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sepia5;1662188; said:
Yea, my home town of Dayton belongs, sad as it is for me to say that. I get depressed just going home to visit family.

I'd get depressed going to visit my family even if they lived in Beverly Hills.
 
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MililaniBuckeye;1662461; said:
They should look about 60 miles southeast of Cleveland if they want to see a city that scores "high" in their misery indexes...

Is it a town that begins with an "A" that is the birthplace of a uni-testicled, roid-raging, divorcee?
 
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computerji;1662456; said:
well, you'd be miserable too if your beloved football team had gone 40 years without winning anything only to move to a new city and then win it all within 5 years.

On second thought...

:slappy:

If only we had a picture of Modell holding up the Super Bowl trophy......
 
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sepia5;1662188; said:
Yea, my home town of Dayton belongs, sad as it is for me to say that. I get depressed just going home to visit family.

Your point on New York is well taken. It's definitely not a city for everyone. But millions of people love living there for all it has to offer. Could I live there forever? Probably not, but I think it would be a blast to live in NYC for a few years.

Honestly, since we lived on Long Island for a while, it sucked. The people were mostly nasty and/or rude, the taxes sucked balls and 3 hour commutes really sucked.

But come on, this list is preposterous. Let's take a poll. Who thinks they'd be more miserable living in Chicago than in Gary? Anyone?

Me, for one. I hate the Cubs, Blackhawks, Bears (sorry Tron) and White Sox. I'd be miserable.

And I don't like long commutes.

[quote='BusNative;166219;7]The opposite is true.[/quote]

Not in my experience, but different strokes I guess....
 
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BuckeyeMike80;1662498; said:
Not in my experience, but different strokes I guess....

Definitely, I just know I dont particularly like visiting NYC. You end up only seeing crappy touristy things and pay waaaay too much for a mediocre hotel. Living there you can really take advantage of all the things that make it so great.
 
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Thump;1662472; said:
If only we had a picture of Modell holding up the Super Bowl trophy......

I've seen better, but this will do

pg2_g_modell_195.jpg
 
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BuckeyeMike80;1662498; said:
Honestly, since we lived on Long Island for a while, it sucked. The people were mostly nasty and/or rude, the taxes sucked balls and 3 hour commutes really sucked.

When I think NYC, I think the five boroughs: Manhattan (awesome), Queens (I actually like Queens a lot), the Bronx (it's coming along), Brooklyn (incredible), and Staten Island (ugh). Long Island, in many ways, is the anti-NYC, the poster child for suburbia. I don't think living on Long Island and living in Brooklyn, for example, are in any way comparable. But your point is fair enough if we're looking at metro areas as opposed to the cities themselves. I wouldn't want to live on Long Island either.

BuckeyeMike80;1662498; said:
Me, for one. I hate the Cubs, Blackhawks, Bears (sorry Tron) and White Sox. I'd be miserable.

And I don't like long commutes.

So you'd pick Gary because you don't like Chicago sports teams? I don't get the long commute argument. Surely your commute into Chicago would be longer from Gary than from Chicago itself. It's not like you could live and work in Gary since there are no jobs there.
 
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sepia5;1662531; said:
So you'd pick Gary because you don't like Chicago sports teams? I don't get the long commute argument. Surely your commute into Chicago would be longer from Gary than from Chicago itself. It's not like you could live and work in Gary since there are no jobs there.

Nah - I'd look for a 3rd option at that point like, say, Baghdad or something :lol:

Just to let ya know, I went to Iraq to avoid having to relocate to Scott AFB :wink:
 
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