Major difference in living in East or West Coast?

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<p>Haha, yeah. Right now I’m in the upper NE and haven’t seen the sun for weeks… Sorry 'bout the rant though (in hindsight, kind of dumb).</p>

<p>^ Haha, well if you really haven’t seen the sun for weeks, I guess some bitterness is quite understandable ;)</p>

<p>That’s what I like about living in the northeast. I’m not a summer/spring/sun-and-fun person. I actually enjoy the cold weather. I don’t think I’d be able to last someplace warm year-round.</p>

<p>–As Third Eye Blind said last year “I didn’t know you guys had your own private ocean!”</p>

<p>When/where did SJ of 3eb spew this one out? Haha, I love it.</p>

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<p>You’ll see the same thing in backwoods Pennsylvania and New York…it isn’t confined to the South by a long shot.</p>

<p>Midwest all da way!</p>

<p>And as someone mentioned above, we got our own private ocean, actually 5 of them!!! Suck it Pacific and Atlantic - the Great Lakes are where it’s at.</p>

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<p>I’m pretty ambivalent towards the midwest. At least you don’t have sharks in your “oceans”.</p>

<p>Lived on the west coast all my life, have visited the east coast several times, but the midwest is for the win in my opinion (where I go to school)!</p>

<p>The midwest stereotypically has less diversity than the coasts, but overall the people are nicest from what I’ve noticed. The midwest receives the best intersection of hardworking, friendly people. </p>

<p>The people from the West Coast vary - there are more “weirdo-nature-hippy” types and are generally a lot more laid back (they can also be considered more carefree…although this could be a good or bad thing…sometimes lacking in responsibility). </p>

<p>The people from the East Coast (northeast/Big cities) are more busy and live faster-paced lives. As a result they don’t have the same “neighborhood” vibe as do the people from the West or Midwest. People from the East Coast are definitely nice - but they give off quite different first impressions and don’t seem as helpful/friendly initially. </p>

<p>I’ve never been to the South so I have no idea how it really is there.</p>

<p>The south is super friendly. There’s a reason it’s called Southern Hospitality and not Northern, Midwestern or Western Hospitality ;)</p>

<p>And they have sweet tea. Tons of it. Everywhere.</p>

<p>^ hahaha, my family used to have a restaurant in southern VA, and it was hilarious how the customers would get all flustered when we ran out of sweet tea. They could have just added sugar to the unsweet tea, but NO. (and yes, they do call it unsweet tea.)</p>

<p>I love sweet tea!!! haha.</p>

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<p>wrong. everything north of santa barbara is “weirdo-nature-hippy” but those people are not laid back at all, they are very intense about some cause or another.</p>

<p>southern california is more conservative than people think, mostly because of san diego, orange county, and a bunch of suburbs east of LA called the “inland empire”. people do tend to be more laid back though.</p>

<p>you’ve already seen everyone in LA because they all act in commercials, also LA is really congested and most parts of it are scary.</p>

<p>biggie or tupac yo?</p>

<p>Biggie, ftw.</p>

<p>Nah… sugar added to unsweet tea ain’t the same :stuck_out_tongue: you gotta have the tea brewed warm, and add the sugar while it’s warm so it fully dissolves. Then you cool it off. That’s sweet tea.</p>

<p>I’m such a southerner (dare I say redneck?) for someone who grew up in DC.</p>

<p>Oddly enough, DC has a ton of country music stations. Or maybe you just can pick them up from the surrounding areas - all I know is that I always pick up a ton when I’m surfing the radio.</p>