(grew up in astoria, did school in jersey, currently in seattle)
if youāre serious about being an entertainer / artist i do think you should probably eventually end up in new york or la (at some point, not necessarily forever)
new york is just unforgiving; itās cold and wet, half your paycheck is going to your landlord, and even though thereās an active and vibrant art scene thereās zero handholding if youāre just getting started - āgetting startedā in nyc means youāve been at it for 5+ years and are finally getting your flowers. itās harder to build community bc itās kind of like going to la and introducing yourself by going āi moved here bc i wanna be famous!ā yeah, you and everyone else here - too many people have that in common for it to be something to meaningfully connect on, there has to be something more substantive there
moving to seattle put this in perspective for me (and iām sure Iāll move back to new york bc itās home for me, but) the smaller the scene, the more excited theyāll be for newcomers, the more support youāll get on your first project, booking your first gig, etc. if itās in the cards for you to move to the city, you will, and itāll be incredible - if youāre not at that point yet youāre living in the most expensive city in the world to be proximal to other artists, but there are already artists in your city, and theyāre not necessarily gonna penalize you for being new to it
recently a lot of people move to new york to be consumers or to be adjacent to the āthe sceneā for their socials which is borderline malicious while thereās a housing shortage; itās literally taking someone elseās spot, whether theyāre *from* there, or at least there for a *reason*. new york has always had transplants so itās not becoming to say āno one should move there!ā but you just gotta ask yourself what youāre gonna get out of it, if itās worth the bill youāre gonna foot, whether youāll really be able to give back in a way thatās commensurate with what youāre getting