or Sarf London if you're feeling local. Never forget the day I had to spell Thornton Heath to somebody in Coventry - first time I realised I, and presumable most others in Croydon North, have a distinct accent.

Croydon itself was hit pretty hard by the riots, I think it was one of the worst hit with a local landmark, Reeves Corner, being burnt down by some useless ****. Could see the smoke from my house and the local high street was wrecked to boot.
General consensus was however that most of the people rioting were bussed in from elsewhere and weren't local, a view I share.

People in Croydon have a great pride for the area, at least in my view, more so if they support the local football club, Crystal Palace, who's slogan is South London and Proud and who have their stadium less then 10 minutes from my house.

I can't speak for South Croydon (we're a big borough) but Croydon North effectively has all the problems of an inner city borough condensed into a much smaller area, which is no surprise as we're barely a stones throw from inner London, if I step outside my house and cross the street I'm in inner London essentially. Croydon had a reputation for a long time as being a shithole, coining terms such as the Croydon Facelift, infamous for it's chav culture and I believe dupstep originated here, as well as contributions to grime. I think it's undeserved though, it's an area that is large and diverse, putting it into a box and calling the entire area shit is grossly unfair.

Croydon's essentially a city without city status, so yeah. I'd say Croydon is a nice place overall, it's a city in a city - take from that what you will.
 

Dimitriov

The end is nigh.
May 24, 2010
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Where I live?

No, but seriously, Victoria's a very beautiful area, which is something that quite a few people seem to know already. So just for fun I'll also point out that for a small city we have fairly disturbing homelessness and drug abuse problems. Yay.

I've worked at downtown convenience stores for the last 6 years so I'll admit to having something of a bias. Honestly our damn city is too nice and the weather is too temperate (I think it was the only city in Canada that had zero snow last year). So it feels like many of the homeless people from the rest of the country just slowly end up here or in Vancouver.

Also our municipal government seems to be fairly corrupt or at least disturbingly secretive for what is supposedly a democratically elected body...

Although, honestly, it really is a lovely city for the most part.

And here's the nice stuff! (picture time):





It genuinely surprises me how many tourists seem to come here to see it.







 

schrodinger

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Jul 19, 2013
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I'm pretty much jealous of everyone in this thread, especially those who live more in the north.
Where I'm at is on a peninsula in a peninsula of the insane state of Florida. Not much going on the west coast, it's pretty much just full of retirees crowding our boring beaches, and the occasional redneck driving by in a convertible pickup truck. The weather is pretty much the same, disgustingly humid, hot, with the erratic rainstorm in between. Pretty much the more exciting activities is on the East coast, just gotta drive through downtown Orlampa to get there. I guess if you want to visit a tiny Greece then you can mosey onto Tarpon Springs and get some sponges. Yep, sponges.

Here have some sand


Though i recommend going tubing down rainbow river, a fresh water river basically untouched and unknown to tourist. Suckas~

 

Johnny Impact

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Aug 6, 2008
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Rolling hills, lots of trees, very rural, the nearest actual city is 200 miles away, summer is short enough that the brutal heat only lasts a couple weeks, winter is a bit too long, very low crime (I can leave my laptop on the passenger seat with my doors unlocked and it STILL doesn't get stolen, did that by accident once), it's out on the fringe meaning the rest of the country gets everything 10-20 years before we do, very quiet, it's in America so "old" is 200 years at most, we don't have any of those marvelous ancient stone buildings I see in people's pictures, lots of tourists in the summer, we used to be 99% pasty white but we are filling up with Somali immigrants, income here is lower than the national average, lots of national parks, rough rocky coast on the Atlantic (too cold for swimming this far north).
 

Ldude893

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Apr 2, 2010
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For one thing, it's very pretty [http://www.alectravelguide.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/hong-kong-victoria-peak.jpg] at night.

Hong Kong used to be a British colony, so English is as common of a language as Chinese. Half of it is an urban jungle with tons of neon signs, laundry racks, air conditioner exteriors, concrete canyons, mirror-faced office buildings and apartments that are sometimes 30 stories tall (aside from some townhouses in the countryside, we don't have suburbs. Just lots and lots of tall apartment buildings.), and the other half is a literal tropical jungle that's right next to the urban sprawl. There's this one hiking trail that's on the border of both the city and the wilderness; it's a cool contrast.

Much of the city's built on uneven land, so it's not a grid like New York or Los Angeles, and you also see a lot of skyscrapers jutting out from slopes and hillsides. In that sense, it's a lot like San Francisco if you replaced all the suburbs with skyscrapers, and like San Fran it also has a great transportation system. I'll be honest, the subway and airport here's magnificent.

SInce it's also a self-governing region, it's one of the only two cities in a giant, totalitarian regime with actual free speech. It's the only place in China where people can openly hate its government, and my god are there a lot of them. We still have candlelight vigils for the Tiananmen Square incident every year, and we have plenty of anti-government protests. A year ago, they tried to enact a law that will add nationalistic education to the school curriculums, but that never went through because people went berserk.
There's also the touchy subject of tourists from Mainland China traveling to Hong Kong, and get so rude and impolite while they're there. Mothers usually come over the border to give birth (being born in Hong Kong grants instant citizenship) and empty shelves of milk powder (milk powder from China is shoddy) My mom once yelled at this mainland couple for letting their kid shit on the pavement in front of their apartment, and there's tons of stories like that about other tourists. I don't think all of them are unruly, but it's still a problem.

And yes, we have the occasional Triad car chase and one-to-one kung fu rooftop battles. Also there's the occasional Kaiju attack (and a Decepticon attack, judging from set footage for Transformers 4). I literally have a rooftop view of the Shatterdome from across the harbor.

Also, we have an awesome marine theme park and Hong Kong Disneyland.
 

SuperBio

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Apr 7, 2011
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I live in Tucson Az, its nice and hot here. Unlike a lot of people though having lived for almost all my life without air conditioning I am very much enjoy 80 plus temps. If its under 75 I actually feel a bit cold. I can't stand the cold. People in Tucson will actually where jackets if its under 75 too so I assume its not just me. Other than that I would say that living right in town is pretty crappy but on the edges of town its pretty nice. Desert is nice it doesn't rain for months at a time and when it does rain its all at once and trees fly left and right. The nice thing about the desert isn't really the heat but the lack of air moisture. 4% humidity is a pretty good idea of what its like in the fall. I should also mention that Arizonan deserts don't have sand, at least down south. Sad part, internet service here is terrible beyond imagining. Right now where I live I can only get 1.5mbs down luckily wireless moved in and we might get 6.5mbs compared to the rest of the U.S by a city basis internet in Tucson is shit. Other than that I would say if you don't like 75-80 degrees almost year round other than the three winter months stay as far away as possible.
 

Zaeseled

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May 17, 2011
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Some people would say that Iniö is a peaceful safe haven if you want to relax. I'd say it's a boring place where there's nothing fun to do.
We are a small island community in the Finnish archipelago with barely over 200 all-year residents. The nature here is really beautiful and our old-timey lifestyle appearently fascinates a lot of people which is why we're such a popular holiday place. When I said old-timey I really meant that, there are houses here that don't have any kind of electricity and have have to row for an hour or so just to get to the store.
If you want a quiet place to rest at, welcome. If you're looking for an easy job where you're just waiting for your pension to start without doing your work, fuck off. We don't want your freeloading ass here.
 

MrMixelPixel

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Jul 7, 2010
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I've resided all my life in Sin City! (Las Vegas) And it aint too bad over here.


We have an impressively high drop out and crime rate. Hey! Less educated folk means less job competition AM I RIGHT? It also gets pretty ridiculously hot here. I think we reached around 118 degrees Fahrenheit this Summer?

In addition, we have billboard upon billboard just covered with naked women. I'll let you, the reader, decide if that is awesome or kind of disgusting. We even have a few with naked men on them! SEX!

Speaking of sex, just out of town I think we have brothels? And sci-fi ones that
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2078148/Nevada-brothel-owner-open-Sci-Fi-themed-hooker-house-men-want-bed-women-world.html

We even welcome straight people!


However, for those of you who don't like not graduating, crime, gambling, mini eiffel towers, and LOT'S of sex (good lord), there's still hope! I for one dislike all of those things listed, except mini eiffelt towers. It has plenty of rural areas that are generally friendly communities with plenty of conveniences. That's the part I like!
 

ShipofFools

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Apr 21, 2013
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I live in a small town in the Dutch province of Zeeland, called Goes.
It's build in a drained swamp, and has multiple restaurant, a coffeeshop, a headshop and a brothel.

I really like it here.
 

EHKOS

Madness to my Methods
Feb 28, 2010
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Welcome to Flushing, MI. Where it's so boring and safe I take my walks at 3 A.M. every day. There's nothing to do and it's a bit upper class so the people are boring and snobby.

The one thing we have going for it is Halo Burger though. Local Flint franchise, great onion rings and mayo slathered burgers. Oh and Wing Garden, home of the greatest chicken fried rice I've ever eaten and a cranky old chinese woman named Ping. If she's grumpy to you that means she likes you though.
 

Ravesy

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Apr 16, 2012
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I live in Cardiff, Wales.

I like to joke about how crap it is, but to be honest its a great place to live. There's a population of around 350,000 people, of all different nationalities.

There's literally hundreds of different bars and restaurants covering pretty much every countries food you could think of, all within walking distance.

We have 3 multi screen cinemas, a few different arenas for gigs and shows and loads of shopping centers. Oh and Tourchwood...

Cardiff Castle is pretty cool, and always has things going on in it, even Jousting a couple of times a year which is great to watch.

Our local football team has just been promoted to the Premier league and we also have the millennium stadium, as the Welsh do love our rugby :D.


One downside is that being Wales the weather is usually rubbish though...

Other Pictures:

And finally, the Welsh flag is a damn dragon, i mean come on, if that isn't cool i don't know what is!

 

wooty

Vi Britannia
Aug 1, 2009
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6urk17s said:
wooty said:
Pretty shit really. I feel like I'm the only English person in my town right now, everyone else is either Polish, Latvian or chav.
Uhh, ehh, sorry about that one. If you don't mind asking, I am really interested in your opinion about our immigrants over there.
To be honest, I'm not that bothered by it. I'm quite good friends with my Latvian workmates, we go out, we have a laugh, we get on very well. If people feel the need to move around to find work and look for a better life, then thats cool with me. If the situation ever came where I felt the need to move to another country for work, I just hope they are as welcoming to me as I have been to them.

Of course not everyone here shares the same view as me, but I just ignore them. We're all here to do the best we can and get on with life.
 

Sarah Kerrigan

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Jan 17, 2010
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I won't put where I live, but I am near Chicago, and we're nothing special. Just alot of damn corn everywhere. And druggies. But I'm sure those are everywhere, right?
 

gagagaga

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Aug 17, 2013
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A little town in the middle of Nova Scotia, Canada. We've got mostly weirdos, old people, and druggies. There's a Native reservation of the outskirts, with lots of crime and poverty and things like that. On the other hand, we've got the biggest high school in the province, and possibly in the entire Maritime region? I swear to god though, most of the people there are greasy motherfuckers. So, eh. Not a horrible place to grow up, but I sure as hell am getting the fuck out of here once I get out of high school.
 

LightningFast

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Feb 6, 2013
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I live in Toronto.

... I love it here! Then again, I live right near the Yonge subway like, which pretty much means I can get to most places in the Downtown area with a couple bucks. It's nice, despite the awful traffic and occasional homeless dude.

Oh yeah, and our mayor may or may not smoke crack, but considering I do stand-up in my spare time, I'm okay with it.