There's nothing special about studying in the UK

<p>haha i don’t really get what initiated this rant but</p>

<p>not every part of the us is warm and sunny with beautiful beaches…there are some great schools in cali, and some in the south (few beaches though) but the overwhelming majority of highly ranked of colleges tend to be concentrated in the northeast, where the winters are usually long, dreary, miserable and grey. basically anywhere from yale in CT to middlebury in VT you’re going to have snow and freezing temps for most of the time you’re at school.
and if you want to be in a city, you’d usually be sacrificing the traditional college campus
and since the sun and beautiful weather seem to be the major point of your argument against UK schools, the fact that the majority of american schools don’t have great weather kind of refutes it.</p>

<p>plus soccer is much better than american football, and there tends to be many more great rock bands from britain than here.
case in point: because i won’t be in a major city next year, I’ll be missing out on the first chance I’ve had to see Muse live. This makes me very very upset. Now, if i was going to school in the UK i doubt this would be a problem, since they often go on european tours!
see! + for your school, haha</p>

<p>and idk about the girls, but british guys are great, with the accents and all</p>

<p>so yeah, i was thinking about going to school in the UK, but money/practicality got in the way. definitely will be studying abroad though! (hopefully when Muse is touring…)</p>