As a southerner and former Floridian I love the video. One correction though. most of Florida is not "at or below sea level". It is low elevation, sure. But it is not New Orleans.
Orlando is a great example. Lakes and low-lying land like Mike mentions, but you also get a decent number of sandy hills you'll see if you take the West Beltway or come in through the Turnpike. And there's a lot of hills in the panhandle near Tallahassee and the state lines.
Southern shore of TB, here. I live half-way up a ”ridge”, a dry green island on the map of a gulf (see what i did there?) of 100-year Flood Zone / plain and I’M six feet above “Gulf level”.
A little fun fact from this Florida man: There's a region in south central Florida that no one really ever talks about known as the Florida Heartland. This region is significantly more southern in culture than the coastal counties it is surrounded by. It consists of Highlands, Hardee, Okeechobee, Glades, Hendry, and DeSoto counties. Very sparsely populated with a focus on agriculture.
Agreed! US-17 and US-27 run n/s south through there... Used to be a fun way to get from SoFla to Orlando/Central FL, but all the traffic lights in 27 at Sebring and Avon Park are a left-down...
Amen to that! They're clearing and building in N. Jax. faster than I can keep up with. The politicians who promote this "growth" won't be satisfied until we're packed in like sardines. I guess they have to have "growth" in order to receive their bribes and kickbacks.
Here in the Daytona Beach area they have built 10 new apartment complexes to completion in just under 3 years. They have started 6 more in the last month. Not to mention the abhorrent amount of housing developments that have gone up, seemingly overnight! Margaritaville, one of the biggest retirement communities in Volusia County started in 2017 alone has affected wildlife, and woodlands which are being completely destroyed!!
It’s rare to see a video done on a state that isn’t dominated by the person’s biases. You gave a very accurate, factual, informative, and unbiased assessment. Great video! Btw, it’s so true about the further north you go the more southern it gets and vice versa 😂😂😂.
I was born and raised in Fort Lauderdale Florida. I then moved to Georgia for 35 years. I have since retired back in Florida. I live in the middle of the state now. I think you did a great job describing Florida. I hate all the traffic with the snowbirds. Other than that, Florida is a great place to live!
Y’all EVER been to Everglades City, Clewiston, Winter Haven, Polk County? The South is still very much in Florida. You just need to know where to look.
True, but the culturally Southern areas that far south are mostly in pockets and are sparsely populated compared to other areas from Central Florida on south.
Yes, thank you! I live in Willow Oak outside of Mulberry and Polk County. My grandmother is from North Florida and my grandfather was raised in Hillsboro county. We are some of the first settlers of Florida.
As a native of south Florida we think of different neighborhoods being completely different states (or countries). This one is the Dominican Republic and that one is Brooklyn.
@@icallbullsxxt Why lots to see, St. Augustine is great, Daytona beach great and JAX very very big.....Orlando is civilized and metropolitan, Tampa and don't forget the panhandle beaches as well.
That’s as logical as saying North Carolina is a very unique state. North Carolina tends to have a lot of people from other places, especially in its major cities.
@@BrendanMcClelland Yeah okay I'm not going to put NC over Florida when it comes to cultural diversity. Our Hispanic and African-American population is actually filling NC up.
@@BrendanMcClelland And you're wrong. Florida is unique. Other than California, Texas, IL (Chicago), DC, NJ and New York, where else in America can you walk into a grocer store and only hear Spanish or Creole? Or Vietnamese? Those are 7 states that are unique because they offer something that the rest of the country does not experience a whole lot of.
@@thedirtybubble9613 for any grocery store where can hear Spanish or any foreign language for that matter, the grocery store would have to be a specialty store that specializes in ethnic groceries whether it’d be Hispanic, Asian, or whatever. If you walk into a more mainstream supermarket, then you’re bound to see plenty of people that speak English.
I've seen some others make comments like this, so I wanna make one too! You actually inspired me to take interest in highways a couple of years ago. Now, I'm a highway design intern at FDOT! Thank you for your interesting content over the years!
Born and raised in Ocala (north central Fl). I love this state. It has some of the most scenic landscapes I've seen. Just driving down a country road with the big water oaks hanging over you can be beautiful.
Southeast Florida is practically another country, especially Miami, even though it's always classified as Miami, Broward, and Palm Beaches. Those three counties are very different from the rest of the state and each other! It's getting a bit cramped down here, so the south is slowly migrating north. And thanks to all the migration from the wealthy Californians & New Yorkers / New Jersey, the cost of living is getting insane, which is very hard on the locals, forcing a lot to leave
Perfect I live wpb same house came 1977 notcso great here talk about middle and lower classes hirting. We are now seeing a homeless population coming to rise ... Miami and ft laud flooding constantly Florida crowded all over Florida cities😢
Excellent Video! North Florida - Jacksonville to Pensacola is The South. The I-4 corridor is tourist trap. South Florida is gateway to the Caribbean. Pockets of cultures - Cubans, Haitians, Jamaicans, and other Latin American and Caribbean island nations have their influence in South Florida.
I would bring The South down to Ocala, though that’s getting overrun by northerners. Ocala and a little bit southeast has ranches and horse country. Leesburg area attracts bass fishing enthusiasts. But out towards Ocala National Forest, it’s southern country folk.
@Bittagrit I agree. What alot of people don't understand is that Florida has alot of None Florida people in it. So when we people come they hear alot of people that's really not from Florida and think that's how Florida people talk. If a person call you country and you from Florida, they parents most definitely not from Florida. So Florida is the south it just got a little extra more seasoning in it than the rest of the south
We moved to the Orlando area over a year ago and we love it. Such a mish mash of culture and languages. We lived in Atlanta for over 8 years and it doesn’t compare in quality of life as we have now. We are an hour either side of the coast to the beach, Miami is 3 hours if we want to take a cruise or we have our own port in port Canaveral. We enjoy the Orlando attractions during low peak seasons. Great place to raise your family, truly wish we would have came here years ago.
I'm guessing you mean the area surrounding Orlando (the winters) because when I lived in the actual city it was a nightmare the traffic sucked there was always some sort of accident and it was always loud of course this was 7 years ago so I get that it would change but I've been to Orlando many times since then and its seem to have gotten only slightly better in these aspects
Someone is exaggerating. I'm from Clearwater and drive to Orlando every day it takes almost 2 hours, and that's leaving at 6 am. Even living in between Tampa Bay and the Gulf, it still takes me about 20 minutes to get to the Gulf, maybe 10 minutes to get to the Bay. The overpopulation and traffic conjestion is no joke. Not to mention the terrible drivers.
I was a refugee from Los Angeles in 2001 when I arrived here. I had little more than the shirt on back. Today I have a solid 18 year career as a safety pro a couple hundred grand in the bank and a beautiful 300k home. Thank you Florida I love you
Good for you man! I always tell people here that if are in bad shape financially in FL (and don’t have some disability etc) it’s probably because you are lazy
Another reason why I love Florida we got all these cruise ports more than any other state in the country. Bringing revenue to hospitality,restaurant and hotel businesses, etc
Florida actually has the largest cruise port in the WORLD. Which is why Florida is a international state. Many people from other countries come Florida
On the infrastructure topic, Florida is also one of two regions in the Western Hemisphere, and the only one in North America, that has a waterway that connects two coasts. One is the Panama Canal (connecting the Caribbean with the Pacific Ocean), and here, We have the Okeechobee Waterway which connects Fort Myers on the West Coast (Gulf of Mexico) to Stuart (Atlantic Ocean). The waterway even has five locks similar to the locks used in the Panama Canal.
I was 2 when we moved to Ft. Lauderdale in 1961. I love my state. Grew up with no air conditioning. Back then, it was paradise. Growing up at the beach was awesome
Moved up from the Keys in 62 to Hollywood when I was 6 months old. Lived in Broward County until I retired at 54 having worked for the Library system for 37 years. It was paradise and so were the Keys where my Grandparents still lived. Live in Palm Bay in Brevard County now and am watching the destruction due to out of control building just as I did in Broward. Time to move again😮
Nicely done! Lived in Florida since '63 (on/off) and you pretty much nailed it. I'm really excited about the high-speed rail. I took a short trip and it was amazing! Cleaner and nicer than flying these days. Biggest downfall is...the traffic...and it's only getting worse. Road construction is never ending..especially on the interstates.
Well done. I have lived in Florida for 30 of my 71 years, up here in North Central Florida and I think you have done a good job with the video and all your information is accurate. Nature will take back Florida some day, but for now, humanity is on a roll devouring natural Florida like a plague.
I've been a Florida snowbird from NYC for a couple of years now, and I have to admit that I am starting to hate migrating back to NYC in the spring. South Florida is definitely its own thing. It's urban yet sprawling. It's also rural country. It's tropical. It's Latino. It's super glamorous but also very destitute. It's vapid but also brimming with culture. It has lots of alligators. It's definitely a vibe that you don't experience anywhere else in the world.
Lived in co op city (Bronx) and moved to Deltona (Volusia county). Lived there 16 years....and encountered two people my family knew from NYC who had also moved there lol
I moved from Scottsdale AZ to Clearwater FL a year ago and I love it here critters and all. I have acclimated to Florida I follow all Florida laws and living rules.. I didn’t bring my Scottsdale shit over here but I can’t say that for others moving here that’s why Floridians hate us transplants…
Well that's good to hear it's going to be up to you to keep all the other transplants in line, but I have a question since you've been living here for a while, is it hotter in Arizona or is it hotter in Florida?
Oh yes, there was an Orlando before Micky & I-4. It had some traffic lights and a Waffle House-type diner or 2. Then along came Uncle Walt and we were all singing M-I-C-K-E-Y-M-O-U-S-E. I was about 10 when the first prototype displays were exhibited. I was a teen when Magic Kingdom opened & we've loved it ever since. Even the airport MCO = Micky City Orlando! Same with BrighLine. None of that would be in FL without Uncle Walt and his vision.
@@paulathepoodlelover The Orlando airport is actually called MCO after Colonel Michael Norman Wright McCoy, who was tragically killed in a B-47 Stratojet crash near Downtown Orlando in 1957.
We once hired a young lady just arrived from California. She said she felt like she was living inside a zoo. She was half elated-half frightened at the amount and variety of wild life living free around us: iguanas, alligators, sea turtles, owls, ducks, bats, and a long list of birds, insects and snakes, all share our parks, beaches and roads. I have lived in South Florida for over 30 years, I find it very amusing and still take pictures of huge iguanas when I go out for my walks. Great video, btw!!
Yes and don't tell her that we also have Black bears, Wild hogs (very dangerous), Bobcats and Cougars (state animal) and a few other things she'd not like to have around.
My friend's girlfriend from Minnesota would always call the police anytime she saw a gator sunbathing on the bank of our pond in the back yard 😂 Chill out, they're like squirrels here
Lifetime Bucs fan here. The Tampa Bay Buccaneers won a Super Bowl in 2002 way before Tom Brady was a Buc. There's more Tampa Bay Buccaneers fans than Carolina Panthers fans. That's for sure.
Agreed. I think some younger people don't remember the 1st Super Bowl win, and they had to trade most of their best players the year after for money reasons, corporate greed, etc. They definitely were not the greatest again for a long time. Real, longtime fans know the frustration and disappointment we've had since the 70s orange creamsicle days.
I remember when the Bucs won their first game and the Tampa Tribune's front page was printed in orange ink. That's when the Bucs wore the cream- kinda peachy-orange uniforms. Those got dirty too easily and the Bucs' mamas fussed so they switched to red, grey and black. 💙. The Bucs have done much better since changing their colors but Tampa is a tough market, lots of "home town fans" from someone else's home town rather than Tampa. Tampa Bay is the water and no one actually lives there except maybe some boats.
Dont forget the lizards, Florida has so many lizards. it's truly unbelievable. Nearly every home has dozens loving around it. There are so many that littel grass islands in plaza parking lots have their own family of lizards that inhabit it. You can not qalk to your car without seeing one on a sunny day.
I forgot that people arent used to Lizards! When I koved down here as a kid it was the COOLEST!!!! what wasnt!!! Was standing in an ant pile and then 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 bit up! I'm OG from KY so there were only black ants there! Once you got hit by 8 or 9 ants all on ya!!! You WERE TAUGHT!!!!! cause it was a real lesson to learn! LMADO!
There are two Floridas: from Orlando north is the south, and from Orlando south is the north. Also, when the temperature goes below 75 is time to get your jacket! 😃from Tampa here
I live in the panhandle, and even in northern Florida we NEVER get snow. Almost 20 yrs old, and the only time it ever "snowed" here, it was ice. However, ice can freeze on the roads and cause schools to be canceled.
Im from New Smyrna Beach, Snowed over 1 inch in 1982-83 on christmas day. and it snowed about 15 yrs ago. Not that it stuck around for long, but it does/has snowed here
@@robbgnarly Hey, I'm from the Destin area in the Panhandle, and it's never really 'snowed' here, the most we'd get is little flakes of ice every decade or so. It's weird because you'd expect it to snow in Northern Florida as opposed to Western Florida where you are, but that shows how truly wonky and inconsistent Florida's weather is🤣.
It has snowed several times in Florida you was born in 04 so you wouldn't know anything about it, hell I barely know anything about it and I was born in the 80s, my dad told me it snowed one time so bad when I was a kid, until it was snowing in both north Florida and Central and even South Florida was getting a little bit of snow.
@@rdf4315 that's why I mentioned I was almost 20 😁. Also, the fact that you're in your 40s and your dad had to tell you how bad it snowed down here gives me the context to know that the storm was a once-in-a-lifetime event. Even so, I highly doubt it will happen again because global warming is making the weather even hot. Regardless my point still stands that as a Panhandle resident approaching adulthood, I have yet to see snow.
@@atnicole461 for one I'm in my mid 30s not 40s and yeah you might be right even though it has snowed a few times since then, I don't think we're going to ever see snow as bad as they saw it back in 89 or 90.
17:10 haha! typical florida driver! great video mike! as someone who was raised in florida, your description was apt. in fact, i grew up in orlando and dreaded the tolls. never realized how anomalous this was until i moved up north. consider me a new subscriber
Great vid Mike (as always)! You know I love Florida, and all of your FLA videos!! Florida is a miss-mash of cultures from around the US and the whole planet, and with global tourism destinations, a vast array of opportunities to experience them, from restaurants, sports, culture and more. I Uber'd in the 305 about a decade ago, and you get to live it first hand, meeting people from all over the world, both those who now call Florida home and those just visiting!
I’m from TN and have lived in both Carolina’s and have family in Georgia and Kentucky, I’ve been all over the south and I have been living in Orlando since 07’ - confirming all of this my man! This was a interesting video and a fun watch, good work bro!
So true. I always thought of Palm Beach County as New York with palm trees, especially on I-95. The New Yorkers started out in Miami and then got pushed north by the Hispanics. When I moved to Florida forty years ago, I felt like I had landed in paradise. I still love it. I don't blame all the folks who move here and visit us here.
Great video! I am from Florida and I think you did a great job explaining this topic! But honestly, North Florida is very southern. I am tired of seeing people excluding North Florida from the South
As a NY'er who had to live in that hell hole for 34 years, I'd always said I was born 20 years too late, 1,500 miles too far north. Compared to the northern states, Florida is DEFINITELY the South. However yes, it's not as southern as the rest of the Southeastern US. The one thing I love about Florida though, is the absolutely wide array of cultures. Latin, African American, White, Asian, and any other culture you can think of absolutely have a fingerprint on this state and for the most part, we make it work as the founding fathers intended, as a melting pot. Far more than Upstate NY EVER did. Am I a transplant from a shit hole state with a shit hole mindset? 100%. But am I more proud to call myself someone who got out and moved to a BETTER PLACE? YES. And I embraced it. I don't try to change it. I moved here FOR change, not to 'enact' change. And that's how EVERYONE who moves to Florida should do it too.
Very true!!! Don't come down to get away from BS and then try to change it to be like the BS you left. We are a FREE STATE and we like it that way. If you don't then GO HOME and take your BS with you.😊
Absolutely. As a natural born 47yo Floridian I’ve lived here most of my life. I’ve left a few times looking for work in other states and have always ended up coming back. Even though I’m of German and Irish ancestry, I love Florida’s Hispanic heritage. Probably why I ended up marrying a Latina woman and have been married to her for more than 25 years and had two beautiful children, a girl and a boy.
@garymixson687 As a person born and raised in Liberty City, I am with you as I tell my peers . I like red I love Florida red and we will keep it red as Gov DeSantis said : Woke dies here . Don't bring your liberal BS here from NYC or any other blue city or state. Buddy is obviously NOT from here
I am from the panhandle and I am a southerner through and through.recently worked in southern Florida and everyone I met was a transplanted northerner. Southern hospitality is alien to them. So, I really liked it when you divided the state into north and south. I grew up hearing northerners referred to as Yankees and the ones that moved to FL as damn Yankees😎. I am from and still live in Panama City FL
As a Native lifelong resident of Florida. I can tell you that we would much rather deal with the occasional toll . Then a state income tax that takes a much bigger toll on our finances
A State Income Tax will never happen since it is forbidden in the Florida Constitution. By the way Toll Revenues are miniscule compared to all of the Sales Taxes & Fees you have to pay for everything else as a Resident.
It's not in Georgia and never was.( This is something that triggers me but I understand it is culturally similar to Georgia . So it's not that bad) There were a lot of Georgia transplants and the Jacksonville Combined Metropolitan Area includes 1 county in Georgia.. But My grandparents and aunts and uncles and cousins did not live in Georgia. The Jacksonville area IS Florida , other parts of the state are like southern outposts of NJ, NY, IL etc. But the Jacksonville Beaches,Southside of Jacksonville and St Augustine seem a lot less southern to me than in 1990.
@@lobos320Jacksonville’s Southside is more suburban, but still full of southern people. The southside, northside, and far westside are also the same politically, even though there is a rural-suburban divide. Heavily conservative The Northside and far westside still have rural pockets
The big difference in my mind, is Florida (the coastal peninsular part) is run by real estate developers and their crony friends, Florida politicians. Its what drives the economy here. There's little industry or employment here that isn't related to real estate development.
I still remember within the first hour of being in Chicago, and I saw on the Stevenson Expressway, which I took right at its north end at LSD, at least 5 cars immediately use the shoulder to get around the standstill traffic. I did see that before on portions of I-95 in Georgia and Virginia, but it was still amazing to see that happen when I had only just been introduced to Chicago.
As a Pinellas (Tampa Bay) resident I consider that maneuver amateurish. I would have gone for the gap between the cars in the center and the right lane.
As a Port Saint Lucie resident you’re 100 percent right . Nothing to do here . You can buy a home right now for 450k that someone bought 3 years ago for 150k and did no upgrades .
I bet the owner never even stepped in it either, so many homes vacant from rich north birds who buy for investment. Yet Florida working resident gets no benefits. Everyone around my age want move out to NC
Very true about Jacksonville being the exception when it comes to toll roads in the large metros in Florida. It is also the least “touristy” of the large metros in the state. It used to actually have more toll roads and bridges but all tolls were removed in the late 1980s and for decades didn’t have any tolled facilities until, as shown in the video at 14:17, SR 23 (aka the First Coast Expressway) in the western part of the metro opened. That road BTW is part of a future multi-billion dollar outer “quarter” beltway around the southwestern quadrant of the Jax metro that will cross the St. John’s River and eventually connect to I-95 in northern St. John’s county by the early 2030s. The section from the current end of SR 23 to near the St. John’s River is expected to open in 2025.
I lived in Jax when they took out the tollbooths on the downtown bridges, 295 across the St. John's and 202 (Butler Blvd) in favor of a 1/2 cent sales tax increase. Before that, there were HUGE backups at all the tollboths in the morning going into downtown and in the afternoon leaving downtown. It was a welcome relief when they were gone for anyone who worked downtown or who lived Eastside but worked Westside or vice versa.
I live in Orlando, and I used to live in Baton Rouge and Phoenix. I consider the Orlando area to be semi-southern. Parts north of the Orlando area feel more southern, while parts south of Orlando are less southern. The Miami / Ft Laudable area does not feel southern at all. The reason I call Orlando semi-southern is because it has a somewhat different feel than the rest of the South, but you can still find plenty of restaurants that serve sweet tea, grits, greens, and other Southern comfort foods.
Not even that. We still country af and talk with Country Slang. Allcthe hoods are Southern, so idk where this notion of Orlando do not being a Southern city came from.
@@StaticbeyfrmSemoranNahhh Orlando definitely isn’t a southern city, it’s 90% tourists and doesn’t have that same southern flare as the rest of the south.
btw. I just got home from a night outing in NE Florida. We were talking about how "cool" it felt after a hot day. I checked the temperature on the car dashboard when we got in and it was 88 degrees at 10:00PM and so humid your shirt looks like it came out of a washing machine when you take it off. That's what a "cool" Florida night is relative to other places. Also noticed that the grass grew two feet high in the last two days due to heavy rains from a hurricane followed by a blazing sun in steamy humidity all day and night. Never saw that happen anywhere else.
I live in South Florida and at 5am is 90 with 89% humidity... that's getting really old for me after being here 16 years from NJ. I can't take the heat and humidity as I get older, time to move on soon.
@@anthonyfp24 How well I know! I am in NE Florida thinking exactly the same thing! I had to flip the Accuweather calendar two months ahead until October to see some cooler weather.
As someone who grew up in Florida, I’ll just tell you right now. Everyone loved hurricane season and by everyone I mean kids, if you were a student in high school middle school or elementary it meant no school for possibly two days to even two weeks. Getting an email from your school talking about how they would most likely be closed for the next three days was the pinnacle of childhood happiness.
I was born and raised in Miami and currently live in Broward. Even though I doubt I'll ever move back, there's no place like home. That city is nuts! 😂
Texas and Florida are not the 'traditional" south. They are their own unique state/region. Texas is a mix of wild western/desert, bayou, lakes/prairies, and forests. Florida is pretty much exactly how you summed it up!
When you grow up in Florida, you only have three desires to go hiking for the first time see mountains for the first time and touch snow for the first time
Last winter I visited Florida for the first time. Most of my time was in Central Florida - I visited family in the Villages for a while and spent the rest of the time based out of Lakeland - and it struck me that everything was either very new and shiny (Villages is infamous for this) or kind of run-down. The visitor center at Homosassa Springs State Park was a memorable exception since it was obviously built in the '60s and just as obviously well-kept-up.
1)As a born, raise, and still resident of Florida, you nail it Mileage Mike on why Florida is different from the rest of the South. 2)I still consider Florida part of the South despite the amount of transplants from the North. That could be because personally, I don’t relate to other regions in the US outside of the South. -Lifelong Cocoa, FL resident
Florida is a really interesting states. Don’t know I could personally live there. Spent the last week down in Key West. Flight from CLT got canceled with Debby so I got a rental car and drove the 14 hours in one day straight down 95. It was a longgg drive.
As a native south floridian I really feel I am a Caribbean not an American, culture wise. North Florida is south Georgia. Mid Florida is a strange buffer zone of theme parks, bikers and cattle towns.
I wasn’t expecting this to be an such an historical educational vid! I learned so much & I lived here for years. Never really wanted to be here. Came by default years ago following my mom after a divorce and living a military life. Very informative. Thanks!
@@xoxxobob61 Want to bet on that? I live in Tallahassee and see droves of people moving here from Miami-Dade and Broward county. Myself included. Also, Gainesville and Jacksonville are absorbing a lot of south Florida residents. For the last 20-25 years, Miami has changed for the worse.
@@NWGuyNWchallenger It's often brought to my attention that Texas & Florida aren't considered to be the "traditional South" like for example Georgia, N. Carolina/S. Carolina & Alabama are
I'm in Ft. Pierce, and I see both of those trees. The difference between the Live Oaks here, and those in South Florida, is that the Oaks in S. Florida have no Spanish moss hanging from them. Plenty of moss, here in E. Central Florida.
I moved to Florida a couple years ago, and live in Lehigh Acres. I'm quite happy to be here, and any disparaging remarks are probably referring to Lehigh of a couple decades ago. I came from a smaller city up north where downtown was a strip of 4 blocks or so. For an area that "doesn't have a downtown", Lehigh sure has a lot of stores and offices on Homestead and Lee Blvd. And when Lee ends, it turns into Colonial Blvd in Ft Myers, yet more continuation of commercial businesses. Lehigh was one of the fastest growing areas in the entire country in 2019; it actually has a larger population than next door Ft Myers, although the latter probably swells to larger size during tourist season. I check the realtor pages just for fun, and Lehigh has just an absolutely endless number of new homes being built. In fact, they usually swamp the number of existing homes up for sale.
Thank you for the informative video. The unbridled sprawl is ruining this state ecologically. As a native Floridian, it's difficult for me to get excited about Brightline, since it has the highest human death toll of any railway in the country.
As a native Floridian I can give this 2 thumbs up. To answer the question is Florida southern or northern...the answer is a simple YES! 😁 Side note, we added some toll express lanes to the southern sections of I-295 across the St.
The difference is 100 years ago Florida was the least populated state in the Southeast. Now, it has more population than the 2nd Georgia and 3rd North Carolina combined, and still the state with highest in migration. Hell, in 2022 Florida had 40,000 more deaths than births and still managed to add 444,000 in a single year. Thats an insane amount of growth.
Insane growth because the state is seriously overcrowded and has looming environmental problems like rising sea levels and diminishing fresh water tables.
Dude, I grew up here, and the water level on the seawall of my childhood home is still the same. Hasn't changed in the 60 years that ive been alive!@stephenpowstinger733
@@nathanstuart3677 More like people keep moving here instead! In 1970 Florida had 6 Million people & today that is the population of Metro Miami! The State's Population has nearly Quadrupled in the past 50 years.
The 1950 map show peninsular Florida as “wilderness” is misleading. Cities like Tampa, Orlando and Miami were thriving even in 1950. As a naive Floridian of old, I miss the vast open spaces and small towns of Florida. Ocala and Winterhaven were great. Now it’s people, houses and cars everywhere.
Man I really hope the high speed rail system is super successful in Florida, could lead to more parts of Florida being reachable by train and it could influence other states to do the same
I live in St. Petersburg. My mother is a Tampa native, and her side of the family has been in eastern Hillsborough for the last 70 years. They're as Southern as they come. Accent, attitude, you name it. Anyone in a coastal city can drive 45-90 mins inland, and the people they will encounter will be way different than what they're used to in the city.
Also from St. Pete and my family has been in Central Florida since it was still called South Florida on both sides of the tree. The only exception is my grandad whose side of the family hails from south Georgia and is easily as southern as they come.
As a recent FL transplant, this is a great video! Still hoping for more Yankee amenities like public transit (car insurance is one of the highest in the nation) and a middle class. There is such a class divide; no middle class jobs (>$80K) and a lot of gated communities.
@@Buglife.352definitely not places like Palm Bay, Deltona, Port. St. Lucie the cities he described are 100% middle class. Before covid these were places that one on a single income could afford to purchase a close to brand new home.
I was born and raised in Florida, so let's be honest about the weather. It's usually hot in the 90s with a humidity heat index as high as 112 on some days. September is the worst month because hurricanes become a factor. Most of the state is over built and over crowded adding exaust heat from cars and air conditioners. This is no tropical paradise, and add in that most people who live here are crazy. No one in their right mind would ever move to Florida voluntarily. But don't get me wrong, this is my home, and I love it. I just don't like what's been done to it.
@@marknewton6984 Not really, Central is definitely Northern. I live in the sticks in CFL and it’s 95% northern. Orlando is not southern. Not Brevard. Not Osceola. Not Lake. Not Polk. Not Volusia. Maybe you’re just in a very rural area.
@@TitaniumTurbine I live in Tampa. The parts of Central Florida that are culturally Southern are generally sparsely populated. A lot of Central Florida, especially Orlando and the coastal areas, definitely leans northern from a cultural standpoint.
I'd say, just because it's an older culture,that's still outdoorsy. Louisianas is. For example a gator tour in Florida would be looked at as Southern even if the tour guide was a transplant from the north,or someplace
Besides Louisiana's French/Cajun culture like in New Orleans how much of that culture dominates the rest of the state? Most of that state was settled by other Southerners while Florida was not.
Don't compare Florida and Texas folks...it's about 10 degrees f warmer in Miami in January than Padre Island Texas, and Mango trees and coconut palms grow like weeds even 100 miles north of Miami...been in Texas, no comparison, and the South Eastern Florida culture is Caribbean.......
I watched this to see if I agreed with your conclusion, but I subscribed after watching the video because you did an absolutely amazing job on this video. Based on this, I'll watch anything you put together. Thanks for the hard work!
Sugarloaf Mountain is the fifth-highest named point and the most prominent point in the U.S. state of Florida. At 312 feet above sea level it is also the highest point on the geographic Florida Peninsula. The hill is in Lake County, near the town of Clermont. Wikipedia
I’m Brazilian and I swear to God the Brazilians here in Florida travel in packs where I live there’s almost no Brazilians but if you go to either Orlando, Miami or Fort Lauderdale, you are in for a party
Lifelong Tampa Bay resident here. I have a few things to add. Florida's central and southern Gulf coast have more of a Midwestern flavor mixed in than the state's eastern parts have. Also, there have been plenty of Bucs fans around here and all over the state pre-Tom Brady and I'm one of them. The Bucs sucked from the time I was a toddler until I was in high school (that was the start of their longest-lasting boom period, culminating in their first Super Bowl appearance and win) and I was still a diehard fan the whole time. When I say that most of Florida, including a lot of Central Florida, is effectively south of the South, those cultural differences are why.
Tbh, I think our cities suck compared to what you can see in NYC or Boston, and while I've always enjoyed living in small-town suburbia, migration and overpopulation have made it too crowded for the way it was designed. I live an hour from Clearwater Beach and I don't even want to go there anymore: Drive takes longer, parking has become insanely expensive, and it's just crowded. I fear the day that they tear down the local wilderness park to put more houses.
There is the option of lobbying for the removal of parking minimums and zoning codes. Higher density makes transit systems more feasible to implement. If you get pushback, just say traffic in Tokyo is awful despite 95% of the population using the train. Hell, NYC traffic is horrible despite 90% of adults using the transit system, and everyone else biking. The only reason why suburbs are as crowded as they are now is because zoning makes it impossible to build anything reasonably dense. If housing is built densely in the areas that people would want to live close to, then those people aren't going to be driving. Again, look at NYC. Movie theatre? Apartments close by. Office buildings? Apartments close by. Food markets? Several apartments close by. Bakeries? Apartments on top. Parks and playgrounds? Surrounded on all sides by townhouses. Something like 40% of adults living in the city don't even have a driver's license.
I just asked my mom why the speed rail doesn't include Tampa. She said govenor Scott didn't want it to. 🤷🏽♀️ This wouldn't have mattered to me at all as a youth. But now, as the really grown, I kinda want it. I'm sure I'd use it.
My husband and I with our 3 children moved down to Florida a little over 10 years ago, from Connecticut. What we have noticed is how different each town is. The first town we moved to, we hated, and only stayed 3 months. I cried everyday that I wanted to go home, it was in central Florida, in the middle. We have been on the coast in central Florida for almost 10 years, and love it .
:Swamp Filled Wasteland" is the most ignorant description of Florida I've ever heard..The ecosystem of Florida is second only to the Amazon for plant and animal diversity..
Look at OLD maps of Florida... the peninsula was called a wilderness, swamp, and more... Florida was where I-10 & US-90 run... Napoleon Bonaparte Broward was "going to tame the swamp" and had the New River Canal dug so, what is now west Broward County, could be farmed...
Lived my first forty-six years in Miami with a wide interest and appreciation for science. But the swamps are really unpleasant for anyone but a true enthusiast. And by that I mean either someone whose field of study includes wetlands, or very hardy hunters and fishermen. Calling people "ignorant" in this case is being an eco-snob.
@@kevinp3550 I agree. Grew up in st. Pete and the summers are hell and bugs are at plague levels. Without ac... People have been hospitalized due to heat here.
I'm a fifth generation Florida native. Cities are not Southern because Yankees and outlanders have moved in. However, I live in Florida in a town of 258 people. People are shocked when they accidentally come across our town because Mayberry's three times larger and way more progressive than our town lol. I have neighbors that still plow with mules. I have neighbors that hook ponies up to carts to go to the store (well, the gas station. We don't actually have a store) We have five Baptist churches and a Methodist church. The entire town goes to church on Sunday and we all meet down at the lake for potluck. So yes, Florida is still Southern if you stay away from where all the transplants are. No one wants to live hard out here where we have a cow to human ratio. They can't produce their own meat dairy and produce in their own yards. That's reserved for us hardy, die hard Southerners. It might surprise people to realize that there was no building boom in Florida until the early 1980s because no one here had air conditioning. We grew up with no air conditioning. So, if the power ever goes out, everyone from Ocala down is going to die of heat exhaustion. (There used to be a fantastic seabreeze that went across the entire state. However, land developers built condos up and down each coast and created a bowl effect. So now it gets very hot and very cold in a place that used to have a warm temperature all year.) So, yes, Florida is a southern state, it's just that the Southerners are smart enough to stay away from the cities. And there are only four major cities in Florida. The rest of the state is just us rednecks.
Thank you. I'm a third generation native. Polk county. And it doesn't even resemble the state I grew up in in the seventies and eighties. I never realized what you said about the sea breeze. Which explains why the air is so stagnant and nasty now here in Polk. In the late 90's early 2000's I loved in Treasure Island. When I moved back to Polk I was blown away by the heat difference.
@@VladimirGitcherocksoff I grew up in Lake Wales. It does get hot there, but it's higher than the rest of the peninsula. That's why y'all still have citrus. Citrus county doesn't though. We're 6 miles from the GA line here, but it's just like it used to be when things were normal. People still visit and the women still get together and can fruits and veggies we grew (or foraged. We still have lots of wild fruit here.) Fortunately, it's one of those places that forces you to either work or leave. Everybody that lives out here is forced to do some kind of farming, gardening, canning etc. It's 60 miles to the nearest city.
Yall are lucky. They found us over here in destin Panama city area. They destroyed everything good about it. I'm in shock at what I see every day the last few years. Feels like my life is over with. I never liked it anywhere else when traveling. The crazy drivers and bad attitudes from other places are a constant nuisance. Everything tripled in price the last few years, so a nice affordable life is history. There is no spring or beach or anything that isn't crowded like a typical big city, in fact it's worse than most because we don't have the infrastructure to support this invasion. I keep going north away from the beach to escape them, but they keep coming and coming. I'm only like 10 minutes from Alabama now. I used to have a farm up here, and I love this city. Good Christian southerners here I hope will give the cold shoulders to outsiders. We don't want them here. We would rather eat palmetto roots and sleep in a tent than be around them 😂
Damn it almost sounds like you live in Lulu, but I'm a Florida native and my family have been here for I don't know how many generations, all I know is my family been here since the late 1700s but everything you mentioned is so true.
Yup. The further South you go, the more North you get until you get to the keys. Then you're south again, but only sort of. The keys are a blend of South, Caribbean, and acid casualty artist enclave dominated by tourism and watersports. It's a weird, awesome place.
I’m a Tennessean. You couldn’t have had toll roads here or you’d have lines of abandoned clunkers to haul away. To say that most people here were without wealth is an extreme understatement.
As a southerner and former Floridian I love the video. One correction though. most of Florida is not "at or below sea level". It is low elevation, sure. But it is not New Orleans.
Orlando is a great example. Lakes and low-lying land like Mike mentions, but you also get a decent number of sandy hills you'll see if you take the West Beltway or come in through the Turnpike. And there's a lot of hills in the panhandle near Tallahassee and the state lines.
I’m happy I live near a beach, at 13 feet above sea level. It floods by the Indian River.
Southern shore of TB, here. I live half-way up a ”ridge”, a dry green island on the map of a gulf (see what i did there?) of 100-year Flood Zone / plain and I’M six feet above “Gulf level”.
I was surprised by the number of hills just west of Orlando
OHH SO YOU LEFT US alright well bless your.. Lolz
A little fun fact from this Florida man: There's a region in south central Florida that no one really ever talks about known as the Florida Heartland. This region is significantly more southern in culture than the coastal counties it is surrounded by. It consists of Highlands, Hardee, Okeechobee, Glades, Hendry, and DeSoto counties. Very sparsely populated with a focus on agriculture.
Yep all down US27 past Hanies City
I think I’ve been to the okechobee
is that where Sebring is, where there is nothing but a racetrack and orange trees??
Agreed! US-17 and US-27 run n/s south through there... Used to be a fun way to get from SoFla to Orlando/Central FL, but all the traffic lights in 27 at Sebring and Avon Park are a left-down...
Indeed. Shout out from Polk! Close the damn border!!!
As a lifelong native, I am sad to see Florida quickly losing its wilderness to development.
Amen to that! They're clearing and building in N. Jax. faster than I can keep up with. The politicians who promote this "growth" won't be satisfied until we're packed in like sardines. I guess they have to have "growth" in order to receive their bribes and kickbacks.
@@LCCB Developers own our state government.
Losing both wilderness and farm land!
Here in the Daytona Beach area they have built 10 new apartment complexes to completion in just under 3 years. They have started 6 more in the last month. Not to mention the abhorrent amount of housing developments that have gone up, seemingly overnight! Margaritaville, one of the biggest retirement communities in Volusia County started in 2017 alone has affected wildlife, and woodlands which are being completely destroyed!!
I agree Florida is going to lose its wilderness. Period. Look at the Everglades and Key West over the years.
It’s rare to see a video done on a state that isn’t dominated by the person’s biases. You gave a very accurate, factual, informative, and unbiased assessment. Great video! Btw, it’s so true about the further north you go the more southern it gets and vice versa 😂😂😂.
I was born and raised in Fort Lauderdale Florida. I then moved to Georgia for 35 years. I have since retired back in Florida. I live in the middle of the state now. I think you did a great job describing Florida. I hate all the traffic with the snowbirds. Other than that, Florida is a great place to live!
Totally agree! Even with the snow birds our traffic is still less than I have dealt with in many other areas of our country!!
And they suck at driving...Ormond By The Sea here...now in Jax for job. Want to go back.
Y’all EVER been to Everglades City, Clewiston, Winter Haven, Polk County? The South is still very much in Florida. You just need to know where to look.
True, but the culturally Southern areas that far south are mostly in pockets and are sparsely populated compared to other areas from Central Florida on south.
Yes, thank you! I live in Willow Oak outside of Mulberry and Polk County. My grandmother is from North Florida and my grandfather was raised in Hillsboro county. We are some of the first settlers of Florida.
Polk County standing up to say we are still Southern.
Polk county here. Believe it or not we are getting roughly a thousand people a day moving in. Why? I have no idea 😂 but I’m glad to be a Floridian
@@TFLA995ha! I use to live on shady lane, off Bailey 🤣
As a native of North Florida we think of South Florida as a completely different state.
As a native of south Florida we think of different neighborhoods being completely different states (or countries). This one is the Dominican Republic and that one is Brooklyn.
I'm in Central Florida and I often feel that this region, South Florida and Southwest Florida are effectively in a different state from North Florida.
As a native of south FL, i hate going north of palm beach county
Thanks!¡!
@@icallbullsxxt Why lots to see, St. Augustine is great, Daytona beach great and JAX very very big.....Orlando is civilized and metropolitan, Tampa and don't forget the panhandle beaches as well.
Florida is a very unique state. It's full of everyone from everywhere.
That’s as logical as saying North Carolina is a very unique state. North Carolina tends to have a lot of people from other places, especially in its major cities.
@@BrendanMcClelland Yeah okay I'm not going to put NC over Florida when it comes to cultural diversity. Our Hispanic and African-American population is actually filling NC up.
@@BrendanMcClelland And you're wrong. Florida is unique. Other than California, Texas, IL (Chicago), DC, NJ and New York, where else in America can you walk into a grocer store and only hear Spanish or Creole? Or Vietnamese? Those are 7 states that are unique because they offer something that the rest of the country does not experience a whole lot of.
@@thedirtybubble9613 for any grocery store where can hear Spanish or any foreign language for that matter, the grocery store would have to be a specialty store that specializes in ethnic groceries whether it’d be Hispanic, Asian, or whatever. If you walk into a more mainstream supermarket, then you’re bound to see plenty of people that speak English.
@@thedirtybubble9613 I’m sure every US state is unique in some form or another. Of course, there could be different levels of uniqueness.
I've seen some others make comments like this, so I wanna make one too! You actually inspired me to take interest in highways a couple of years ago. Now, I'm a highway design intern at FDOT! Thank you for your interesting content over the years!
Born and raised in Ocala (north central Fl). I love this state. It has some of the most scenic landscapes I've seen. Just driving down a country road with the big water oaks hanging over you can be beautiful.
Did that in September US Hwy 27 from Ocala to High Springs. The oaks over the highway & the rolling pastures were really beautiful on that sunny day.
Southeast Florida is practically another country, especially Miami, even though it's always classified as Miami, Broward, and Palm Beaches. Those three counties are very different from the rest of the state and each other! It's getting a bit cramped down here, so the south is slowly migrating north. And thanks to all the migration from the wealthy Californians & New Yorkers / New Jersey, the cost of living is getting insane, which is very hard on the locals, forcing a lot to leave
Perfect I live wpb same house came 1977 notcso great here talk about middle and lower classes hirting. We are now seeing a homeless population coming to rise ... Miami and ft laud flooding constantly Florida crowded all over Florida cities😢
💯🎯💯
Yep, native floridians are being pushed out of their homes. Can it even be called florida then, if there's no floridians.
Palm beach county is a soul less place that only cares about the old money families.
It’s called Gentrification.
Excellent Video! North Florida - Jacksonville to Pensacola is The South. The I-4 corridor is tourist trap. South Florida is gateway to the Caribbean. Pockets of cultures - Cubans, Haitians, Jamaicans, and other Latin American and Caribbean island nations have their influence in South Florida.
Good summary
Best explanation
Facts
I would bring The South down to Ocala, though that’s getting overrun by northerners. Ocala and a little bit southeast has ranches and horse country. Leesburg area attracts bass fishing enthusiasts. But out towards Ocala National Forest, it’s southern country folk.
@Bittagrit I agree. What alot of people don't understand is that Florida has alot of None Florida people in it. So when we people come they hear alot of people that's really not from Florida and think that's how Florida people talk. If a person call you country and you from Florida, they parents most definitely not from Florida. So Florida is the south it just got a little extra more seasoning in it than the rest of the south
Florida boating culture is like no other from pensacola to key west. Boating is also heavily popular in the interiors too with the rivers.
You forgot all of the chains of lakes that we have inland in Florida.
Ahh yes Swaper boats with jumpin Gator
I’m a transplant and I get excited every time I run into a born and raised Floridian; they are rare. Thank you for having me ❤❤❤
7th Generation Floridian here. You'll find this to be more common in North Florida
Boo! 👻🌞❤️
Born and raised Floridian here and I wouldn’t change that for the world. I love it here. Only thing missing is some mountains 😂
We aint that rare
Wait born and raised floridians is rare dang
We moved to the Orlando area over a year ago and we love it. Such a mish mash of culture and languages. We lived in Atlanta for over 8 years and it doesn’t compare in quality of life as we have now. We are an hour either side of the coast to the beach, Miami is 3 hours if we want to take a cruise or we have our own port in port Canaveral. We enjoy the Orlando attractions during low peak seasons. Great place to raise your family, truly wish we would have came here years ago.
I'm guessing you mean the area surrounding Orlando (the winters) because when I lived in the actual city it was a nightmare the traffic sucked there was always some sort of accident and it was always loud of course this was 7 years ago so I get that it would change but I've been to Orlando many times since then and its seem to have gotten only slightly better in these aspects
Someone is exaggerating. I'm from Clearwater and drive to Orlando every day it takes almost 2 hours, and that's leaving at 6 am. Even living in between Tampa Bay and the Gulf, it still takes me about 20 minutes to get to the Gulf, maybe 10 minutes to get to the Bay. The overpopulation and traffic conjestion is no joke. Not to mention the terrible drivers.
Please leave. We don't want yall here. We're over capacity
Raised in florida but left for Atlanta years ago. I everytime i come back for family i feel like moving back.
Oh, gawd - as an almost-lifelong Floridian, I hate Orlando! Too much traffic, crime, etc.
As a Floridian thank you for complementing our state
Even though we are Culturally different in parts of Florida we do have a very beautiful State!
Thanks for the info!
Lolz
Florida is the greatest state in the USA.
I was a refugee from Los Angeles in 2001 when I arrived here. I had little more than the shirt on back. Today I have a solid 18 year career as a safety pro a couple hundred grand in the bank and a beautiful 300k home. Thank you Florida I love you
Good for you man! I always tell people here that if are in bad shape financially in FL (and don’t have some disability etc) it’s probably because you are lazy
Cool story, Bro!
Good. Just don't go voting democrap
The Southeast economies grow out the ceiling. Good for biz!
Wow! This is really inspiring. I'm sure your 18yr journey wasn't easy but ANYTHING is possible. Thank you.
Another reason why I love Florida we got all these cruise ports more than any other state in the country. Bringing revenue to hospitality,restaurant and hotel businesses, etc
😮
Florida actually has the largest cruise port in the WORLD. Which is why Florida is a international state. Many people from other countries come Florida
Those cruise companies are why we don't have to pay state income tax!
On the infrastructure topic, Florida is also one of two regions in the Western Hemisphere, and the only one in North America, that has a waterway that connects two coasts. One is the Panama Canal (connecting the Caribbean with the Pacific Ocean), and here, We have the Okeechobee Waterway which connects Fort Myers on the West Coast (Gulf of Mexico) to Stuart (Atlantic Ocean). The waterway even has five locks similar to the locks used in the Panama Canal.
I was 2 when we moved to Ft. Lauderdale in 1961. I love my state. Grew up with no air conditioning. Back then, it was paradise. Growing up at the beach was awesome
Moved up from the Keys in 62 to Hollywood when I was 6 months old. Lived in Broward County until I retired at 54 having worked for the Library system for 37 years. It was paradise and so were the Keys where my Grandparents still lived. Live in Palm Bay in Brevard County now and am watching the destruction due to out of control building just as I did in Broward. Time to move again😮
We grew up without AC, too. It was fans and open doors & windows. Mom had AC installed after I went off to college at Stetson LOL
florida is in its own league
Shit league
N fla is the real South
We have the whiniest governor in the country. That's for sure.
@@markrichards6863 lol
I never seen anyone fall so fast.
Key West has a different vibe of its own. The local wits call it a drinking town with a fishing problem.
Great Report. As a lifetime Fl resident Thank you for posting your overall honest assessment of Fl.
I've lived in 4 states , I was not born & raised in Florida but it was the only place Ive moved to that felt like I belonged & was welcome.
Same
I moved almost 3 years ago from PA . I finally feel like I am home here in Florida.
I'm glad you feel welcome but it makes me curious about the other places you went and why you didn't feel welcome there.
@@awaitingSaint777 where do you live if you don't mind me asking?
@@nitroneonicman South Florida
The Cuban Sandwich originated in the Tampa neighborhood of Ybor City.
Yes & those are the absolute best! Or Carmine's for deviled crab rolls. Yum.
YAH AND IT WAS MAded by A mafia Resturant
REALLY ? IT didn't originate in CUBA ?
SO WHY didn't they call it an YBOR SANDWICH ?
Because it was Cuban immigrants in Ybor City that created it.
Just had one at La Segunda.
Nicely done! Lived in Florida since '63 (on/off) and you pretty much nailed it. I'm really excited about the high-speed rail. I took a short trip and it was amazing! Cleaner and nicer than flying these days. Biggest downfall is...the traffic...and it's only getting worse. Road construction is never ending..especially on the interstates.
Well done. I have lived in Florida for 30 of my 71 years, up here in North Central Florida and I think you have done a good job with the video and all your information is accurate. Nature will take back Florida some day, but for now, humanity is on a roll devouring natural Florida like a plague.
I lived in South East Florida for a number of years. Now Jacksonville for 17 years. I came down to Florida 1985.
This video is very accurate.
🚗🙂
Damn you've been here for almost 40 years I don't know what state you came from and don't care because you're a true Floridian now .
ok florida man calm down
I've been here since 1991. I haven't a single friend down here.
If i could afford to move back home (CT.), I'd go back in a heartbeat.
I've been a Florida snowbird from NYC for a couple of years now, and I have to admit that I am starting to hate migrating back to NYC in the spring. South Florida is definitely its own thing. It's urban yet sprawling. It's also rural country. It's tropical. It's Latino. It's super glamorous but also very destitute. It's vapid but also brimming with culture. It has lots of alligators. It's definitely a vibe that you don't experience anywhere else in the world.
Vapid but also brimming with culture may be the best definition of Florida, or at least southeast Florida, I've read.
Lived in co op city (Bronx) and moved to Deltona (Volusia county). Lived there 16 years....and encountered two people my family knew from NYC who had also moved there lol
Very nice job with the video, describing my home state of Florida is an almost impossible task that could easily be a documentary/miniseries.
I moved from Scottsdale AZ to Clearwater FL a year ago and I love it here critters and all. I have acclimated to Florida I follow all Florida laws and living rules.. I didn’t bring my Scottsdale shit over here but I can’t say that for others moving here that’s why Floridians hate us transplants…
Move back. Don’t care how you adapted.
@@prueensgloria4743 nope sorry I ain’t going anywhere.. last true red state and I’m stayin 😘
keep Florida red
Well that's good to hear it's going to be up to you to keep all the other transplants in line, but I have a question since you've been living here for a while, is it hotter in Arizona or is it hotter in Florida?
I’m a transplant or whatever y’all call it.. I’m bringing all my New York ways down here.. don’t like it oh well
Ok, you got me to laugh at that DMZ Map, never really thought of my Orlando home like that :p
I'm way down the street in Tampa and I never thought of my city that way, either! 😁
Me neither, but it kind of is - didn't realize it till he said it. :D
Oh yes, there was an Orlando before Micky & I-4. It had some traffic lights and a Waffle House-type diner or 2. Then along came Uncle Walt and we were all singing M-I-C-K-E-Y-M-O-U-S-E. I was about 10 when the first prototype displays were exhibited. I was a teen when Magic Kingdom opened & we've loved it ever since. Even the airport MCO = Micky City Orlando! Same with BrighLine. None of that would be in FL without Uncle Walt and his vision.
@@paulathepoodlelover The Orlando airport is actually called MCO after Colonel Michael Norman Wright McCoy, who was tragically killed in a B-47 Stratojet crash near Downtown Orlando in 1957.
Same here that's why I love Orlando best place for all elements of living in Florida. Going on 16 years of Florida Life!
We once hired a young lady just arrived from California. She said she felt like she was living inside a zoo. She was half elated-half frightened at the amount and variety of wild life living free around us: iguanas, alligators, sea turtles, owls, ducks, bats, and a long list of birds, insects and snakes, all share our parks, beaches and roads. I have lived in South Florida for over 30 years, I find it very amusing and still take pictures of huge iguanas when I go out for my walks. Great video, btw!!
Yes and don't tell her that we also have Black bears, Wild hogs (very dangerous), Bobcats and Cougars (state animal) and a few other things she'd not like to have around.
When I first moved here, I was baffled by the birds half my height freely walking around. 😮
@@hopefulahchwathakazakiagregoryThose must be red head cranes.
@@hopefulahchwathakazakiagregory
Sandhill cranes
My friend's girlfriend from Minnesota would always call the police anytime she saw a gator sunbathing on the bank of our pond in the back yard 😂 Chill out, they're like squirrels here
Lifetime Bucs fan here. The Tampa Bay Buccaneers won a Super Bowl in 2002 way before Tom Brady was a Buc. There's more Tampa Bay Buccaneers fans than Carolina Panthers fans. That's for sure.
Agreed. I think some younger people don't remember the 1st Super Bowl win, and they had to trade most of their best players the year after for money reasons, corporate greed, etc. They definitely were not the greatest again for a long time. Real, longtime fans know the frustration and disappointment we've had since the 70s orange creamsicle days.
I watch that on a big screen in my front yard...welcome to florida
Arrrr🏴☠️🏴☠️🏴☠️🏴☠️
I remember when the Bucs won their first game and the Tampa Tribune's front page was printed in orange ink. That's when the Bucs wore the cream- kinda peachy-orange uniforms. Those got dirty too easily and the Bucs' mamas fussed so they switched to red, grey and black. 💙. The Bucs have done much better since changing their colors but Tampa is a tough market, lots of "home town fans" from someone else's home town rather than Tampa. Tampa Bay is the water and no one actually lives there except maybe some boats.
FIRE THE CANNONS
Dont forget the lizards, Florida has so many lizards. it's truly unbelievable. Nearly every home has dozens loving around it. There are so many that littel grass islands in plaza parking lots have their own family of lizards that inhabit it. You can not qalk to your car without seeing one on a sunny day.
I forgot that people arent used to Lizards!
When I koved down here as a kid it was the COOLEST!!!!
what wasnt!!! Was standing in an ant pile and then 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 bit up!
I'm OG from KY so there were only black ants there!
Once you got hit by 8 or 9 ants all on ya!!!
You WERE TAUGHT!!!!! cause it was a real lesson to learn! LMADO!
Snails! Snails and more snails!!! Ugh!!
There are two Floridas: from Orlando north is the south, and from Orlando south is the north. Also, when the temperature goes below 75 is time to get your jacket! 😃from Tampa here
I live in the panhandle, and even in northern Florida we NEVER get snow. Almost 20 yrs old, and the only time it ever "snowed" here, it was ice. However, ice can freeze on the roads and cause schools to be canceled.
Im from New Smyrna Beach, Snowed over 1 inch in 1982-83 on christmas day. and it snowed about 15 yrs ago. Not that it stuck around for long, but it does/has snowed here
@@robbgnarly Hey, I'm from the Destin area in the Panhandle, and it's never really 'snowed' here, the most we'd get is little flakes of ice every decade or so. It's weird because you'd expect it to snow in Northern Florida as opposed to Western Florida where you are, but that shows how truly wonky and inconsistent Florida's weather is🤣.
It has snowed several times in Florida you was born in 04 so you wouldn't know anything about it, hell I barely know anything about it and I was born in the 80s, my dad told me it snowed one time so bad when I was a kid, until it was snowing in both north Florida and Central and even South Florida was getting a little bit of snow.
@@rdf4315 that's why I mentioned I was almost 20 😁. Also, the fact that you're in your 40s and your dad had to tell you how bad it snowed down here gives me the context to know that the storm was a once-in-a-lifetime event. Even so, I highly doubt it will happen again because global warming is making the weather even hot. Regardless my point still stands that as a Panhandle resident approaching adulthood, I have yet to see snow.
@@atnicole461 for one I'm in my mid 30s not 40s and yeah you might be right even though it has snowed a few times since then, I don't think we're going to ever see snow as bad as they saw it back in 89 or 90.
17:10 haha! typical florida driver! great video mike! as someone who was raised in florida, your description was apt. in fact, i grew up in orlando and dreaded the tolls. never realized how anomalous this was until i moved up north. consider me a new subscriber
It's horrible down here and everyone should move back up north..... Thanks 👍
I.see what you did there 😂
Yes! 😂
Depends on how you vote. :)
🖕🏾 ain’t going nowhere
Amen !😂😂😂
You did a great job explaining Florida’s uniqueness. As a lifelong Floridian (in the northern “Southern” part), I learned a lot!
A very accurate account of Florida! Thank you!
Over 60 year old 5th generation to Florida!
Great vid Mike (as always)! You know I love Florida, and all of your FLA videos!! Florida is a miss-mash of cultures from around the US and the whole planet, and with global tourism destinations, a vast array of opportunities to experience them, from restaurants, sports, culture and more. I Uber'd in the 305 about a decade ago, and you get to live it first hand, meeting people from all over the world, both those who now call Florida home and those just visiting!
Great video Mike. Very upbeat/energetic throughout the entire video.
I moved to Florida in 1986 and I just wanna say this is a beautiful video
I moved to Tampa in 1986 too.
I came here to go to UT from Mississippi.
I’m from TN and have lived in both Carolina’s and have family in Georgia and Kentucky, I’ve been all over the south and I have been living in Orlando since 07’ - confirming all of this my man! This was a interesting video and a fun watch, good work bro!
So true. I always thought of Palm Beach County as New York with palm trees, especially on I-95. The New Yorkers started out in Miami and then got pushed north by the Hispanics. When I moved to Florida forty years ago, I felt like I had landed in paradise. I still love it. I don't blame all the folks who move here and visit us here.
The native Floridians do mind
Great video! I am from Florida and I think you did a great job explaining this topic!
But honestly, North Florida is very southern. I am tired of seeing people excluding North Florida from the South
As a NY'er who had to live in that hell hole for 34 years, I'd always said I was born 20 years too late, 1,500 miles too far north. Compared to the northern states, Florida is DEFINITELY the South. However yes, it's not as southern as the rest of the Southeastern US. The one thing I love about Florida though, is the absolutely wide array of cultures. Latin, African American, White, Asian, and any other culture you can think of absolutely have a fingerprint on this state and for the most part, we make it work as the founding fathers intended, as a melting pot. Far more than Upstate NY EVER did. Am I a transplant from a shit hole state with a shit hole mindset? 100%. But am I more proud to call myself someone who got out and moved to a BETTER PLACE? YES. And I embraced it. I don't try to change it. I moved here FOR change, not to 'enact' change. And that's how EVERYONE who moves to Florida should do it too.
Very true!!! Don't come down to get away from BS and then try to change it to be like the BS you left. We are a FREE STATE and we like it that way. If you don't then GO HOME and take your BS with you.😊
@@garymixson687 100%
Absolutely.
As a natural born 47yo Floridian I’ve lived here most of my life. I’ve left a few times looking for work in other states and have always ended up coming back.
Even though I’m of German and Irish ancestry, I love Florida’s Hispanic heritage. Probably why I ended up marrying a Latina woman and have been married to her for more than 25 years and had two beautiful children, a girl and a boy.
Sounds like someone doing pretty well 😄😄@johngreenwald2954
Keep doing you man 😃
@garymixson687 As a person born and raised in Liberty City, I am with you as I tell my peers . I like red I love Florida red and we will keep it red as Gov DeSantis said : Woke dies here . Don't bring your liberal BS here from NYC or any other blue city or state. Buddy is obviously NOT from here
I am from the panhandle and I am a southerner through and through.recently worked in southern Florida and everyone I met was a transplanted northerner. Southern hospitality is alien to them. So, I really liked it when you divided the state into north and south. I grew up hearing northerners referred to as Yankees and the ones that moved to FL as damn Yankees😎. I am from and still live in Panama City FL
As a Native lifelong resident of Florida. I can tell you that we would much rather deal with the occasional toll . Then a state income tax that takes a much bigger toll on our finances
A State Income Tax will never happen since it is forbidden in the Florida Constitution. By the way Toll Revenues are miniscule compared to all of the Sales Taxes & Fees you have to pay for everything else as a Resident.
You did an awesome job with this video 👏👏👏
jacksonville, the southernmost city in Georgia
It's not in Georgia and never was.( This is something that triggers me but I understand it is culturally similar to Georgia . So it's not that bad) There were a lot of Georgia transplants and the Jacksonville Combined Metropolitan Area includes 1 county in Georgia.. But My grandparents and aunts and uncles and cousins did not live in Georgia. The Jacksonville area IS Florida , other parts of the state are like southern outposts of NJ, NY, IL etc.
But the Jacksonville Beaches,Southside of Jacksonville and St Augustine seem a lot less southern to me than in 1990.
@@lobos320 There is a Jacksonville, Georgia though, FYI.
@@lobos320Jacksonville’s Southside is more suburban, but still full of southern people. The southside, northside, and far westside are also the same politically, even though there is a rural-suburban divide. Heavily conservative
The Northside and far westside still have rural pockets
@@lobos320 I'm well aware it's not in Georgia, but it's southern. I worked there for a while and I have family in the area.
Lol everybody knows Jackistan is all the way Florida only the weather can be compared to Georgia
The big difference in my mind, is Florida (the coastal peninsular part) is run by real estate developers and their crony friends, Florida politicians. Its what drives the economy here. There's little industry or employment here that isn't related to real estate development.
That red car speeding lol that’s exactly how nyc would drive with more space
Who needs more space to do that? lol
Really? I always thought it was a third world thing.
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I still remember within the first hour of being in Chicago, and I saw on the Stevenson Expressway, which I took right at its north end at LSD, at least 5 cars immediately use the shoulder to get around the standstill traffic. I did see that before on portions of I-95 in Georgia and Virginia, but it was still amazing to see that happen when I had only just been introduced to Chicago.
As a Pinellas (Tampa Bay) resident I consider that maneuver amateurish. I would have gone for the gap between the cars in the center and the right lane.
As a Port Saint Lucie resident you’re 100 percent right . Nothing to do here . You can buy a home right now for 450k that someone bought 3 years ago for 150k and did no upgrades .
I bet the owner never even stepped in it either, so many homes vacant from rich north birds who buy for investment. Yet Florida working resident gets no benefits. Everyone around my age want move out to NC
I'm a transplant, I've been living in the Great State of Florida for the last 10 years...and I LOVE IT!!!...
Very true about Jacksonville being the exception when it comes to toll roads in the large metros in Florida. It is also the least “touristy” of the large metros in the state. It used to actually have more toll roads and bridges but all tolls were removed in the late 1980s and for decades didn’t have any tolled facilities until, as shown in the video at 14:17, SR 23 (aka the First Coast Expressway) in the western part of the metro opened. That road BTW is part of a future multi-billion dollar outer “quarter” beltway around the southwestern quadrant of the Jax metro that will cross the St. John’s River and eventually connect to I-95 in northern St. John’s county by the early 2030s. The section from the current end of SR 23 to near the St. John’s River is expected to open in 2025.
I lived in Jax when they took out the tollbooths on the downtown bridges, 295 across the St. John's and 202 (Butler Blvd) in favor of a 1/2 cent sales tax increase. Before that, there were HUGE backups at all the tollboths in the morning going into downtown and in the afternoon leaving downtown. It was a welcome relief when they were gone for anyone who worked downtown or who lived Eastside but worked Westside or vice versa.
I live in Orlando, and I used to live in Baton Rouge and Phoenix. I consider the Orlando area to be semi-southern. Parts north of the Orlando area feel more southern, while parts south of Orlando are less southern. The Miami / Ft Laudable area does not feel southern at all.
The reason I call Orlando semi-southern is because it has a somewhat different feel than the rest of the South, but you can still find plenty of restaurants that serve sweet tea, grits, greens, and other Southern comfort foods.
Not even that. We still country af and talk with Country Slang. Allcthe hoods are Southern, so idk where this notion of Orlando do not being a Southern city came from.
@@StaticbeyfrmSemoranyou might want to edit your post.
@@StaticbeyfrmSemoranNahhh Orlando definitely isn’t a southern city, it’s 90% tourists and doesn’t have that same southern flare as the rest of the south.
@@thisismyaccount6174 bro I'm from here. The ppl that r tourist don't stay here long. U can't tell me about my own city remember that
@@BrendanMcClelland i dont have to edit shit nigga. Figure it out like you do with everything in yo life tf is wrong with u
btw. I just got home from a night outing in NE Florida. We were talking about how "cool" it felt after a hot day. I checked the temperature on the car dashboard when we got in and it was 88 degrees at 10:00PM and so humid your shirt looks like it came out of a washing machine when you take it off. That's what a "cool" Florida night is relative to other places. Also noticed that the grass grew two feet high in the last two days due to heavy rains from a hurricane followed by a blazing sun in steamy humidity all day and night. Never saw that happen anywhere else.
110%
Shirts with a vent like the fishing gear shirts made of polyester breathe enough in this humidity and heat down here in FL..
As a native Florida I always say if the temperature goes below 72 it's chilly.
I would never make it up North.
I live in South Florida and at 5am is 90 with 89% humidity... that's getting really old for me after being here 16 years from NJ. I can't take the heat and humidity as I get older, time to move on soon.
@@anthonyfp24 How well I know! I am in NE Florida thinking exactly the same thing! I had to flip the Accuweather calendar two months ahead until October to see some cooler weather.
As someone who grew up in Florida, I’ll just tell you right now. Everyone loved hurricane season and by everyone I mean kids, if you were a student in high school middle school or elementary it meant no school for possibly two days to even two weeks. Getting an email from your school talking about how they would most likely be closed for the next three days was the pinnacle of childhood happiness.
😂
Haha yup
I was born and raised in Miami and currently live in Broward. Even though I doubt I'll ever move back, there's no place like home. That city is nuts! 😂
Texas and Florida are not the 'traditional" south. They are their own unique state/region. Texas is a mix of wild western/desert, bayou, lakes/prairies, and forests. Florida is pretty much exactly how you summed it up!
When you grow up in Florida, you only have three desires to go hiking for the first time see mountains for the first time and touch snow for the first time
Last winter I visited Florida for the first time. Most of my time was in Central Florida - I visited family in the Villages for a while and spent the rest of the time based out of Lakeland - and it struck me that everything was either very new and shiny (Villages is infamous for this) or kind of run-down. The visitor center at Homosassa Springs State Park was a memorable exception since it was obviously built in the '60s and just as obviously well-kept-up.
This is one of the best, most-informative & factual videos we've seen to date - well done, sir!
1)As a born, raise, and still resident of Florida, you nail it Mileage Mike on why Florida is different from the rest of the South.
2)I still consider Florida part of the South despite the amount of transplants from the North. That could be because personally, I don’t relate to other regions in the US outside of the South.
-Lifelong Cocoa, FL resident
Brightline is not high speed rail. It’s an enhanced service like some of Amtrak’s Midwest routes disguised as high speed rail
Don't forget about SunRail in Orlando
@@americanwalmarts3565 There is also Tri-Rail, in S. Florida, running from West Palm Beach to Miami.
Granted, Amtrak doesn't run HSR either. The rail tracks are too old, and need major upgrades
It's fast for us Americans tho.
Florida is a really interesting states. Don’t know I could personally live there. Spent the last week down in Key West. Flight from CLT got canceled with Debby so I got a rental car and drove the 14 hours in one day straight down 95. It was a longgg drive.
As a native south floridian I really feel I am a Caribbean not an American, culture wise. North Florida is south Georgia. Mid Florida is a strange buffer zone of theme parks, bikers and cattle towns.
I wasn’t expecting this to be an such an historical educational vid! I learned so much & I lived here for years. Never really wanted to be here. Came by default years ago following my mom after a divorce and living a military life. Very informative. Thanks!
Florida is very much Southern. It's just not very southern anymore because of all the people from the Northeast moving down in droves.
Lifelong Florida resident here. Most of this state is Southern only in the geographic sense and it has been this way for a good while.
North Florida was Southern until the people from the Northeast and South Florida came there
@@mrjuicejunior Sorry but South Floridians aren't moving to North Florida.
@@xoxxobob61 Want to bet on that? I live in Tallahassee and see droves of people moving here from Miami-Dade and Broward county. Myself included. Also, Gainesville and Jacksonville are absorbing a lot of south Florida residents. For the last 20-25 years, Miami has changed for the worse.
Not my personal opinion, but is it safe to say Florida & Texas aren't part of the traditional South?
What do you mean
South of i4 isn't southern. North of i4 is.
@@georgerogers1166 indeed Destin is moderately, Hispanic
@@NWGuyNWchallenger It's often brought to my attention that Texas & Florida aren't considered to be the "traditional South" like for example Georgia, N. Carolina/S. Carolina & Alabama are
@@TheFinancialFrank I agree I live in Georgia and outside North Georgia mountains and metro Atlanta the rest of the state is very southern
If you see Oak trees, you're in the old south ...If you see Plam trees you're in the new south.
I'm in Ft. Pierce, and I see both of those trees. The difference between the Live Oaks here, and those in South Florida, is that the Oaks in S. Florida have no Spanish moss hanging from them. Plenty of moss, here in E. Central Florida.
Central Florida has both trees.
Miami has both.
I mean Savannah is pretty old south as it gets and is full of palm trees
I see both daily and Cyprus
I moved to Florida a couple years ago, and live in Lehigh Acres. I'm quite happy to be here, and any disparaging remarks are probably referring to Lehigh of a couple decades ago. I came from a smaller city up north where downtown was a strip of 4 blocks or so. For an area that "doesn't have a downtown", Lehigh sure has a lot of stores and offices on Homestead and Lee Blvd. And when Lee ends, it turns into Colonial Blvd in Ft Myers, yet more continuation of commercial businesses. Lehigh was one of the fastest growing areas in the entire country in 2019; it actually has a larger population than next door Ft Myers, although the latter probably swells to larger size during tourist season. I check the realtor pages just for fun, and Lehigh has just an absolutely endless number of new homes being built. In fact, they usually swamp the number of existing homes up for sale.
Thank you for the informative video. The unbridled sprawl is ruining this state ecologically. As a native Floridian, it's difficult for me to get excited about Brightline, since it has the highest human death toll of any railway in the country.
As a native Floridian I can give this 2 thumbs up. To answer the question is Florida southern or northern...the answer is a simple YES! 😁 Side note, we added some toll express lanes to the southern sections of I-295 across the St.
The difference is 100 years ago Florida was the least populated state in the Southeast. Now, it has more population than the 2nd Georgia and 3rd North Carolina combined, and still the state with highest in migration. Hell, in 2022 Florida had 40,000 more deaths than births and still managed to add 444,000 in a single year. Thats an insane amount of growth.
Insane growth because the state is seriously overcrowded and has looming environmental problems like rising sea levels and diminishing fresh water tables.
Dude, I grew up here, and the water level on the seawall of my childhood home is still the same. Hasn't changed in the 60 years that ive been alive!@stephenpowstinger733
@@stephenpowstinger733 It's overcrowded because of bad development policies
@@nathanstuart3677 More like people keep moving here instead! In 1970 Florida had 6 Million people & today that is the population of Metro Miami! The State's Population has nearly Quadrupled in the past 50 years.
The 1950 map show peninsular Florida as “wilderness” is misleading. Cities like Tampa, Orlando and Miami were thriving even in 1950. As a naive Floridian of old, I miss the vast open spaces and small towns of Florida. Ocala and Winterhaven were great. Now it’s people, houses and cars everywhere.
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I love it here in Florida!!! Left the Midwest and will bot go back. Florida is beautiful all over.
Man I really hope the high speed rail system is super successful in Florida, could lead to more parts of Florida being reachable by train and it could influence other states to do the same
I live in St. Petersburg. My mother is a Tampa native, and her side of the family has been in eastern Hillsborough for the last 70 years. They're as Southern as they come. Accent, attitude, you name it. Anyone in a coastal city can drive 45-90 mins inland, and the people they will encounter will be way different than what they're used to in the city.
Also from St. Pete and my family has been in Central Florida since it was still called South Florida on both sides of the tree. The only exception is my grandad whose side of the family hails from south Georgia and is easily as southern as they come.
Come thru my Black brotha u got this game on lock.👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾
No doubt 💪🏾
As a recent FL transplant, this is a great video! Still hoping for more Yankee amenities like public transit (car insurance is one of the highest in the nation) and a middle class. There is such a class divide; no middle class jobs (>$80K) and a lot of gated communities.
Yes
Its the haves and have nots down here
@@Buglife.352definitely not places like Palm Bay, Deltona, Port. St. Lucie the cities he described are 100% middle class. Before covid these were places that one on a single income could afford to purchase a close to brand new home.
Gated communities are a drawback b/c friends eventually stop trying to come visit you through the gates.
You got a chuckle out of me when you put the DMZ across central Florida.
I was born and raised in Florida, so let's be honest about the weather. It's usually hot in the 90s with a humidity heat index as high as 112 on some days. September is the worst month because hurricanes become a factor. Most of the state is over built and over crowded adding exaust heat from cars and air conditioners. This is no tropical paradise, and add in that most people who live here are crazy. No one in their right mind would ever move to Florida voluntarily. But don't get me wrong, this is my home, and I love it. I just don't like what's been done to it.
As someone who lives in Florida... It's definitely "The further north, the more south"
Central is still Southern...and hangin' on! 😎
@@marknewton6984 Not really, Central is definitely Northern. I live in the sticks in CFL and it’s 95% northern. Orlando is not southern. Not Brevard. Not Osceola. Not Lake. Not Polk. Not Volusia. Maybe you’re just in a very rural area.
Polk? Parts of Tampa? Lakeland?
Nigga no. Orlando is my ciry and we Cou try as hell we just a big city with some Skyscrapers. @@TitaniumTurbine
@@TitaniumTurbine I live in Tampa. The parts of Central Florida that are culturally Southern are generally sparsely populated. A lot of Central Florida, especially Orlando and the coastal areas, definitely leans northern from a cultural standpoint.
I always wonder why Louisiana can have a radically different culture from the rest of the South and still be considered Southern while Florida cannot.
Facts
I'd say, just because it's an older culture,that's still outdoorsy. Louisianas is. For example a gator tour in Florida would be looked at as Southern even if the tour guide was a transplant from the north,or someplace
Besides Louisiana's French/Cajun culture like in New Orleans how much of that culture dominates the rest of the state? Most of that state was settled by other Southerners while Florida was not.
@highway2heaven91 because Louisiana culture has always been southern and the same it's different but still southern
@xoxxobob61 right The the culture here is mixed in it's southern and still French and cajun
Don't compare Florida and Texas folks...it's about 10 degrees f warmer in Miami in January than Padre Island Texas, and Mango trees and coconut palms grow like weeds even 100 miles north of Miami...been in Texas, no comparison, and the South Eastern Florida culture is Caribbean.......
I watched this to see if I agreed with your conclusion, but I subscribed after watching the video because you did an absolutely amazing job on this video. Based on this, I'll watch anything you put together. Thanks for the hard work!
BTW you are right. I grew up in rural south-central Virginia, which is the south. Florida is Florida.
Sugarloaf Mountain is the fifth-highest named point and the most prominent point in the U.S. state of Florida. At 312 feet above sea level it is also the highest point on the geographic Florida Peninsula. The hill is in Lake County, near the town of Clermont. Wikipedia
I’m Brazilian and I swear to God the Brazilians here in Florida travel in packs where I live there’s almost no Brazilians but if you go to either Orlando, Miami or Fort Lauderdale, you are in for a party
Lifelong Tampa Bay resident here. I have a few things to add. Florida's central and southern Gulf coast have more of a Midwestern flavor mixed in than the state's eastern parts have. Also, there have been plenty of Bucs fans around here and all over the state pre-Tom Brady and I'm one of them. The Bucs sucked from the time I was a toddler until I was in high school (that was the start of their longest-lasting boom period, culminating in their first Super Bowl appearance and win) and I was still a diehard fan the whole time. When I say that most of Florida, including a lot of Central Florida, is effectively south of the South, those cultural differences are why.
Tbh, I think our cities suck compared to what you can see in NYC or Boston, and while I've always enjoyed living in small-town suburbia, migration and overpopulation have made it too crowded for the way it was designed. I live an hour from Clearwater Beach and I don't even want to go there anymore: Drive takes longer, parking has become insanely expensive, and it's just crowded. I fear the day that they tear down the local wilderness park to put more houses.
There is the option of lobbying for the removal of parking minimums and zoning codes. Higher density makes transit systems more feasible to implement. If you get pushback, just say traffic in Tokyo is awful despite 95% of the population using the train. Hell, NYC traffic is horrible despite 90% of adults using the transit system, and everyone else biking.
The only reason why suburbs are as crowded as they are now is because zoning makes it impossible to build anything reasonably dense. If housing is built densely in the areas that people would want to live close to, then those people aren't going to be driving. Again, look at NYC. Movie theatre? Apartments close by. Office buildings? Apartments close by. Food markets? Several apartments close by. Bakeries? Apartments on top. Parks and playgrounds? Surrounded on all sides by townhouses. Something like 40% of adults living in the city don't even have a driver's license.
Beach parking is ridiculous. It used to be affordable, but no more.
I just asked my mom why the speed rail doesn't include Tampa. She said govenor Scott didn't want it to. 🤷🏽♀️ This wouldn't have mattered to me at all as a youth. But now, as the really grown, I kinda want it. I'm sure I'd use it.
My husband and I with our 3 children moved down to Florida a little over 10 years ago, from Connecticut. What we have noticed is how different each town is. The first town we moved to, we hated, and only stayed 3 months. I cried everyday that I wanted to go home, it was in central Florida, in the middle. We have been on the coast in central Florida for almost 10 years, and love it .
:Swamp Filled Wasteland" is the most ignorant description of Florida I've ever heard..The ecosystem of Florida is second only to the Amazon for plant and animal diversity..
Look at OLD maps of Florida... the peninsula was called a wilderness, swamp, and more... Florida was where I-10 & US-90 run... Napoleon Bonaparte Broward was "going to tame the swamp" and had the New River Canal dug so, what is now west Broward County, could be farmed...
Lived my first forty-six years in Miami with a wide interest and appreciation for science. But the swamps are really unpleasant for anyone but a true enthusiast. And by that I mean either someone whose field of study includes wetlands, or very hardy hunters and fishermen. Calling people "ignorant" in this case is being an eco-snob.
@@kevinp3550 I agree. Grew up in st. Pete and the summers are hell and bugs are at plague levels. Without ac... People have been hospitalized due to heat here.
Not a wasteland, but certainly a swamp in large areas.
I'm a fifth generation Florida native.
Cities are not Southern because Yankees and outlanders have moved in. However, I live in Florida in a town of 258 people.
People are shocked when they accidentally come across our town because Mayberry's three times larger and way more progressive than our town lol.
I have neighbors that still plow with mules. I have neighbors that hook ponies up to carts to go to the store (well, the gas station. We don't actually have a store)
We have five Baptist churches and a Methodist church. The entire town goes to church on Sunday and we all meet down at the lake for potluck.
So yes, Florida is still Southern if you stay away from where all the transplants are.
No one wants to live hard out here where we have a cow to human ratio. They can't produce their own meat dairy and produce in their own yards. That's reserved for us hardy, die hard Southerners.
It might surprise people to realize that there was no building boom in Florida until the early 1980s because no one here had air conditioning. We grew up with no air conditioning.
So, if the power ever goes out, everyone from Ocala down is going to die of heat exhaustion.
(There used to be a fantastic seabreeze that went across the entire state. However, land developers built condos up and down each coast and created a bowl effect. So now it gets very hot and very cold in a place that used to have a warm temperature all year.)
So, yes, Florida is a southern state, it's just that the Southerners are smart enough to stay away from the cities.
And there are only four major cities in Florida. The rest of the state is just us rednecks.
Thank you. I'm a third generation native.
Polk county. And it doesn't even resemble the state I grew up in in the seventies and eighties.
I never realized what you said about the sea breeze. Which explains why the air is so stagnant and nasty now here in Polk. In the late 90's early 2000's I loved in Treasure Island. When I moved back to Polk I was blown away by the heat difference.
@@VladimirGitcherocksoff I grew up in Lake Wales. It does get hot there, but it's higher than the rest of the peninsula. That's why y'all still have citrus.
Citrus county doesn't though. We're 6 miles from the GA line here, but it's just like it used to be when things were normal.
People still visit and the women still get together and can fruits and veggies we grew (or foraged. We still have lots of wild fruit here.)
Fortunately, it's one of those places that forces you to either work or leave. Everybody that lives out here is forced to do some kind of farming, gardening, canning etc. It's 60 miles to the nearest city.
AMEN ❤
Yall are lucky. They found us over here in destin Panama city area. They destroyed everything good about it. I'm in shock at what I see every day the last few years. Feels like my life is over with. I never liked it anywhere else when traveling. The crazy drivers and bad attitudes from other places are a constant nuisance. Everything tripled in price the last few years, so a nice affordable life is history. There is no spring or beach or anything that isn't crowded like a typical big city, in fact it's worse than most because we don't have the infrastructure to support this invasion. I keep going north away from the beach to escape them, but they keep coming and coming. I'm only like 10 minutes from Alabama now. I used to have a farm up here, and I love this city. Good Christian southerners here I hope will give the cold shoulders to outsiders. We don't want them here. We would rather eat palmetto roots and sleep in a tent than be around them 😂
Damn it almost sounds like you live in Lulu, but I'm a Florida native and my family have been here for I don't know how many generations, all I know is my family been here since the late 1700s but everything you mentioned is so true.
5:02 “…aaannnndddd new lakes can appear randomly in the form of sinkholes.” Hilarious!!!
😂
Yup. The further South you go, the more North you get until you get to the keys. Then you're south again, but only sort of. The keys are a blend of South, Caribbean, and acid casualty artist enclave dominated by tourism and watersports. It's a weird, awesome place.
As a Florida boy I can say this video was pretty much right on !
I’m a Tennessean. You couldn’t have had toll roads here or you’d have lines of abandoned clunkers to haul away. To say that most people here were without wealth is an extreme understatement.