20 Rudest Cities In America. Where Manners Don't Exist.
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- Опубликовано: 25 апр 2024
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Today We Look at the cities with the rudest population. We did this video a few years ago but people wanted an update and wanted us to expand the list. So, today we give you the 20 Ridest Cities in the US
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This is an opinion-based video about what cities in the United States have the rudest people.
Briggs
According to Briggs
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Hey, that transphobic rant when you were talking about Baltimore was rude. You should apologize for that.
Couldn't agree more about Los Angeles suburbs. Stay away from large hubs and California is a beautiful state with a lot to offer.
Uh, check out your title, Briggs: "Where manners don't existed"
As a Native American, I can say that most of us wish that Washington DC would go back to calling their team, the "Redskins". It's like Land-o-Lakes changing their label---they got rid of the Indian, and kept the land. Don't blame us for these changes! The fault lies with a bunch of busybody, middle-aged, middle-class women, who have nothing better to do with their time.
Hahaha i enjoyed this comment.
why don't you say it directly: they are Karens.
Really? Hmmm I don’t think soooo but it’s your comment everyone has one. Times change. Lived there in the 1970s loved it, also loved the Red Skins were our favorite team but that was then this is now. Everything changes. Never paid attention to LOL ads.
it's not middle aged women it's the younger woke millenials
I don't know why you're getting hate with this you're absolutely right. I used to be stationed up in Montana where the Blackfoot reservation was. They're the tribe that created the logo for the Redskins. That town was so insanely proud of that team. I found if you actually talk to Native Americans a large majority feel the same. It's the one's who have about 1/16th Native blood and have never had anything to do with the tribe or bothered to learn about that heritage that have a problem with it
I’ve lived in Vegas for 65 years. What I can tell you is that it’s a cold dark place for outsiders. Especially for the ones coming from California. My tip if you’re a Californian in Vegas is to NEVER tell anyone, and for Gods sake, never say anything close to “ Well, in California we do it THIS way.”
Vegas was coo back the 90s but now it’s hard to find people who are actually from here because it’s a mix of people from everywhere. Ppl rude asf here now.
Its that way in Southern states now too including FL. If your from a liberal state, especially West Coast or Northeast, forget Southern hospitality, now more like Southern hostility.
It’s not a red/blue thing at all. We just don’t like people who flee their home state to come here and then want to make Nevada just like the place they fled. It’s really quite common with Californians.
@@davidtotten3042 That has how its been with many from Northeast and Canada that flee to FL and Southern states. They look down on and think locals are supposed to change to accommodate them. This has turned what was Southern hospitality into Southern hostility. Extremely rude entitled attitudes.
I lived in Las Vegas for three years and finally left when I got a job where I was appreciated after the horrible experience i had with the job that brought me there. That was 1988 to 1991. I can sum it up thusly. It was a religious experience. I descended into Hell, and in the third year I rose again.
I’m rude, so I moved to Minnesota to fit in.
Frick off, ya, you betcha.
it’s important to know where we belong.
Lol
I might have to move there too in that case.
LOL
Again Briggs as a New Jerseyan, thank you for this award. Im glad we were able to win rudest state and city. Again i didn't watch the rest of the video because who care about a bunch of lower tiered cities.
You misunderstood. The video today is about the rudest cities, not the biggest a$$holes. They are close. Like brothers, they are a lot alike. But not the same.
@@maobfh Can’t they be both?
Precisely why I GTFOO Jersey almost 30 years ago. I prefer to follow the Dalton (of Roadhouse) Rule: "Be nice. Until it's time to NOT be nice."
@@h.s.levine2932 - often, they are!
New Jersey sucks
Baltimore was listed twice on this list 😂😂😂
That's just how rude they are
Editing errors at 14:13 and 14:23
Swear I’m not making this up: Baltimore is the only city where I’ve seen someone screaming at a fire hydrant.
In my mind, people that do that have some sort of Mental Illness.
Mental
The time I went to Baltimore. I had a layover you could say. Went to get a haircut and the barber literally told me to not go anywhere but that block or I might get shot. I asked if she was kidding. She looked me straight faced in the mirror with a "no seriously"
I saw a guy in NYC having a very cordial conversation with one.
All that started here when they decided to "normalize" mental patients by closing all the institutions. You know the idea is make them part of society by immersing them. The institutional population was huge, and as you seen not entirely a success, by any stretch of the imagination. Ergo people screaming at fire hydrants.
You know what's crazy. When I was stationed in Montana I had to drive through the Blackfoot reservation to get to Glacier National Park. Always stopped there to top up on fuel. I'm a white guy, I stop there everyone just stares, never say a word. It's a tense situation. One time I stopped and forgot to take off my Redskins hat. Completely different reaction. It was like everyone was excited to see me. Very welcoming, wanted to talk about the team. That's the tribe that came up with the logo for the Redskins and used to be honored every year by the team before the name change. They have a bar there that's just covered in Redskins memorabilia. They're all so proud to be represented by the team. I came to find out that if you actually talk to Native Americans, not just Blackfoot but other tribes, a large majority were extremely proud of the name. The ones who weren't are the ones who are about 1/16th Native American who never had anything to do with the tribe or ever learned about that heritage. The real Native Americans love it. It's not a rude name at all unless you're trying to speak for a group of people who never asked for it and already told you otherwise
Good old Browning, Montana.
@@pdxmtngoat that's the one lol
I moved to Anchorage in 1981. It was very friendly in those days. If you were broken down side the road, someone would stop to help or at least check on you.
Over the years, the wrong type of people have moved to AK. It's now illegal to stop to check on people along side the road as so many have been harmed and robbed.
Oh no!!
Alaska doesn't even have a big population,but it's so crime ridden very sad.
@@darrendawson4800 only in some areas!
@@darrendawson4800it's the same people doing it every day.
Chicago has the rudest, most agressive panhandlers I have ever experienced.
When’s the last time you were there? Now the majority barely speak English, making it more difficult to be rude.
even those that are not panhandlers are RUDE in chicago.
City of my birth, but family moved to Florida. Loved Fl but it changed so tried out many places on the East Coast. Now in New England … love it for over 30 years
@@h.s.levine2932 It's been a while. I lived there from 2003 to 2008. There was one woman I had to pass every work day. She was always aggressive. One day I thought I got past her without her noticing me, but she yelled at me, "Your f*cking white ass is going to hell!" She was like that frequently. There ought to be a law against that kind of abuse from a person using a public sidewalk for private business, I thought. But I don't think there is, and I put up with it. (She was white, by the way, so it wasn't a racial thing.)
Chiraq
I used to live in Houston and I believe one of the contributing factors outside of the traffic, is that it is unbearably hot & humid practically all year long. There may be periodic breaks from the heat, but the humidity is persistent and it just pisses you off to start profusely sweating as soon as you step outside. No matter what temperature it is, you always feel wet and sticky.
Houston: It's the humidity. No one can be happy with that humidity.
I agree. I had a job interview there. There was no way i was going to move there to work.
Baltimore should have been made #1. They’re cold, exceptionally rude and have no ounce of kindness and empathy with one another. Most of them are only nice to you when theres an ulterior motive and/or they need something from you. It’s NOT an opinion, it’s my experience.
It's an opinion. Opinions are based on how one feels, and you feel Baltimore is the rudest city in the US. Others may feel differently, which makes it their opinion.
@@deanzachariades6365experience is fact though, not opinion. It’s my experience too. It’s Briggs experience too, not opinion. How do you feel? Have you been to Baltimore? Do you know?
The entire North East is rude. But DC is just cold. Soul-lessly cold. The worst people in the world live in DC and the DC suburbs. I consider it enemy held territory, the enemy being satan.
@@randomexploring541 OK, I will not pretend to speak for Briggs, but in his videos he usually has a disclaimer that he gets his research from people who have opinions. And I was in Baltimore as recently as November 2023. So while I won't say Baltimore is as charming as its nickname suggests, to say it's a FACT that it's the rudest city is not true. Because there is no way of knowing for sure. We all go by our OPINIONS.
Hi Briggs- I dont know the last time you were in SoCal, but let me tell you...........not much has changed and your analysis is spot on.
I agree on rude. But most of America is rude these days. Most of us live urban. Living in a bubble. Me too. It reflects our society. Mostly greedy, not enough toys, red v blue mentality.
John F. Kennedy described Washington, DC, as "A city that combines northern hospitality with southern efficiency."
Absolutely brilliant!
@@birbluv9595 Agreed.
And what year was that?
Definitely not wrong about Seattle. I now live in a better place. People are more polite even if not particularly welcoming to strangers.
Good riddance.
We all know new york is number 1!!! Philadelphia and Boston got to be in top 5
Why? These are the most civilized places in US New York and Boston… I would only southern places put on this list…
Philadelphia Stinks, I live there it's horrible Murders, Robberies, Car Jackings, Dangerous Angry Drivers every day and night!!!!!
As a lifelong Coloradan, I am surprised that Denver is not on the list. It used to be a pretty nice city, but over the past couple of decades it has become a horrible place to live or visit. The drivers are some of the worst I've ever experienced, and there is no such thing as a "nice" person downtown. I avoid that sh**hole like the plague.
It crashed in the 90s and hasn't stopped plummeting since
You can most likely blame democrats
The swarm or Californians completely changed the culture of Colorado. They brought their self importance, insincerity, and narcissism with them and it more or less ruined the state, especially Denver.
I live in Denver and totally approve the comment. It has changed significantly 😢
Wellington Webb...a nice guy, very popular, but beneath the skin a far left radical was the change that brought Denver to its knees.
Look it up.
Love this topic 🤣🤣 hilarious to watch. thanks Briggs
Great narration! 👍🏻
I work in Calabasas. So true about the rudeness level. Off the charts.
A CA native once described it that the way Calif. deals with 'Diversity', is everyone just ignores everyone else!
You are spot-on about San Francisco. Was there in the mid 90’s and the people there were incredibly snobby
Native bay boy can confirm. SF is that wonderful mix of elitism and shanty towns
I am not sure what it says about me, but I felt perfectly at home with the people of San Francisco and the overall Bay Area.
Was there in the 1970s, but only for 3 days thought it was wonderful
And? Boston, New York, San Francisco Still the most civilized cities in US. I would only southern republican places put on the list.
@@cindylewis3325 a lot changed in 20 years. It would have been cool to be there in the 70’s but I was a little kid at the time
It’s funny how you explaining each city character))I was laughing all the time))
Can confirm Seattle Freeze
I have known 8 people that moved to Seattle all of them confirmed it as well. One was a very attractive friendly young lady. We all know she realistically gets a pass and would be welcomed welcomed with open arms, not in Seattle.
Yup. Moved there from central fl Orlando area March 2020 for a job.....did met a couple nice coworkers but weird others and other coworkers. Moved back to fl on Thanksgiving 2020. Crazy maskerbater incident there too. Way too many weirdos and weirdo politics there . Chaz says it about about their people
They should have named their NHL team the Seattle Freeze. It fits the sport and it's an inside joke at the same time.
Generally, people in Seattle aren’t rude; they’re actually polite and have good manners, IMO. Because someone doesn’t want to get chummy doesn’t mean they’re rude. Rude people are the one that aggressively honk, dangerously speed, speak aggressively, ill-mannered. Also, places where you get horrible customer service. In my experience that’s almost everywhere in the northeast, Detroit, Los Angeles, to name a few.
Yes, the Freeze is real….but I think most of it is about hating Californians.
Thanks for the video
In St Louis you're dead before you get a chance to realize you've been treated rude😢😮
I was born and raised in Miami, Florida and unfortunately, it’s true. It’s changed so much. 😢
It's always changing, and not for the better. Growing up there turned me into a recluse.
Miami has crept up and now all of south Florida is one big, crowded metropolitan area with dirty beaches and unfriendly people. It’s basically like New York with a beach. Add hurricanes, the constant heat, horrendously expensive cost of living, high crime and not many career opportunities for young people, and it is intolerable. Lived there for 30 years and finally moved away to north Georgia years ago and I couldn’t be happier! It might be a nice place to visit, just MIGHT, but definitely not a great place to live, especially for young people. I made more friends here in Georgia the first year I lived here than I had during 30 years in south Florida!
@@XenIsWhen I understand I have become an introvert. I feel like I don’t fit in anymore. I like nice things like everyone but I really am not a materialistic person. I will be friends with anyone. Ppl here think their better than anyone else. Pretty disgusting and depressing. 😞❤️🙏
@@juliedurden9479 I wish I could move but my husband has his business here and our home which has a very low mortgage. I have been looking at land in Tennessee and overseas. I agree with you. I don’t even recognize our water anymore. Growing up it was crystal clear. 😢
Opps, for Detroit, MI, you through up the Baltimore, MD graphic. Great video. I can't believe NYC wasn't #1, over Jersey, wow!
Las Vegas locals are pretty nice, albeit a little blunt haha. Atlanta should be somewhere on here based on the drivers alone. Our drivers are NOT polite!
I found no rude people in Phoenix because I found no people there. I thought it was a ghost town, but I guess it was too hot for anyone to be outside.
I did not find rude people in Phoenix. But, things happens.
1.64 million people. 5th most in the US. And then we get flooded with thousands of tourists during the winter and spring
@@ndfnq7811 I was on a project there in September, so maybe it wasn't tourist season. But I also didn't see students walking around the downtown Arizona State campus. Eery. I was there for the entire month. Surprised it was so hot in September; used to Pacific Northwest temperatures.
I had great experiences in NYC. People were very helpful when I was lost or learning subway.
You were lucky. It isn't always like that in NYC. Yet it's not that much different than many other urban areas, just more population and buildings
I’ve been to NYC twice in three years, never had anyone rude to me, maybe it’s my twang.
I teach you subway
Hello! I really appreciate your videos! It would be great if you would please do a video on the states with the fewest number of factory farms. It would be an added bonus if you also threw in cost of living for those states. Thank you!!
Knew Chicago would be on the list
I was surprised it was so high.
@@tonkabear2369 I grew up in the far south 'burbs. It should've been higher.
@@barbfagin1235 I’ve lived here all my life, aside from the crime 🥴 it’s pretty friendly.
I understand your explanation about Chicago! However, I have become familiar enough with them that I have become thankful for their abrupt honesty.
😂😂😂❤❤❤😮😮😮that's wild Briggs
Think most people are rude while recovering from lockdown (like prison) and all the anger/chaos in the world and on the news.
I live in South Florida and can say Miami is RUDE AF!!! I'm originally from Philly, and am always amazed how polite people are there, in comparison to Miami/Ft. Lauderdale. That says a lot!!
I used to live in various parts of south Florida…Ft. Lauderdale, City of Sunrise, Margate, Lauderhill (we moved around a lot when I was a kid). My husband grew up in downtown Miami. We also lived in many other states. The people of south Florida are incredibly rude…superficial, entitled, rich wannabes. Finally moved away to north Georgia years ago. I made more friends in my first year here than I made during my 30 years living in south Florida!
@@juliedurden9479 That's my plan too!!
Interesting video, I'm from Chicago, and not proud to admit that, but it's true about how rude alot of them are, specifically those on the south side. I'm also not suprised Philadelphia, NYC and Miami made the list. I would love to see an opposite version of the most friendliest cities in the US
Boston not even close
They don't call us "Massholes" for nothing! Assholery is an art form up here.
Idk about rude certain part in NORTH DAKOTA, the ppl are just cold
True...no culture
This was very accurate. There’s a line in a song about NYC: “If I can make it there, I can make it anywhere….” There’s A LOT of truth to that.
Love you Briggs. Small correction to title 'exist'
Yo Briggs. At 14 minutes you were talking about PHX and then showed a clip of downtown Tucson. (The A hill gave it away)
Wrong clip and city my dude 🌵
World According to Briggs, where grammar doesn't existed 😂 I still like your channel.
Doesn't existed?
@@michaelhillard4158 😂😂THAT PART!😂
As a lifelong Seattleite, I can confirm the Seattle Freeze. Likewise, as a recent transplant to the Phoenix valley, I can confirm the extreme dislike for snowbirds, especially those folks from the Dakotas, MN, IA, and WI. For the most part it’s their horrific driving going ten miles under the limit in the left lane, acting like there is two feet of snow on the ground and 2 inches of ice on the roads.🤬
Did some time near Seattle while in the military after coming from a southeastern military base. Night/day between the Seattle freeze and southern hospitality.
I have in different parts of Florida over the past 60 years. Central and South Florida are very different than North Florida. North Florida has nice southern hospitality. I have traveled extensively in my life and I have found that people in big cities are rude. People in the rural areas are decent good people for the most part. You do have exceptions. Living in big cities is stressful and can make people rude.
Miami, Florida has to be on here, right?
It would be disingenuous to not mention it! My sister said it best, “ The people here are so rude I can’t stand it!” She would come to visit from NC to see our parents and would always leave early because she found it so unpleasant !! I moved my family away from there years ago and couldn’t be happier!
I laughed hard at your Newark story. I love jersey and it's love language of busting balls. It's oddly artistic.
At 14:16 the text says Baltimore, Maryland but you’re talking about Detroit. And no, I won’t stop typing. 🤪
Lol
Try London sometime!
Also re: Newark airport : it's horrible BUT the staff there are overworked in all the chaos and do the best they can.
Can you give us the most overworked cities?
Good idea.
Yes. Please do this! Highest inflation?
Can we please get a list of the Top 20 Friendliest sir ?
Definitely Los Angeles....I lived there for 6 years...and commuting was stressful and dangerous....1) Most people will not allow you to gracefully merge into lanes of traffic on freeways; you have to get aggressive..2) When the left turn arrow ends....three or four more cars continue to turn left; which delays traffic moving 3) So much tailgating and reckless drivers...every time I drove anywhere, I nearly was hit by a reckless driver. I was very relieved to move away.... I do miss the weather, the beaches, and the restaurants....
You had a little typo in this presentation. You listed Baltimore twice, although the second time, you were showing and pointing to Detroit, although Baltimore was on the screen
Minneapolis. Downtown area.
Orlando is a GREAT city and I've never had issues the times I've been there. You need to send someone to Miami then you'll know what rude is in Florida.
I totally agree about Las Vegas I found people in general very friendly, The tourist seem to be the Rudest people.
Basically most big cities in the US are on top 20. Any city has combination of both nice and rude people.
For real. Even here in the south where we're supposed to be warm and friendly you have some pretty mean people. Which is pretty much everywhere, it's just more frequent in higher populations.
The absolute worst I have ever been treated in my life was at a party in Brentwood, Los Angeles. Once those bubble people realize you are not one of them they are merciless. I still think about it and its been over 30 years ago. I have also experienced the Seattle thing but it's just kind of like they ignore you, while in L.A. they are actively mean. It's really only the bubble people on the West side though. Other people are okay. Some people have no use for you unless you are an aspiring something. I'm from Houston and it used to be a very friendly city. I think there are no native Houstonians left in Houston.
I haven’t watched yet. I’m going to guess Boston, Newark, and New York are the top three.
Yup.
💀💀💀 Boston and New York are the most civilized places in US.
New York gets a bad rap for rudeness. It’s a big city with Tons of people. May be the area you go.
Good evening Briggs! Have a great weekend! 🎚️🇺🇸🪖👮♂️
I'll be visiting Boston this fall. While I live in North-Central Florida now-I grew up just south of Chicago. I'll be fine. LoL
It's not so bad.
Remember that what tics people off about Boston is the driving... the solution, drive aggressively as well and note: Boston drivers do NOT merge...they expect you to get the hell over... in Boston merging traffic has the right of way.
@@bukboefidun9096It’s not rude it’s more freedom. The dictatorship what is rude.
I've heard Philly referred to as "The CIty of Bodily Harm."
Definitely no brotherly love here.
I’ve been to several of those cities and never had someone be rude to me. The only time I had a rude experience was in Albuquerque.
I had no issues in Phoenix. I felt at home there too.
Definitely go back to Newark. All of the big NYC airports are undergoing massive renovations. EWR is really, really nice now.
Oh good, my last EWR trip was 5 years ago... be there in June to travel internationally again . Looking forward to improvements!
I was at EWR earlier this year. I still thought it sucked, but at least the surrounding area didn't smell as bad as it did last time I was there 30 years ago. I think LAX is worse.
I've been to all those places ... spot-on every place !!
Another good video Briggs. I have been to Anchorage, Alaska. In summer. We were never treated rudely as tourists. Stayed downtown. No problems whatsoever. When the weather warms in June and July, Alaska is pretty nice. Not all of Dallas is horrible. Encountered hospitality there.
Part of the rudeness that you possibly experienced in Anchorage is due to the wrong type of people moving to AK over the years. Also, many of the tourists are very rude too. So guessing that perhaps it's a circle in some aspects?
Great, I'd much rather people be direct than nicey-nice passive aggressive.
Totally agree. I can't stand fake nice.
Yeah, same here
Same. Living on the West Coast after growing up in Maryland is tough.
Terima kasih sudah berbagi vidio bagus ❤❤❤
Guessing: Boston, Philadelphia, NYC, Newark, NJ, Phoenix, LA, DC, Miami, Providence, Baltimore, Detroit, LV, Buffalo, Chirac, Denver, Dallas, Houston, Seattle, Memphis, Orlando, and SF
Don’t forget Miami!!
New Orleans....The NYC of the south.
Here in Seattle, we get all sorts (mostly tech workers) who move up here with little in the way of social skills; some have lots of attitude & aren't the friendliest of folks. They work here for a few years then leave, not having assimilated to the local culture or having contributed anything to the area other than driving the locals farther out of the area by over-paying for homes & driving up property taxes. it's the same thing that happened back in the 1990's when people from California moved up here, did the same thing then left, complaining about the weather. If they stay longer than a couple of years and/or show they're assimilating to the area, then they're good.
I might’ve been to Liberty International Airport in Newark, New Jersey. I remember it was almost 2 decades ago, and I was just a little kid, probably not even a teenager yet. My grandparents had driven me there from my grandma’s former condo in Lyndhurst, New Jersey, and all I remember about the experience at Liberty International in Newark was my grandparents had only gone into the lobby with me to walk me through everything you need to go through at an airport, including the strict protocols of security, and then as I was traveling alone, my grandparents left and I just waited for my plane going all the way to the Rocky Mountains of Colorado, possibly to Denver airport. But I do believe I remember the staff were very helpful on the actual plane ride. I got on the plane, took my seat, and the ride for the most part was quite comfortable. Got safely to Colorado, disembarked with my luggage, and met my Uncle Bob.
Try being an adult entering the US at Newark after an overseas trip. That’s where you’ll learn what real rudeness is.
First time ever getting on a plane was when I flew from DTW to EWR. Most the staff were actually quite cool believe it or not, had a couple who weren't however. But what struck me was the moment I stepped out of EWR, I noticed patrol cops were randomly yelling at pedestrians and drivers passing through, and I can't exactly remember what they were saying but it was some condescending stuff lol.
Yup, that’s EWR.
This video was hilarious
Bloomington, IN was definitely rude in the 1979 movie Breaking Away, with the cutters and the coeds.
John Mellancamp represents Bloomington, Ind.
@@billschindler1381 Little Pink Houses, Ain’t That America. He seems like a nice guy.
I'm from Dallas and I moved to a rural west Texas town , and while living in the metroplex, I never thought of it being a rude place, but here the people are a lot nicer....It's not unusual to find old people who were either stationed here in the USAF or went to one of the universities here when they were young, and retire....It's a harsh desert enviorment so I guess people have to be nice to each other lol
Alpine, Texas is a great little town. Friendly people.
Living in Washington DC is like living in a police state. Everywhere, there are fences and armed guards. Park in the wrong spot, and the police show-up with M-16's, before you're even out of your car. Random street closures and Metro-line shutdowns are a daily occurrence. I swear, that town is under a perpetual state of martial law. No wonder everyone is ill-tempered. And, that's our nation's capital? Says a lot abut this country.
It never used to be that way. Lived there in the 1970s when you could visit the Capital on a Sunday with no security, stand in the Rotunda & Could stand out in front of the White House. I think alot of that came from 9/11.
January 6? Might have something to do with it.
Don't forget the cameras everywhere - including speed cameras.
I’m from DC born and raised and still live here, and I don’t know what you are talking about everywhere there are fences and armed guards that only applies to some of downtown 🙄
@@washingtondc9290 Was about to comment the same. Some people only see what they want to see. Also, I feel like DC has gotten exponentially kinder since when I would spend most of my teenage days there (when I should have been in class in MoCo)
Bellingham, Washington don't know if you had it on the list but had to comment.
I have to agree. When I first moved here, nice and mellow. But now? Would like to move. Side story: recently made a trip to 2 Texas cities, Dallas & El Paso. Multiple plane stops (Southwest). The only place where the TSA people were rude (extremely so) was Bellingham. No TSA rudeness at all in Oakland, Las Vegas, Love Field (Dallas), El Paso or Seattle. (Layovers gave me time to get outside for a bit.)
Must disagree. I live in Bham. Still quite friendly. Rating a city because when you never even left the airport, and a TSA agent wasn't warm and fuzzy....hilarious.
@@michaelmiddleton3311 Interesting how your last sentence negates your third sentence.
We live in northern NJ/NYC metro area and vacationed in San Francisco last year. It was anything but rude, felt way more relaxed and friendly than our area 😆
Yes!! We are nice here and welcome you to enjoy our beautiful town!! ❤❤
Los Angeles was horrible for rudeness. I encountered it while sitting briefly in my car in a hospital parking space (labeled patient/visitor) after a medical procedure, and a man started honking and yelling for me to hurry up and pull out of the space so he could park.
Ok but this is only 1 case. I mean of course negative expereience but it could happen everywhere.
I’m curious what is the percentage of people who are natives of all the states, I’d imagine this can play into the rudeness of a place to some degree. Also great video Briggs!, coming from VA.
We just visited Chicago last Fall , very nice people , we
Stayed out in the Suburbs and rode the L 45 min ish
And bus
Everyone was nice and helpful ❤ we stayed in Forest Park so really wanted to experience the public transportation along with the tourist attractions in Chicago ❤🎉
Naperville needs to be on the list😂
On the number of shootings in Baltimore, I knew someone who called it, "Body-more".
Bodymore, Murderland
Santa Cruz is just Los Angeles but its constantly 1950 here. Like imagine Tom Sawyer holding an iphone. Thats Santa Cruz.
Sounds like a pretty chill place though. Plus it's where The Lost Boys was filmed. 👍 👍 ❤ ❤
John Mellancamp represents Bloomington, IND.
In montreal i had a car behind me absolutely freak out screaming,waving arms when i stopped behind a curbside construction lane .
I lived in the Houston area for many years and yes they have some rude people there. I was very surprised at how rude they can be. Some of the nicest people too.
14:25 - BRIGGS! DUMB QUESTION? Why is the tag on the screen for Detroit, MI say "Baltimore, Maryland"?
It's probably just an error
Prolly cuz there's not much of a diff.
@@jaylewis5035 I don't know. I'm pretty sure the ratio of Homes Lived In versus Homes Burnt Out still swings in Baltimore's favor. Nobody has as many abandoned husks as Detroit.
@@sc100ott Did you reply to the wrong post? This doesn't seem relevant to the question of why Briggs or his editing staff got the wrong visual element for the City of Detroit.
@@jackielinde7568 oops
Nope, it's definitely the locals that are rude in Las Vegas. The locals that have been here for a long time aren't the problem, it's the folks from So Cal that moved here.
Briggs, when did Detroit change its name to Baltimore?
I work in Newark and I totally predicted Newark would be #1 on this list. LOL
Hi From Providence Rhode Island. Heard about your experience here. Well if you think you had an issue at City Hall think what its like for residence lol. Actually what your experiencing wasn't always that way, unless your from NY City or think your in NY. I myself would change your opinion and i know a bunch that would do same. lately way to pushy panhandlers and homeless have changed the character here. Im from the East Side, its a bit different, but have seen my old neighborhood thats Charles Wanskuck go down hill. by way try Pawtucket for rood, think its that there water sucks but that is far worse. we also get a lot of Mass or was we call them Mass Holes. gets lets say interesting
In Washington, D.C., it isn’t the city residents per se who are so rude, it’s the suburbanites. The Inner Beltway of D.C. is the most elitist and the douchiest place in America. They look down on everyone without money, never realizing how much the money for D.C. flowed right out of the city and into Virginia.
Is los angeles bougie? Just wondering.
I remember when my dad and I went to take my aunt and grandmother to Washington D.C. to sightsee. It was so cold and windy, that we turned back and started heading back to the truck. upon returning to the truck, we saw a "street cleaner," looking in our truck, trying to see what he can steal. (My aunt's and grandmother's suitcases were in there.) My dad gave him (street cleaner) quite a scare.
Why your dad is a criminal?
Dallas is the only place in America where I have experienced genuine racism. I met up with a girl I used to work with for dinner. Me white man. She half-black woman. You can guess the rest.
that is so true about bbq and those bad neighborhoods