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Who here is from NYC and who here is a transplant? - Page 2 — Brooklynian

Who here is from NYC and who here is a transplant?

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  • Kate wrote: [quote=jayce] where in Boston?
    I'm a masshole myself. :wink:
    I'm from Carlisle, there is a chance that means nothing to you.

    Last season of This Old House!!! Woo!!! :D
  • nybt wrote: [quote=Kate][quote=jayce] where in Boston?
    I'm a masshole myself. :wink:
    I'm from Carlisle, there is a chance that means nothing to you.

    Last season of This Old House!!! Woo!!! :D

    You rock!
  • nybt wrote:

    Last season of This Old House!!! Woo!!! :D

    You watch TOH too?! :D
  • caaahyoko wrote: [quote=nybt]
    Last season of This Old House!!! Woo!!! :D
    You watch TOH too?! :D
    :D If I could save all of the old houses, I certainly would! I've been salivating at this site recently...
  • EmilyM wrote: But don't you think that many of them intend to, and find that in the long run they can't afford it?
    In my personal experience, no. It feels like ever since NYC "came back," it's been a stop in the post-collegiate life of many a person. They get the experiences and go somewhere else. That's obviously a generalization based on personal experience, though. There are always exceptions, and a neighborhood based board like this will be filled with them, since you have to care about where you live to bother coming here.
    nybt wrote: Renters don't jack up their own rent, the landlords jack up rents. That being said...

    If rents are increasing and the area is hot, the new businesses that follow usually account for an increase in the quality of the neighborhood amenities. How is that bad? It's a free market, man. If someone else is willing to pay more for the area and the experience, well, life just isn't fair and it's something that we all have to put up with, right?
    It's the renters' faults. When a group of people find a cheap area and blow it up, they're the front line warriors for gentrification. And you're right, it's not fair and you have to just deal with it. Part of my way of dealing with it is saying, 'Fuck you hipster transplant gypsies.'
  • Kate wrote: As am I, where are you from Jayce? I'm from Carlisle, there is a chance that means nothing to you.
    hahahahahaha. Carlisle. I know it VERYVERYVERY WELL.
    um, did you attend CCHS?
    i grew up in Littleton, but went to school in Concord because my dad was a teacher in the HS. So, we may have gone to the same highschool. (i think i might have a few years on you tho. class of 91)
  • devincf wrote:
    It's the renters' faults. When a group of people find a cheap area and blow it up, they're the front line warriors for gentrification.
    Let me get this straight- you feel that people should avoid reasonably priced neighborhoods? :? And if they ignore that, and they do move in to a reasonably priced neighborhood, you're of the mind that they should not make any effort to improve their living environment? THAT sounds like a truly transient attitude.
  • where is brighten beach BROOKLYN born JACK when we need him to keep this fight alive!??!? :P
  • devincf wrote: It's the renters' faults. When a group of people find a cheap area and blow it up, they're the front line warriors for gentrification. And you're right, it's not fair and you have to just deal with it. Part of my way of dealing with it is saying, 'Fuck you hipster transplant gypsies.'
    so everyone is supposed to stay in their home town, whether they have one or not, in their own neighborhood, and never move? cause I know tons of native new yorkers in our neighborhood who moved into it recently. are the hipster transplant gypsies?
  • jayce wrote: [quote=Kate]As am I, where are you from Jayce? I'm from Carlisle, there is a chance that means nothing to you.
    hahahahahaha. Carlisle. I know it VERYVERYVERY WELL.
    um, did you attend CCHS?
    i grew up in Littleton, but went to school in Concord because my dad was a teacher in the HS. So, we may have gone to the same highschool. (i think i might have a few years on you tho. class of 91)

    Whoa that's crazy, I did indeed go to CCHS, who is your father? PM me if you like :D If I remember correctly we practically have the same bday also... scary small blog world.
  • hipster transplant gypsies?

    i just moved to new york a year ago, i'm in love with it, i think the people here are far nicer than where i'm from (pittsburgh), and i plan on staying here for a long time. my girlfriend is the same way, and many of my friends are the same way.

    i'm also new to this message board and shit like that makes me feel very unwelcome, as i'm sure it would to any recent "transplant."

    i also enjoy newer art and music, so i suppose that makes me a "hipster."

    i guess i only have one strike left.
  • I self-indict. I was not born in Prospect Heights.

    Anyway, there's a difference between improving a neighborhood and making it hip. Williamsburg is the perfect example of a place ruined by newcomers. Which is saying a lot, because it used to really be an awful area.
  • kidicarus wrote: hipster transplant gypsies?

    i just moved to new york a year ago, i'm in love with it, i think the people here are far nicer than where i'm from (pittsburgh), and i plan on staying here for a long time. my girlfriend is the same way, and many of my friends are the same way.

    i'm also new to this message board and shit like that makes me feel very unwelcome, as i'm sure it would to any recent "transplant."

    i also enjoy newer art and music, so i suppose that makes me a "hipster."

    i guess i only have one strike left.
    Do you DJ? That would be strike three for sure.
  • devincf wrote: [quote=kidicarus]hipster transplant gypsies?

    i just moved to new york a year ago, i'm in love with it, i think the people here are far nicer than where i'm from (pittsburgh), and i plan on staying here for a long time. my girlfriend is the same way, and many of my friends are the same way.

    i'm also new to this message board and shit like that makes me feel very unwelcome, as i'm sure it would to any recent "transplant."

    i also enjoy newer art and music, so i suppose that makes me a "hipster."

    i guess i only have one strike left.
    Do you DJ? That would be strike three for sure.

    crap.
  • Transplant -

    (Let's see if I can get this right):
    1977-1980 - Aurora, SD
    1980 - Seattle
    1980 - 1985 - Burnsville (Mpls suburb), MN
    1985 - 1996 - Brookings, SD
    1996 - 2000 - Portland, ME
    2000 - 2002 - Boston, MA
    2002 - 2005 - Minneapolis, MN
    2005 - Present - PH, baby.
  • Everybody with a couple of records is a DJ now. They should make people get a license. Take some sort of test.
  • devincf wrote:
    Anyway, there's a difference between improving a neighborhood and making it hip. Williamsburg is the perfect example of a place ruined by newcomers. Which is saying a lot, because it used to really be an awful area.
    how can you "ruin" an "awful" area? :?
  • devincf wrote: Everybody with a couple of records is a DJ now. They should make people get a license. Take some sort of test.
    haa i'd fail that test.

    yeah, every time i go out it's like hip hop 1995 night.
  • vanilla wrote: [quote=devincf]
    Anyway, there's a difference between improving a neighborhood and making it hip. Williamsburg is the perfect example of a place ruined by newcomers. Which is saying a lot, because it used to really be an awful area.
    how can you "ruin" an "awful" area? :?

    By turning it into a cesspool of and beacon for annoying hipsters. People come from all over the country just to live in Williamsburg now. It's sort of like what I imagine the Village was like in the 60s, only with a horrible and shallow cultural movement.
  • devincf wrote: [quote=vanilla][quote=devincf]
    Anyway, there's a difference between improving a neighborhood and making it hip. Williamsburg is the perfect example of a place ruined by newcomers. Which is saying a lot, because it used to really be an awful area.
    how can you "ruin" an "awful" area? :?

    By turning it into a cesspool of and beacon for annoying hipsters. People come from all over the country just to live in Williamsburg now. It's sort of like what I imagine the Village was like in the 60s, only with a horrible and shallow cultural movement.

    what do you find annoying about the hipsters?

    i'm not attacking your comment, i'm just really into this whole subject. i didn't move here for williamsburg, but i love williamsburg and i actually (brace yourself) feel more "at home" in williamsburg than any other place in the city, maybe even the country. the people there have been extremely nice to me, i've met a lot of friends there and made some really great memories there.

    explain the "horrible and shallow cultural movement" part. the only movement i've seen in williamsburg is a hatred of chain stores, and can you blame them? but i'm sure you're talking about something bigger, so elaborate.
  • As of the 2000 census, only 52.3% of the New York population was born in NY state. Can't find numbers on those actually born in the state but not in the city.

    Ruined by newcomers? New York was, and is, built on immigration, from both outside of the state and outside of the country.
  • Transplant

    1980-1998 New Hartford, CT
    1998-2002 Wellesley MA (With one year in Vienna, Austria)
    2002-2005 Washington Heights, NY
    2005- Prospect Heights, Brooklyn
  • nybt wrote: As of the 2000 census, only 52.3% of the New York population was born in NY state. Can't find numbers on those actually born in the state but not in the city.

    Ruined by newcomers? New York was, and is, built on immigration, from both outside of the state and outside of the country.
    Come on. I don't know if you're misunderstanding my posts or just twisting them. I'm not saying to wall off the city. I am talking about the transient types, who move to New York after college because it's a thing to do and mommy and daddy will pay their rent and they want to go to the clubs and be on Last Night's Party. I met a girl who has lived in Greenpoint for two years who didn't know that Brooklyn and Manhattan have the same mayor. These are not people who give a shit about where there are beyond its proximity to the nearest scenester bar.

    And what happens is this: Artists and pioneers are pushed out of their area by gentrification so they move to a new, low cost neighborhood. They bring some life to the area so hipsters follow. Hipsters bring chain coffee joints and places to eat and boutiques and the neighborhood gets written up and the yuppies follow. By now it's so expensive to live in the neighborhood the artists and pioneers have moved on. Begin cycle again.
  • kidicarus wrote: what do you find annoying about the hipsters?
    you might find this past post to be quite interesting, kidicarus:::
    http://dailyheights.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=1541&highlight=hipsters
  • kidicarus wrote: what do you find annoying about the hipsters?

    i'm not attacking your comment, i'm just really into this whole subject. i didn't move here for williamsburg, but i love williamsburg and i actually (brace yourself) feel more "at home" in williamsburg than any other place in the city, maybe even the country. the people there have been extremely nice to me, i've met a lot of friends there and made some really great memories there.

    explain the "horrible and shallow cultural movement" part. the only movement i've seen in williamsburg is a hatred of chain stores, and can you blame them? but i'm sure you're talking about something bigger, so elaborate.
    Any time a bunch of people dress the same, act the same, drink the same beer, etc etc etc, it's a movement. Lame as it is, it's a movement.
  • My mom is from Washington Hghts - I spent most holidays with my grandmother

    Dad - the Bronx They now live in Atlanta

    born Eugene Ore - 63-65

    Worcester Ma - 65 - 87 - You can still buy a Pacer or a Pinto in Worcester!

    In between lived in Lyon France, 2 years - Ya think ya know rude??

    San Francisco - 83 - 83

    Then -

    Watertown/Boston Ma - 87 - 91 Ya think ya know rude??
    New Brunswick, NY - 1 year
    Hyde Park, NY - 2 years in school to busy to know what was going on
    Park Slope - 94 - 99 Started lovin' Brooklyn
    Prospect Heights - 99 since! I ain't never leavin...

    I have never felt more at home in my personal life than I have since I have been living in NYC or if you must Brooklyn!
  • jayce wrote: [quote=muteflute]transplant, baby. boston born and raised, 83-2004; Brooklyn, Aug. 2005-present.
    where in Boston?
    I'm a masshole myself. :wink:

    fun! Brookline, specifically, right near Cleveland Circle, and then Cambridge for college. you?
  • I lived in Watertown, and worked in Boston. Went to Watertown after graduating from Clark U. Not a big fan of Massachusetts! Really glad I was able to leave and no reason at all to go back. My family is spread out all over.
  • devincf wrote:
    Any time a bunch of people dress the same, act the same, drink the same beer, etc etc etc, it's a movement. Lame as it is, it's a movement.
    i don't know. i think the whole "hipster uniform" thing is a little misinformed. you'd probably get much dirtier looks wearing a trucker hat in williamsburg that anywhere else in the city. people in williamsburg are self-concious about the labels they get from everyone else, but what are they going to do?

    sometimes i think the word "hipster" only means people who are young and like art. i don't think the people in williamsburg are any more clique-ish than any other group of people who are the same age and share the same interests.

    i moved here from pittsburgh, where i felt like an outsider because i was under 30 and didn't care THAT much about football. that place felt like a clique to me.
  • Oh gee. Another hipster conversation. There are like 10 of "them" in the whole freaking neighborhood. Talk about obsessing over something that isn't there! :roll:

    But on topic, Brooklyn-born and mostly bred (with stops in *shudder* Queens).
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