People Who Live In Suburbs: Classy, Icky, or Dudes?

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (4414 of them)

I do have a pretty sweet indie record collection though.

Colonel Poo, Saturday, 12 July 2008 01:17 (seventeen years ago)

actually, my childhood catholic pplz were polish or otherwise eastern european, not irish. indeed there was a big hubbub when someone made a statue called 'hunky steelworker' cause so many people could remember when 'hunky' was a slur.

when i was in grade two everyone else went to ccd for two weeks and i got to just sit there reading. awesome

mookieproof, Saturday, 12 July 2008 01:20 (seventeen years ago)

(I should note that I didn't live in a "suburb," as a child, but in a planned subdivision in a town of about 100,000 -- i.e., basically the same as a suburb except you don't hear about cool new stuff from people in a nearby city.)

er, yeah. that was my experience, as well. but i lazily think of it as "suburban"

but it was really more of a small subdivision outside of a small-ish town

dell, Sunday, 13 July 2008 23:50 (seventeen years ago)

i got lots of love for the suburbs

max, Sunday, 13 July 2008 23:55 (seventeen years ago)

but i guess princeton doesnt really count as a 'suburb'

max, Sunday, 13 July 2008 23:55 (seventeen years ago)

actually, my childhood catholic pplz were polish or otherwise eastern european, not irish. indeed there was a big hubbub when someone made a statue called 'hunky steelworker' cause so many people could remember when 'hunky' was a slur.

when i was in grade two everyone else went to ccd for two weeks and i got to just sit there reading. awesome

-- mookieproof, Saturday, 12 July 2008 01:20 (2 days ago) Link

you from picksburgh?? a couple of years ago, my brother was in the hospital and some relatives from western pa. came out to visit him. during a visit, my cousin turned to me and said, 'he'll be all right -- he's a stubborn bohunk!!" truer words were never spoken.

edb, Monday, 14 July 2008 03:13 (seventeen years ago)

I think what people are largely glossing over here is that, at least in a lot of places, the suburbs aren't economically homogenous. There are upscale suburbs and downscale suburbs.

The Reverend, Monday, 14 July 2008 20:36 (seventeen years ago)

For real – there's a big diff between McMansion Playland and Levittown.

Abbott, Monday, 14 July 2008 21:04 (seventeen years ago)

I think my favorite thing about the former incarnation of suburbs IS: archaeologists determined Mesopotamia was a well-formed society bcz of their logical, grid-based roads. What will THE FUTURE think of all the random twists & turns peppered with cul-de-sacs?

Abbott, Monday, 14 July 2008 21:06 (seventeen years ago)

sure, but do you say pop or soda?

-- mookieproof, Friday, July 11, 2008 7:50 PM (Friday, July 11, 2008 7:50 PM) Bookmark Link

tonic.

and tresspasses which, in northern mass speak came out as "tresspuhsez".

chicago kevin, Monday, 14 July 2008 21:08 (seventeen years ago)

my mom's neighborhood consists of all these four-digit house numbers which bear no logical relation to one another-- like, 6837 is next to 2339...

dell, Monday, 14 July 2008 21:11 (seventeen years ago)

Poor pizza delivery people.

Abbott, Monday, 14 July 2008 21:14 (seventeen years ago)

club soda innit

council estate represent, it doesn't get realer than the Scott

someone got their bike stolen, like, last month

xposts

not that we care about xposts, on the estate

Matt, Monday, 14 July 2008 21:15 (seventeen years ago)

Do people really feel less spied-on when they have neighbors who they share walls with rather than neighbors 20 feet away?

It's not a matter of spying or privacy, it's that ... when you're in a dense rental area, people mostly just expect you to be non-annoying and otherwise treat you like a near-stranger in a dense area, doing whatever it is that you do. In an upscale ownership-based subdivision where real estate values and people's sense of the American dream is at stake and people's kids all play together, you are policed and confronted with a lot of expectations about how you're fitting into things -- socially, professionally, etc. It's fundamentally a fake scale recreation of a "village," and you're known to all and carry all the responsibility of a good villager, only more so.

The suburbs of major cities are getting the opposite these days, though -- people pushed out of gentrifying city centers, winding up very isolated and shut off and non-villagey in the kinds of strip-mally suburban spaces that don't jump to mind when we talk about "suburbs" in the leafy-subdivision middle-class sense.

nabisco, Monday, 14 July 2008 21:39 (seventeen years ago)

otm

fields of salmon, Monday, 14 July 2008 21:51 (seventeen years ago)

... But a dense rental area that's largely populated by students who grew up in strip-mally suburban spaces is the worst kind of hell.

fields of salmon, Monday, 14 July 2008 21:55 (seventeen years ago)

one year passes...

The Suburns are Euro-american living pods popular for their isolation and seclusion, allowing a social interaction -free life. This prevents minorities from seeing them and vice versa. The television acts as the survelince monitor for world events and to have social times. No more apartment neighboors, a welcome sight to the easily annoyed and annoying American stereo owner.

― Mike Hanle y, Thursday, August 30, 2001 5:00 PM Bookmark

Gah. Reading this made me so angry that I have to rebuke it even nine years later. As a minority who grew up in the suburbs, the suburban county where I was raised had a rather wonderful diversity: the largest Korean-American community in the state, larger concentrations of Latinos than the central city, a well-established black community in the county's largest town (which I was born out of), growing South Asian and African populations, a thriving Russian community, many other Asian ethnicities, a large, well-populated Indian Reservation, and more.

Which leads to my problem: some white guy is denying that me and millions of people like me exist, just so he can set up some easy narrative that makes him cooler than some other white guy. This pisses me off indescribably.

donk quixote (The Reverend), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:23 (sixteen years ago)

I really shouldn't have clicked on this thread, it was only going to make me mad.

donk quixote (The Reverend), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:25 (sixteen years ago)

My suburban street had a black family, a chinese family, and a gay couple, so I feel you Rev. But really everywhere else it's just whites.

underrated eros mit all bums i have loved (kkvgz), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:27 (sixteen years ago)

My point is (well, maybe depending on where you are) that isn't really true at all.

donk quixote (The Reverend), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:30 (sixteen years ago)

I mean, there were definitely pockets where I grew up (my own neighborhood, unfortunately) that were super-white, but at the sametime there were other areas that were anything but.

donk quixote (The Reverend), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:32 (sixteen years ago)

rev's point is kinda that sweeping, superior, judgey-judgey generalisations about what "kind" of people live in a place are duds.

لوووووووووووووووووووول (lex pretend), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:33 (sixteen years ago)

rev and lex otm.

Bill A, Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:35 (sixteen years ago)

pretty sure my parents are the only asians living in our suburb. have made it out to the north jersey suburbs which are pretty heavily asian and south asian dominated. and to the northwest philly suburbs which are pretty russian dominated. but yeah, it'd be nice to see some more integration.

⚖ on my truck (dyao), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:37 (sixteen years ago)

I was trying to joke lightheartedly to Rev. The.overgeneralizations abt.race in the suburb are retarded.

underrated eros mit all bums i have loved (kkvgz), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:38 (sixteen years ago)

Looking at wikipedia, it looks like my home county is about 15% minority, but that includes the rural parts too, which really were that white (except now lots of Latinos live in those parts too and you have ignorant white folks complaining about all the "Mexican gangbangers" in Monroe).

donk quixote (The Reverend), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:38 (sixteen years ago)

So, I'd guess it's more like 20% in the more urban/suburban parts of the county.

donk quixote (The Reverend), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:39 (sixteen years ago)

kkvgz: I gotcha, but sometimes jokes are hard to read on the net.

donk quixote (The Reverend), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:41 (sixteen years ago)

Actually, another gay man (I strongly suspect) moved nxt door to my folks, but he's a bit of an asshole about his lawn and nowhere near as cool as Bill and Pete.

underrated eros mit all bums i have loved (kkvgz), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:41 (sixteen years ago)

(Especially when I'm kinda worked up.)

donk quixote (The Reverend), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:41 (sixteen years ago)

Understandable, Rev.

underrated eros mit all bums i have loved (kkvgz), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:42 (sixteen years ago)

suburban makeup is changing quickly in a lot of places. comments 9 years ago are starting to look more like 19 years ago.

156, Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:43 (sixteen years ago)

Suburbs are still dud imo

CaptainLorax, Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:45 (sixteen years ago)

at this point it seems that a lot of the chicago suburbs are more ethnically/racially diverse than most parts of the city itself

hope this helps (Granny Dainger), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:51 (sixteen years ago)

suburban makeup is changing quickly in a lot of places. comments 9 years ago are starting to look more like 19 years ago.

― 156, Tuesday, June 8, 2010 1:43 PM Bookmark

Yeah, but my family's been there for 50 and a lot of the black families in my hometown have been there for longer (Although it should be mentioned that this is an old 19th-cen. mill town that got sucked in by conurbanization). Obviously, the makeup has changed due to successive waves of immigration. But most of these communities have been in place for as long as I remember.

donk quixote (The Reverend), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:54 (sixteen years ago)

there are suburbs that are super diverse and there are large american cities that are not. suburbs are dud for other reasons.

iatee, Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:55 (sixteen years ago)

Sure.

donk quixote (The Reverend), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:56 (sixteen years ago)

what is the best kind of community

puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:57 (sixteen years ago)

humans only obv

puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:57 (sixteen years ago)

Suburb-bashing is superdull and I will probably think you are a moron if you (not you personally) engage in it, though.

donk quixote (The Reverend), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:58 (sixteen years ago)

"How can I be folk? I'm from the suburbs you know" -- John Fahey

puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 20:59 (sixteen years ago)

i got to say they're still a pretty bad scene around here. mostly middle and working class white-flight havens (which will eventually become more "diverse" - thereby leading to another exodus ten years later to a farther outer-ring development of zero-lot-line boxes), and scorched-earth McMansion developments for a tacky, aspiring upper-middle class who have lots of Palin stickers on their SUVs.

at this point it seems that a lot of the chicago suburbs are more ethnically/racially diverse than most parts of the city itself

it seems like this is happening in a lot of major cities(?); not so much down here.

used to bull's-eye Zach Wamps in my T-16 back home (will), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 21:02 (sixteen years ago)

Suburbs are dud for a lot of reasons. Cities are dud for a lot of reasons. Rural areas are dud for a lot of reasons. Seems like city folk are the only ones that get off on looking down on the others. (the "ugh city folk" lament of rural peeps is just a reaction to urban snobbery).

hope this helps (Granny Dainger), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 21:03 (sixteen years ago)

again, I'm only speaking for what I see in a 20 mile radius of moi

used to bull's-eye Zach Wamps in my T-16 back home (will), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 21:04 (sixteen years ago)

*Suburb-bashing*
"The suburbs aren't all bad."
"How can you have anything nice to say about suburbs! They're horrible!"

Cause I spent the vast majority of my life there and I probably know a hell more a lot about them than you, you condescending twat.

donk quixote (The Reverend), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 21:05 (sixteen years ago)

well I've spent the vast majority of my life in a suburb too - and it sucked.

iatee, Tuesday, 8 June 2010 21:06 (sixteen years ago)

I really, really hate cars though.

iatee, Tuesday, 8 June 2010 21:06 (sixteen years ago)

chuburbs

puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 21:06 (sixteen years ago)

xp to Grany What? Please. The country people I know LOVE looking down on urban peeps because we live "all smushed together on top of each other" plus we don't have the American dream of enough space not to care what anyone else thinks of how you live. And, you know, attics and basements and garages. Plus the country smells better plus lake views plus the beach plus they really love their lives there and it's the opposite of here so pretty much they're nice about it but they escape back to their private, individual houses with great relief.

the soul of the avocado escapes as soon as you open it (Laurel), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 21:07 (sixteen years ago)

(the "ugh city folk" lament of rural peeps is just a reaction to urban snobbery).

ugh, I once spent a week visiting a country cousin who insisted on calling me "city boy" the whole time I was there, which wasn't even accurate

donk quixote (The Reverend), Tuesday, 8 June 2010 21:07 (sixteen years ago)


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.