hereā€™s my misc thoughts lol iā€™m no expert but this is from my POV as someone whoā€™s lived here full time a bit and grew up visiting all the time. firstly, youā€™re def right that it is expensive ā€” nearly impossible to relocate to if you donā€™t have a job secured and arenā€™t rich. even moreso if you have never visited or have only done one super tourist-y visit--itā€™s not just Times Square and Statue of Liberty (love her tho) rainbows and butterflies vibes lol. like i seriously do not recommend moving here if you havenā€™t been to other boroughs, and neighborhoods outside of Midtown, SoHo, FiDi, UES etc. iā€™ve never been to england so canā€™t speak to it bit you might find it helpful to look online for comparisons to cities youā€™ve spent more time in - london and other cities in europe perhaps. consider if NYC would be that much more exciting or ā€œbetterā€ for you? also thereā€™s a huge issue of influencers and people who wanna live here impulsively for fun that has driven up rent and driven out lifetime residents, esp working class folks and people of color. (lots of writing out there on the difference between moving to any city vs gentrifying one, and what one can do to not be complicit in the latter). and, my family is from here and i have always loved the city; i did get a job here after graduation but i really wouldnā€™t have moved here if i hadnā€™t. so definitely come here intentionally, and arrive with a willingness to engage with your community! sometimes new residents who arenā€™t as acquainted with the ā€œrealā€ new york and canā€™t afford apts in the more gentrified or historically wealthy areas (most of manhattan, some parts of brooklyn) have a misconception of the city, so they end up feeling awkward or ā€œunsafeā€ where they live, and thus donā€™t give back to their neighborhood. itā€™s veryyy weird that some people move here only to go to work, eat out and party on the weekends. (not saying this is you ofc! but just a general note). the irony is that NYers get a bad rep for the mind your own business culture and realness--and yeah NYers arenā€™t ā€œniceā€, but people are kind. folks care about and actively help out their neighbors. i saw this in my own fam growing up! and as sinatra himself once said: ā€œif i can make it here, iā€™ll make it anywhere.ā€ it is a tough place to ā€œmake itā€ for people without roots. but iā€™d never deny that new york, for many of us, lives up to its reputation as the so-called greatest city in the world ;)
Aug 30, 2024

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This is sooo interesting thanks for sharing - one of the things that shocked me most when I visited NYC as a Londoner was I think they are HUGELY different cities! I was expecting them to be similar and theyā€™re not at all imo.
Aug 30, 2024
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yarsmis ah interesting! iā€™m supposed to visit london later this year. iā€™ve only been to europe one other time and my impression was that the cities were cleaner and the sidewalks were wider lol. the other main thing i noticed was that they didnā€™t seem be very accessible to people with wheelchairs, compared to the US where ramps are basically mandatory everywhere. i also felt like people also tended to keep to themselves like in nyc but in a diff way!
Aug 30, 2024

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(grew up in astoria, did school in jersey, currently in seattle) if youā€™re 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; itā€™s cold and wet, half your paycheck is going to your landlord, and even though thereā€™s an active and vibrant art scene thereā€™s zero handholding if youā€™re just getting started - ā€œgetting startedā€ in nyc means youā€™ve been at it for 5+ years and are finally getting your flowers. itā€™s harder to build community bc itā€™s kind of like going to la and introducing yourself by going ā€œi 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 iā€™m sure Iā€™ll move back to new york bc itā€™s home for me, but) the smaller the scene, the more excited theyā€™ll be for newcomers, the more support youā€™ll get on your first project, booking your first gig, etc. if itā€™s in the cards for you to move to the city, you will, and itā€™ll be incredible - if youā€™re not at that point yet youā€™re living in the most expensive city in the world to be proximal to other artists, but there are already artists in your city, and theyā€™re 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 ā€œthe sceneā€ for their socials which is borderline malicious while thereā€™s a housing shortage; itā€™s literally taking someone elseā€™s spot, whether theyā€™re *from* there, or at least there for a *reason*. new york has always had transplants so itā€™s not becoming to say ā€œno one should move there!ā€ but you just gotta ask yourself what youā€™re gonna get out of it, if itā€™s worth the bill youā€™re gonna foot, whether youā€™ll really be able to give back in a way thatā€™s commensurate with what youā€™re getting
Mar 22, 2024
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I completely understand where everything on the list of cons is coming from but none of it is entirely true. New York is $$$ and yet millions of people find away to make it sort of work. (consider community resources, free events, no spend days.) New York is loud and yet there are quiet parks, and nearly silent neighborhoods (like my old haunt in Bay Ridge where I almost went crazy from the silence and listening to the waves every day.) New York is smelly & yet, thereā€™s fresh air by the sea, over the rivers, on secluded streets (& many more good smells like bakeries, and laundry, the seaā€“again!ā€“, and dusty stores, and the bleach smell of nearly cleaned sidewalks) & you donā€™t have to be young to live here. Most people arenā€™t. (The old people are the best.) No matter where you go, if you only look for the negative you will find it. But in a city this big you will find the exceptions are the norm.
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šŸ  decent living situation ā€” awful roommates, deadbeat landlords, or psycho neighbors will make you super miserable so try to get this one locked down! šŸ«‚ homies ā€” making new friends can take a long time, but if you commit to putting yourself out there over and over youā€™ll connect with some truly inspiring and amazing people šŸ¤‘ income (even a little) ā€” yes you can get by on dumplings, no Ubers, no bars, etc. but being broke here feels particularly like a prison because most things are stupid expensive. Be on your grind and then blissfully spend it all away If you end up getting all 3 of these youā€™re probably gonna be hopelessly addicted to being here just like me. Welcome to NYC :)
Feb 21, 2024

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being traditionally cool is really quite boring and iterative, and itā€™s actually very cool and sexy to geek out about something you like or share bits of knowledge on a topic youā€™re passionate about
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i had it for a little over a year until i was like wow this is actually terrible! i genuinely think it has negatively impacted society by ruining peopleā€™s attention spans, having a horrific algorithm, and most of all by the most mind-numbing or outright harmful trends - fake words that people now use IRL (ā€œunaliveā€), trad wife tiktok, shein hauls, body-focused fitness vids that encourage fatphobia and unhealthy habits, shallow political/feminist theory and queer discourse, ā€œalpha maleā€ podcaster tiktok, encouraging overconsumption in general, trends ruining local spots or niche thingsā€¦ the list goes on
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