Top 10 Worst Housing Projects in The United States

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 15 май 2024
  • Top 10 Worst Housing Projects in The United States
    Have you ever wondered where the worst housing projects are in the United States? Who hasn't right?
    Every city has some form of public housing. Over time some of the worst have been torn down but the stories remain.
    This video lists 10 of the worst housing projects in the United States both past and present. We also look at Marcy Houses where Jay-Z grew up.
    City Beautiful video: • Why did we build high-...
    🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹
    🔶My Other Channels:
    🟥 On This Day
    / @abouttoday
    🟥 According To Briggs
    / @doitwithbriggs
    If you enjoy these videos I would love to hear about it. We look at the best and worst cities, states, towns, and neighborhoods in the United States. Occasionally we do other countries. Most of the time focus on the negative side of locations. That is just what people want to see.
    If you only want some happy positive information about a city, town, or state, I would suggest looking up local mortgage and real estate companies or maybe the locations website. They are trying to sell you something so it will be nothing but sunshine, rainbows, and a bunch of smoke up your skirt. They won't tell you about crime, poverty, or insurance you'll need because of natural disasters. I will.
    🟪Stuff I use:
    Microphone: amzn.to/2mfNH7A
    Boom Arm: amzn.to/2meqRNM
    Sound Cage: amzn.to/2leJYXM
    Software: amzn.to/2mknQeU
    Lighting: amzn.to/2kDJt9g
    ❤Things You should watch or listen to:
    Hermens Outdoors:
    / @willyfish
    Caffeinated Humor Podcast:
    anchor.fm/caffeinatedhumor
    Kimmie the Explorer:
    / @kimmitheexplorer7473
    Business & Voice over email: World2Briggs@gmail.com
    Mailing Address: World According to Briggs
    20449 SW Tualatin Valley Hwy
    354
    Aloha, Oregon 97003

Комментарии • 6 тыс.

  • @hotsoup1001
    @hotsoup1001 3 года назад +4659

    Housing projects are a place where you can find the friendliest and most generous, but poorest people in the country, being terrorized by a relatively tiny percentage of criminals.

    • @johniii8147
      @johniii8147 3 года назад +205

      I’ve seen around the world poverty breeds desperation crime violence gangs.

    • @TheLegacy125
      @TheLegacy125 3 года назад +26

      Facts

    • @tdobson888
      @tdobson888 3 года назад +22

      Facts

    • @jmarch_503
      @jmarch_503 3 года назад +89

      Pareto principle I wouldn't be shocked if 80% of crimes are committed by 20% of the people

    • @sanctionskillkids3541
      @sanctionskillkids3541 3 года назад +137

      In NYC housing projects are home to over 400,000 people. They are home to thousands of low wage workers, elderly and disabled.

  • @kabn3211
    @kabn3211 3 года назад +1749

    I grew up in the Projects in the 60's & 70's we had no roaches the garbage was being burnt & we had housing cops & folks cared , A true village.

    • @elizabethanders8069
      @elizabethanders8069 3 года назад +17

      Where did you live?

    • @DMWBN3
      @DMWBN3 3 года назад +194

      Think crack really was a huge turning point. From what I've worked out.

    • @georgeanaipakos3489
      @georgeanaipakos3489 3 года назад +153

      Karen good post, I was a cop in the projects throughout the 1970s and 1980s in NYC and most of the tenants were honest folks just trying to get by. Of course there were the criminals but that is in every community rich or poor.

    • @rosalynjeffery9510
      @rosalynjeffery9510 3 года назад +47

      Karen, it's sad now and days that you can't trust the people in the village anymore...

    • @lamBETTERthanY0U
      @lamBETTERthanY0U 3 года назад +43

      Mr Watto
      Heroin and crime was still bad in the 70’s

  • @joelman1989
    @joelman1989 2 года назад +141

    I appreciate how you make it a point to say not all people in these places are bad. I grew up in the Marbel Hill projects in the Bronx. I feel extremely lucky because my projects was pretty low key. It was dirty. But there was no gang. Never seen anyone get robbed. Never seen a fight or heard a gun shot. My cousin grew up in Castle Hill in the Bronx, one of the worst projects out there. We turned out completely different. My neighborhood the guys were just worried about playing video games. His neighborhood was like a war zone.

    • @naquanmcneil5320
      @naquanmcneil5320 Год назад +8

      I lived in Castle Hill and it was a war zone

    • @chandrasparks8004
      @chandrasparks8004 Год назад +2

      Lived in the So BX near Yankee Stadium...always something popping💯

    • @edgee400
      @edgee400 Год назад

      I grew up in Webster projects 169th st. The only difference growing up between me and my family and friends was that I chose to get out and do what was necessary. Do I blame the white man for building the projects or holding us down no we do it to ourselves.

    • @witch6in6the6womb
      @witch6in6the6womb Год назад

      80% are horrible.

  • @MostlyHarmless86
    @MostlyHarmless86 Год назад +78

    I have 2 Robert Taylor Home stories. I worked for a private ambulance service in suburban Chicago. We did a lot of non-emergency transports and ambulance back-up coverage for some Chicago FD houses. I got dispatched for a wheelchair transfer from hospital to home. The patient was probably 6'6" or 6'8", at least 250 lbs of muscle, with a cast from knee to toes on the left leg. We take him home to Robert Taylor homes. He tells us 14th Floor. We wheel up to the elevator - which were always slow because of kids playing with them, and someone says the elevators have been broken all day. My partner, myself, and the patient didn't want to hump up 14 stories of stairs. We were about to call for assistance when the elevator door opens, and 3 repair guys are inside and see us standing there. They said "QUICK - GET IN" so we did. Then they asked us which floor. They held it at the floor while we delivered the patient. He was really nice and extremely cool. His mamma wanted my partner and I to stay for cake, but we had to leave. She insisted we take a piece with us and for the elevator guys too. I don't want to think about what could have happened if not for the elevator guys.
    2nd Story: Came in one morning and there's a note next to the timeclock. "Effective immediately no [company] employee is required to enter any CHA (Chicago Housing Authority) facility without police escort " I asked the dispatcher why the new policy and he says to go look at the ambulance parked out back. I counted 7 bullet holes on the side of the rig. There were more on top. The ambulance pulled into one of the Roert Talor buildings and someone with a rifle opened fire from above on the ambulance.

    • @myas9207
      @myas9207 10 месяцев назад +1

      That 2nd story😬

    • @nelsonmcatee3721
      @nelsonmcatee3721 7 месяцев назад +1

      Back around 1970 somebody pulled the fire alarm at Altgeld Gardens projects in Chicago just so the fire department would show up. When they did, they were caught in a crossfire waiting for them.

  • @crustybus2311
    @crustybus2311 3 года назад +2878

    The Marcy projects is where they hold the World Series of Dice.

    • @RickySpanish100
      @RickySpanish100 3 года назад +168

      Chappelle’s Show reference, nice 👌🏽

    • @combatjm89
      @combatjm89 3 года назад +123

      Ashy Larry, yo - ASHY LARRY!

    • @JiMMyRoxks
      @JiMMyRoxks 3 года назад +21

      😂😂😂😂

    • @nontraditionaltech2073
      @nontraditionaltech2073 3 года назад +80

      Ahhh you beat me to it!
      “What you need is some chapstick and a set of trousers”

    • @ZeFatBoy
      @ZeFatBoy 3 года назад +97

      Leonard Washington still holds the crown

  • @nelskrogh3238
    @nelskrogh3238 3 года назад +910

    Buildings with 11 floors that have elevators that only go up 3 floors--say no more.

    • @ryanbarker5217
      @ryanbarker5217 3 года назад +13

      it would go up three floors, then you'd have to take another elevator to go up another three floors. it's not as if you had to walk the last 8 stories. maybe the theory was to break up any kind of assault by making them short trips. like he said, that didn't work.

    • @keithbaker1951
      @keithbaker1951 3 года назад +85

      Typical government decision making

    • @michaelchitwood389
      @michaelchitwood389 3 года назад +20

      South Bronx tennements...7-10 floor walk up in the old days. I wish i'd explored the ones still standing in '93, but no...

    • @peterjermyn5785
      @peterjermyn5785 3 года назад +13

      The element of people need the exercise knowing they have nothing better to do

    • @lranieri1
      @lranieri1 3 года назад +30

      I feel like that's a cruel metaphor for life!

  • @isaiah07141
    @isaiah07141 Год назад +11

    I was born and raised in Cabrini Green from 1965 to 1969. I was blessed our family moved into a house on Chicago's west side in 1969. It was 12 of us. I only remember riding my tricycle one day and my brother yelling, "get in the house, they're shooting again". I think I was 2 or 3 years old when that happened. It was sad for most of my family because they remembered more bad stuff than me. I was second to the youngest and barely remembered anything that happened there. We all turned out to be very fortunate during our years in Chicago. We all had healthy lives and didn't struggle much after that. I always give God the glory for all that has happened to all of my family. We never lost any family from violence in the streets. God bless y'all 😊.

  • @WillieTheWino
    @WillieTheWino Год назад +25

    I lived in Cabrini when I was a kid in the late 70's for a couple of years. I still have yet to see anyone who can adequately put into words exactly how horrible that place was.

  • @ABCEasyas--
    @ABCEasyas-- 3 года назад +994

    The “temporary “ housing remind me of portable classrooms in many public schools. They’re supposedly temporary solutions that eventually became permanent t structures even though they shouldn’t.

    • @darkpaw1522
      @darkpaw1522 2 года назад +75

      Good rule of thumb: If it's set up because something is impoverished or underfunded, it won't be temporary.

    • @Sooner757
      @Sooner757 2 года назад +18

      @@darkpaw1522
      Part of the reason why my elementary school district started using some temporary buildings was to accommodate an influx of refugees from Saigon in 1975. It's why I could speak some Vietnamese when I was a little kid.

    • @kadenparks3966
      @kadenparks3966 2 года назад +20

      Honestly thought they WERE permanent lol

    • @cbalyer
      @cbalyer 2 года назад +6

      facts ... I remember I moved to Virginia like what is this lol

    • @ACGreyhound04
      @ACGreyhound04 2 года назад +7

      Not necessarily. There’s one of those “modular” classroom buildings in what used to be a parking lot outside a small school building in my neighborhood that is now used only for kindergarten classes. It has been there for more than 30 years, just because the building is so small, not because it is underfunded.

  • @MrsLillieAn
    @MrsLillieAn 3 года назад +73

    Cabrini-Green
    The reason why it took so long for the last building to come down in 2011 is because my grandma didn't want to leave her home. So they moved her in 1 of the new buildings they built over there.

  • @itiswhatitaintanditaintwha1427
    @itiswhatitaintanditaintwha1427 Год назад +69

    The Cabrini-Green projects was also the unofficial home of the Evans family in 'Good Times'. They never said it's name on the air, but the building was featured in the opening credits, the insinuation being that the Evans lived there. But from what I've seen in this video ,things were hardly 'dyn-o-mite' there!

    • @dejoirnadavis3249
      @dejoirnadavis3249 Год назад +9

      I grew up there. It was bad but it was home🤷🏾‍♂️

    • @BIGGHANK269
      @BIGGHANK269 Год назад +3

      I lived in the 'Nolia back in '00. Great times but some not so great times as well. Very violent place at times but most of the people were good people having hard times.

    • @dejoirnadavis3249
      @dejoirnadavis3249 Год назад +2

      @@BIGGHANK269 yup. Different projects same way of living.. good ppl going through the day by day struggle

    • @darylmartin6989
      @darylmartin6989 Год назад +5

      Ain’t Candyman from there too?

    • @thecawdsquad875
      @thecawdsquad875 Год назад +3

      Yes, they were supposed to be the Cabrini-Green projects on the show. The producers did a good job of making the Evans' apartment resemble the actual Cabrini-Green units with the cinder block interiors and red bricks in the hallways.

  • @rochellerochelle2009
    @rochellerochelle2009 2 года назад +11

    I grew up in the projects, earned my GED, Associates and Bachelors degrees and have a business today.

  • @canibusnj
    @canibusnj 3 года назад +971

    Fun facts, the Jordan Downs housing projects is where the 1993 film Menace II Society was filmed. The Robert Taylor housing projects is where Mr. T and Kirby Puckett grew up and lastly the Cabrini Green housing projects is where the sitcom Good Times takes place.

    • @0fficialdregs
      @0fficialdregs 3 года назад +36

      i knew those facts and im happy you do too

    • @lawrencefox563
      @lawrencefox563 3 года назад +9

      good times ,oh my god ,if this was your lot who would have kids .

    • @canibusnj
      @canibusnj 3 года назад +11

      @@lawrencefox563 Many do... and continue to do unfortunately!!! smh

    • @S.C.-wo8hq
      @S.C.-wo8hq 3 года назад +8

      I heard you lookin fa Candyman, bitch.

    • @MONET8iAM
      @MONET8iAM 3 года назад +3

      Everythang Texas Also Losing Isaiah

  • @mattsheezy5469
    @mattsheezy5469 3 года назад +766

    I feel for the old people, and poor people who are kept hostage by the gangs in public housing. Wild goons outside of your door all hours of the day, and night, standing outside all afternoon, blasting car stereos, and being disrespectful. Imagine sending your teenaged daughter out into that madness.

    • @PremeL-hy3lu
      @PremeL-hy3lu 2 года назад +74

      Happens everyday. They be the same ones that protect her.

    • @jeanetteredd2986
      @jeanetteredd2986 2 года назад +8

      Ok

    • @dmeans315
      @dmeans315 2 года назад +41

      There is LAW in every ghetto....just not the one ran by the city or state....justice is swift and not spoken

    • @wildfiregirl1556
      @wildfiregirl1556 2 года назад +4

      Amen. I never had no issues. But a bitch would fight if I had too.

    • @amirjones09
      @amirjones09 2 года назад +45

      There’s nothing wrong with a blasting music😂😂😂

  • @nataliejg156
    @nataliejg156 Год назад +7

    You absolutely nailed it with Cabrini-Green, it was a horror show, by far more terrifying than the Hollywood film.

  • @ianace6862
    @ianace6862 3 года назад +83

    As an Illinoisan watching this video, I kept waiting for him to say Cabrini-Green cuz I knew damn well it was gonna be on here somewhere.

    • @nakishapolk6730
      @nakishapolk6730 3 года назад +4

      Me too but I knew my project (Robert Taylor Homes) would also make the cut 🤦🏽‍♀️

  • @hellboigordo5503
    @hellboigordo5503 3 года назад +314

    I was born in 1993 lived in The Chicago project housing until 2009 it was a horrible upbringing but it was beautiful sometimes never forget where I come from so I can understand where I’m trying to go

    • @ladygore8848
      @ladygore8848 3 года назад +34

      I've lived in the projects for 10 year now I own my own home I will never look down on nobody in the projects

    • @diabolivirtusen-tavares-ea4645
      @diabolivirtusen-tavares-ea4645 3 года назад +1

      Soooo... where are u now?

    • @hellboigordo5503
      @hellboigordo5503 3 года назад +29

      doing just fine 🙏🏿

    • @waxdominioni3303
      @waxdominioni3303 3 года назад +1

      💯

    • @barbaragosselin5709
      @barbaragosselin5709 3 года назад +14

      Yes! I grew up in the Bronx. We lived in a five floor walk up that still stands today..dirt poor..but those streets were our playground..we used to count rats that would float on big chunks of ice down the Harlem River! Never had a car or air conditioning. Just one meal a day sometimes none. I feel like a millionaire now! I don't forget where I came from! I help the poor whenever I can!

  • @stephanieyvonne9436
    @stephanieyvonne9436 2 года назад +98

    I lived in project housing in East Tennessee for about 10 years after I moved out of my parents’ house. The first 9 years were great! Everyone was so friendly and wanted to help each other. It was beautiful too. I loved it there. However, that last year was a nightmare. Someone moved in and brought bed bugs. Those nasty little things spread all over the building and even outside to the separate units next door.
    I had to move and throw everything away and I mean everything! The only things I kept were a few nice outfits and some important paperwork.
    It’s really sad that people who don’t have a lot of income have to live in conditions like those. Most people there were disabled or like I was, just making a small amount of money each month. I was fortunate that I had family to help me move on and find a better home. Most of those people just had to stay and live with the bugs. Sad😔

  • @Acky642
    @Acky642 2 года назад +22

    I painted the interior of the Cabrini Greene apartments with a rich church group out of Lake Forest. The stories the residents told were unbelievable. But in early 200’s, I lived down the street in Roscoe Village. I was told the reason it took so long for the buildings to be removed was because of the rat infestation. The city was worried all the rats would run into the new homes

    • @stevennagley3407
      @stevennagley3407 Год назад +2

      @@muzikmichael6130they loose their limbs to rat traps?

    • @turdburglar1295
      @turdburglar1295 Год назад

      By rats you mean black people right?

    • @nelsonmcatee3721
      @nelsonmcatee3721 Год назад +2

      Yeah the city started releasing cats from the animal shelters to stop the rat problem.

  • @charliepayden1752
    @charliepayden1752 3 года назад +759

    Cabrini Green Projects was also where the 70’s show “Good Times” was filmed

    • @Jman417
      @Jman417 3 года назад +18

      Eddie Murphy punchline to a joke was "I like good times" from his comedy film raw made me laugh.

    • @melissavazquez2953
      @melissavazquez2953 3 года назад +28

      Love that show..Good times

    • @mjolden
      @mjolden 3 года назад +51

      Mike Evans (the real guy, not the character) lived in Cabrini-Greene and based that show as well as the movie "Cooley High" on his experience out there.

    • @Blackman19498
      @Blackman19498 3 года назад +19

      No it was the Robert Taylor projects, that good times is base on

    • @lillianflowers1542
      @lillianflowers1542 3 года назад +64

      @@Blackman19498 sorry brother taylor but good times was not based off of the mighty Robert Taylor Holmes ; although i could see why you would think that, see the brother and sister with the prior comments are correct and this is why. When good times comes on , you will notice they show the red buildings and when the kid goes by on the bike they show 911 sedgwick ,929 and 939 hudson and then they show kids in the back of jenner school and 500 and 502 oak street. Then they show those white buildings.
      Brother Mike Evans used both Cabrini and Raisin in the Sun to create the show. And then he left the network and had help creating the movie Cooley High.
      If you check out both projects of his you will see cabrini is the only housing projects they use. Just a little something to add to yall good knowledge. Yall be safe out here.

  • @fourthgirl
    @fourthgirl 2 года назад +184

    I grew up in East Oakland. 1961, my parents bought a house on 66th Avenue. The original owners were moving to the suburbs (Walnut Creek) with government aid because a housing project was being constructed across the main road. My school Lockwood Elementary was divided. The main building that got all the sunlight, faced the lawn out front and had access to the library, media room, etc. I spent from K-6 grades in that building. The other two-story building was set in-field, away from everything. These students had different start times, lunch, recess. I asked a teacher when I was in the 4th grade what classes were in that building. She said it was for the kids who lived in the projects. The portables behind that building were for special ed classes. In the cafeteria, children who received free lunch had to stand in a different line and give their name to the lunch-lady who pretended not to hear anything forcing them to shout. Then would say out loud "Don't be shy because your momma doesn't have any money. Come and get this free food." There is a societal problem with people who spent their lives being discriminated against, begin to do this to others.

    • @avacox9006
      @avacox9006 Год назад +1

      Hi Fourthgirl…..Did you by any chance ride the submarine decorated buses that took the inner city kids to the beach in the summer of 1974?

    • @fourthgirl
      @fourthgirl Год назад +5

      @@avacox9006 No. We were city kids. Inner city is code phrasing for ghetto and we didn't live in a ghetto. I never heard or saw these buses. It was no big deal to go to Crown Beach or Crab Cove in Alameda. As a family we spent July 4th at Santa Cruz and loved Ocean Beach in SF.

    • @ms.bubs4fun506
      @ms.bubs4fun506 Год назад +7

      Oakland schools had two separate lines for the free lunch kids and it was so embarrassing. They did this for decades. Then the schools became charter schools with a mostly poor Latino population.

    • @memyself4431
      @memyself4431 Год назад +4

      THIS! Just for another example which i think makes me feel the same way! I have food stamps I shop at Walmart and I use a card to pay for no food items for my household. The cashiers ALWAyS announce to everyone what my remaining balance is which basically says I couldn’t pay the full amount with my first payment so now I use food stamps. I am not ashamed but I do like to have my transactions personal no matter how I pay

    • @memyself4431
      @memyself4431 Год назад

      The whole entire school system is a joke ! School bullies no religion or pledge of allegiance inequality and teachers don’t want to be there because they have bad kids and don’t get paid enough. I never liked school as a kid but college and trade school was ok as an adult. The teachers were mean to me in elementary and one nice teacher the only lady of color the entire time was the best to me

  • @stephentoth2745
    @stephentoth2745 Год назад +10

    I was not surprised to see Cabrini Green at the top of the list. I visited there in 1994 particularly the Elementary School there because I was studying education in impoverished city locations. I remember being shocked to hear the principal excited that recess had just recently started again because they finally stopped the sniper who had been shooting at people from the top of one of the buildings. I remember thinking wow in all my years of public school that is one thing we never worried about. Was not surprised to hear they started tearing them down given that most of the young children that I spoke with always said if I grow up not when I grow up. Thanks for the video.

  • @pattiross3798
    @pattiross3798 2 года назад +8

    Cabrini-Green in Chicago was also the setting for the TV sitcom GOOD TIMES!

  • @jeancesar5493
    @jeancesar5493 3 года назад +238

    Some of these housing project look like a prison without any guard

    • @gdlywom
      @gdlywom 3 года назад +9

      It was

    • @Greg_Deep
      @Greg_Deep 3 года назад +13

      That was by design

    • @joshuawiggan2457
      @joshuawiggan2457 3 года назад +8

      Built just like prisons.

    • @prestonmitchell7223
      @prestonmitchell7223 3 года назад +4

      @@joshuawiggan2457 it's called conditioning bro

    • @r.d.9399
      @r.d.9399 3 года назад +3

      That's what they are. I'd live in a tent before I ever moved back to the projects

  • @LoneWolfHustle
    @LoneWolfHustle 3 года назад +478

    Queensbridge Projects aka QB home of Nas, Mobb Deep, Ron Artest and many other rappers, athletes and celebrities. So much talent came out of those Projects.

    • @gh0rochi363
      @gh0rochi363 3 года назад +50

      The need to get out will produce such things

    • @loonyspoons5676
      @loonyspoons5676 3 года назад +49

      For every one exception there are a thousand who just lived and died in poverty

    • @Yandel21ableify
      @Yandel21ableify 3 года назад +9

      The rest will die in the projects.

    • @keenandreher5479
      @keenandreher5479 3 года назад +36

      @kj a bunch of those too, but Naturally because they're not famous entertainers would not be mentioned

    • @teshou4474
      @teshou4474 3 года назад +7

      @kj they didn’t really have the educational resources to become lawyers doctors or nurses

  • @discoverglobeliving
    @discoverglobeliving Месяц назад

    Eye-opening video! Really puts into perspective the housing issues. Thanks for shedding light on this!

  • @SH-md6qp
    @SH-md6qp Год назад +9

    Cabrini Green was nothing compared to the Robert Taylor homes and the Stateway Gardens projects in the south side of Chicago. I worked in all of these projscts for a total of 18 years as a Paramedic and a Firefighter. from the late 80's to the early 2000's

    • @willyrockbags738
      @willyrockbags738 Год назад +2

      Ya I never understood how Cabrini got a bigger name than the ones you named. Those southside projects were the wildest in the country

    • @kelvinbarber1765
      @kelvinbarber1765 11 месяцев назад +2

      @Willy RockBags Cabrini Greene residents make it appear Cabrini was the worst out of all of them.

  • @easelminch6887
    @easelminch6887 3 года назад +298

    Watching this is so sad. I’m from the hood and definitely still wasn’t the projects but I saw so many of my friends murdered as teenagers and So many with long prison sentences. The ghetto is no joke and I feel so bad for any kids who have no choice in where they grow up

    • @diabolivirtusen-tavares-ea4645
      @diabolivirtusen-tavares-ea4645 3 года назад +3

      Which "ghetto" 🤣😂

    • @laylow6214
      @laylow6214 3 года назад +9

      Ok white girl we believe you 😂😂😂

    • @easelminch6887
      @easelminch6887 3 года назад +18

      laylow bitch I’m Chinese

    • @easelminch6887
      @easelminch6887 3 года назад +8

      TraRob-EastSide hidden valley in Charlotte I was born in orchard trace lol bitch. The ghetto is disgusting and ratchet why would i claim something so gross for no reason

    • @diabolivirtusen-tavares-ea4645
      @diabolivirtusen-tavares-ea4645 3 года назад +10

      @@easelminch6887 attention which you are recieving with your incredulous story... im from compton but u dont see me pumping my chest

  • @teemanz2264
    @teemanz2264 3 года назад +34

    Lived in the south Bronx! Lived in the projects on the 15th floor. When the two elevators were broken! Had to do 15 flights with asthma! The summer was brutal!!

    • @LSp8
      @LSp8 2 года назад +2

      No joke. My sister lived in the projects on E156 & Jackson Ave! I've walked them scary ass steps numerous times

    • @renroxhrd
      @renroxhrd 2 года назад

      I'm sorry

    • @gumbo88888888
      @gumbo88888888 2 года назад

      !!!

  • @kostasjezuz4846
    @kostasjezuz4846 Год назад +2

    Love your videos mate, been binge watching, cheers from Greece!

  • @gordongordon4434
    @gordongordon4434 2 года назад +8

    The mention of Techwood Homes in Atlanta was a somewhat troublesome area. After all, it was the first housing of its type built in the United States to help those who were having a hard time with their families. Over the years problems did occur when the prior ones found better housing and there were others who moved into apartments that became run down because the city didn't keep them up as they should. There were a few other projects that were closed and leveled due to the 1996 Olympics coming to town and that was a means to beautify the city. Even when some of the buildings in the Techwood area were torn down, a nice dormitory where most of the Olympian Athletes were housed. At least two others were torn down and most of the residents were pushed to the front of the line to get the first chance at housing outside the city's boundaries to help it look much better. One of which I serviced on a beer route was Perry Homes. It was known as one of the top dangerous projects in the area. It had a grocery store and a package store just across the street from the front of the project. On delivery days the acholic beverage companies had their delivery men meet at one of the stores in the early morning and service it. A policeman would be there to watch over us and our trucks while we were servicing the store. We would stay together and move as a group to the other location so we would have police protection. Several times when a beer delivery man was there making a delivery alone he was pulling the order off one side of his truck while beer was being taken off the other. A guy came up to me and said to stay still, "was my life worth more than a few cases of beer being taken of the other side"?...... And yes, the vast majority of the project's residents were nice people. That was the only place they had to live. The sad thing is people learn to fear the unknown and with any above average crime report, people don't want to take a chance.

  • @deadmansgulf911
    @deadmansgulf911 Год назад +24

    The one in the Cabrini Green project about a 9 year old girl being abducted in 1981 and never heard from again was particularly upsetting. 😢

    • @barbaramelville6320
      @barbaramelville6320 Год назад

      So sad 😭 I’m sorry for your loss

    • @nathj4818
      @nathj4818 11 месяцев назад

      I heard one of a poor little girl around the same age that was raped murdered then spray painted on and left in one of the elevators there

  • @perenflo8603
    @perenflo8603 3 года назад +417

    When I was in college in New Orleans I had my car stolen. It was found like 10 months later on a side street next to the Magnolia projects. The city of streets contacted my dad about the "abandoned car". It took like $600 to get it back into working condition. One good thing about it was that I was forced to walk 3 miles to school everyday along St Charles street, a very beautiful street will old style mansions. I have fond memories of those walks.

    • @so.many.obstacles
      @so.many.obstacles 3 года назад +28

      And you got some good exercise in too.

    • @perenflo8603
      @perenflo8603 3 года назад +3

      @SNICKERS Fixed.

    • @zachbrooks9884
      @zachbrooks9884 3 года назад +6

      Yeap some one who stole it lived there

    • @devintaylor8702
      @devintaylor8702 3 года назад +18

      NEW ORLEANS IS MY HOME YEAH ITS VERY CHOPPY I GREW UP BY THE DESIRE PROJECT IN THE 9TH WARD 😁😁

    • @Chris_T_3rd_Ward_504
      @Chris_T_3rd_Ward_504 3 года назад +7

      I'm assuming you went to Tulane or Loyola (I go to Tulane now 😄). I lived in the Magnolia for a few years as a kid in the late '90s, which, by that point, it was light years less violent then just a few years prior. Then we got a nice house by Audubon park when my mom got a better job.
      Other than getting great cardio, why didn't you just catch the St. Charles streetcar? Also, which year exactly was this when your car got stolen? I'm always interested in people's experience in NOLA, especially pre-Katrina.

  • @efrainorsinisr4609
    @efrainorsinisr4609 2 года назад +196

    I grew up in Queens bridge and I experienced the most diverse and wonderful childhood in the 50’s and 60’s. There were all races and nationalities that lived in peace.
    I think this is why I can relate to anyone today. Wouldn’t trade it for anything. But times have changed, although you can say that about most things.

    • @AndriaaLeoLove
      @AndriaaLeoLove 2 года назад +4

      Then

    • @nickpalmer4832
      @nickpalmer4832 2 года назад +1

      Yeah listen to this idiot narrator

    • @davehughesfarm7983
      @davehughesfarm7983 2 года назад +2

      Sounds horrible compared to small town heartland America..

    • @maryfrances1307
      @maryfrances1307 2 года назад +9

      We were number 8! I absolutely loved growing up in Queensbridge, especially as a kid in the 80s. Wouldn't trade it for the world. Despite all the crack and gun violence, we had tons of resources, and those rappers and NBA players are my friends. :-)

    • @tinytowz4471
      @tinytowz4471 2 года назад +5

      QB '50s-late '60s
      41 Side of 12th
      Good childhood memories.
      PS 111 Day Camp
      Silvercup Bread
      Queens Plaza
      The [Jacob Riis] Center
      The 1/2 Moon Ride Tuck
      The Pizza Truck .15 then to .25 per slice
      The Mr. Softee icecream truck
      Twin Pops were for easy sharing
      The River Park
      The Side Park
      The Baby Park
      The Queensborough/59th St. Bridge
      Learning how QB had changed, was saddening.😔💔

  • @Toxic8arbarian
    @Toxic8arbarian Год назад +21

    As a Chicagoan who grew up on the north side even though I was born during the demolishing of Cabrini greens I grew up hearing about the horror stories of the projects

    • @michaelcesco2970
      @michaelcesco2970 Год назад +2

      I wonder if one of those Chicago high rises they show ed was the one that " Good Times " was produced at ?

  • @eyesnearstactical
    @eyesnearstactical Год назад +2

    I used to live in Cabrini! We were there for 2 years until we moved to the south side 82nd and Troop. It was some tough times back then. I’m glad we made it out. I wonder about some of my old friends. I know a few died gang banging but most ended up lifers in prison. I always stay humble due to my upbringing as a kid. I will always love Chicago! ❤️🙏🏾

  • @brilliantbrownbeauty
    @brilliantbrownbeauty 3 года назад +207

    Whew, I thought growing up in Piedmont Courts (Charlotte, NC) was rough. Police stopped patrolling for fear of being ambushed by criminals. I made it out and never looked back - not sorry. 🙄

    • @mcleanicstechnology2857
      @mcleanicstechnology2857 2 года назад +2

      Piedmont Court was definitely on 🔥. It's completely renovated there now.

    • @brilliantbrownbeauty
      @brilliantbrownbeauty 2 года назад +1

      @@mcleanicstechnology2857 Yes, I’ve heard there’s been a complete change in the area. Long time coming in my opinion.

    • @xamo8667
      @xamo8667 2 года назад

      North east charlotte on old concord rd?

    • @quanbrooklynkid7776
      @quanbrooklynkid7776 2 года назад +2

      Shut up

    • @alpat6374
      @alpat6374 2 года назад +1

      Arlington Courts in Dayton OH...lot of fun as a kid it's a field now

  • @Mexirose02
    @Mexirose02 3 года назад +55

    When I was 6 years old in 1990, I lived in “Greenbriar Apartments” aka “Uzi Alley” to the city of Columbus, Ohio. That place is ingrained in me for life.

    • @Mexirose02
      @Mexirose02 3 года назад

      @Master Chief Hey Master Chief! Thank you very much for your kindness! I love your name, definitely one of my fav games out there! 🙂

    • @Mexirose02
      @Mexirose02 3 года назад

      @@kinglistosas5010 Hey there!

    • @missbree7333
      @missbree7333 3 года назад +1

      And now it's just grass...

    • @kellicline5336
      @kellicline5336 3 года назад +2

      Ahh good ol' Uzi alley. Made places like Lincoln park and Rich street look like New Albany lol.

    • @renroxhrd
      @renroxhrd 2 года назад +1

      Sorry to hear that

  • @theoabbot8822
    @theoabbot8822 Год назад +1

    Outstanding! I love TheBriggs!

  • @moohHa22
    @moohHa22 Год назад

    Every housing unit you described - ooh I’ve gotta look into that after this video. Heellooo rabbit hole!

  • @yourvbsx
    @yourvbsx 3 года назад +563

    Imagine living in a project where they hold tours that’s so humiliating like why
    Revise: I’ve also read a comment saying the money gives back to the project housing so that’s good I guess but still😩

    • @dazzeldil143
      @dazzeldil143 3 года назад +9

      Frrrr

    • @themostbeautifulwomaninthe9160
      @themostbeautifulwomaninthe9160 3 года назад +33

      They hold tours because it’s historical

    • @fivefiveqt214
      @fivefiveqt214 3 года назад +25

      It’s a way to bring awareness and generate money to put back into the projects. Nothing wrong with it.

    • @wayofthegun6224
      @wayofthegun6224 3 года назад +18

      @@fivefiveqt214 LoL what ..

    • @kaptynssirensong2357
      @kaptynssirensong2357 3 года назад +72

      Poverty porn. Some countries hate Americans for going to other countries to stare at/ take pics of impoverished people, yet we are doing in our own country too. Horrible.

  • @Dave-sy3rg
    @Dave-sy3rg 3 года назад +434

    I went to college in Chicago in the mid 80's. We were all warned, especially by the students who came from the projects to steer clear of them. You could see Cabrini Green from the Ravenswood elevated train. I always wondered where the residents went shopping because there were almost no businesses near the buildings except a few liquor stores.

    • @khn5426
      @khn5426 2 года назад +8

      @ Dave gah dayummm you old 😂😂 (I’m joking)

    • @robertmanfredthurrigl9424
      @robertmanfredthurrigl9424 2 года назад +109

      The only shop that does well and flourish on any projects seems to be the infamous liquor store.

    • @TheeOne4.44
      @TheeOne4.44 2 года назад +98

      I'm from Cabrini Green. We went shopping where everyone else went shopping.

    • @moneymanchaching9903
      @moneymanchaching9903 2 года назад +37

      @@trailersandteasers3421 there are no gun stores in the city

    • @cookie22100
      @cookie22100 2 года назад +5

      So sad.

  • @DTSTANGO
    @DTSTANGO 2 года назад +6

    I experienced living at the Dearborn Homes 27th State Street. Stateway Garden 39th Federal Street, Robert Taylor Homes 22nd Street and Ida B. Wells Homes 36th East of King Drive..... The experiences was horrific but that was my experiences at that time (1990-1995.) None of the buildings exist today and I reside at a $275K condo today however we all still struggle on some level or another. I'm soo grateful that lifestyle is a far in distance memory of my past.

    • @denisewatkins1585
      @denisewatkins1585 Месяц назад

      I had friends who lived and all those projects and I visited with other friends who had relatives there. It was not as bad in the seventies, but Chicago was not as bad in the seventies. Good that you were able to get out. Chicago has changed drastically since the loss of industry jobs and unskilled labor jobs and the crack epidemic.

  • @shanonangermeyer-norman5280
    @shanonangermeyer-norman5280 9 месяцев назад

    thank you so much for this informative history lesson. i find this information very useful.

  • @ecurewitz
    @ecurewitz 3 года назад +108

    $10000 a week in "pharmaceutical" sales. Awesome euphemism Briggs!

    • @SwampDrainingKindaGuy
      @SwampDrainingKindaGuy 3 года назад +1

      Benny the butcher our of Buffalo claimed 25k a day... Buffalo supposedly has high crime rates

    • @dboykrank47
      @dboykrank47 3 года назад

      I mean, DXM & codeine are hot on the black market...

    • @adrianne7045
      @adrianne7045 3 года назад +2

      I’m sure it was more money than that per week!!

    • @spark2053
      @spark2053 3 года назад

      You can check people there most have nice nails, hair, and furniture!

    • @mackgullyblama2675
      @mackgullyblama2675 3 года назад +1

      10k a week is KAKA..

  • @chination1796
    @chination1796 3 года назад +486

    I grew up in Cabrini it wasn't that bad there until crack cocaine came out

    • @legacyturbo8485
      @legacyturbo8485 3 года назад +25

      Yea and any guesses on whom was behind the crack epidemic in the USA ...!!!! I’ll give anyone that what to think about it as much time as they want to reply back to me ...!!!!!! Good luck ..!!!!

    • @SV-kr9fu
      @SV-kr9fu 3 года назад +39

      @@legacyturbo8485 : Was it Candyman?

    • @diegoperez2090
      @diegoperez2090 3 года назад +22

      @@legacyturbo8485 BLM?

    • @uncleremus7380
      @uncleremus7380 3 года назад +65

      @@legacyturbo8485 same people that started WAR ON DRUGS?

    • @UserName-ts3sp
      @UserName-ts3sp 3 года назад +26

      Legacy Turbo cia

  • @ladyk6237
    @ladyk6237 2 года назад +7

    I feel so bad for the babies and the young innocent kids that are subjected to this trauma on a daily basis.

  • @futuresite11
    @futuresite11 2 года назад

    Your narration is lively, hilarious and hard hitting truths! I know; I LIVED in Cabrini O' Greens in the early 70's.
    Harsh.
    Keep it up!
    You're doing fine!!!

  • @chuckallstar1281
    @chuckallstar1281 3 года назад +56

    Briggs needs to do one on the most dangerous Trailer parks

    • @bekimcolaku5258
      @bekimcolaku5258 3 года назад +2

      Money is the root of all evil people will kill for a $1

  • @Hillers62
    @Hillers62 3 года назад +72

    Cabrini-Green is where the Evens family of "Good Times" (think J.J. Walker) lived...the beginning of each episode even had a shot of these projects...

    • @holachika5071
      @holachika5071 2 года назад +5

      That’s DYNO-MITE!!!!!

    • @kimr.2284
      @kimr.2284 2 года назад

      Hola Chika,😂😂😂😅

  • @cuseyeti_one8three
    @cuseyeti_one8three 2 года назад +2

    I went to university at DePaul and did my student teaching at DuSable HS, smack in the middle of the Robert Taylor homes. Walking to the school from the CTA station in the late 1990's was quite the experience.

  • @alleyal5898
    @alleyal5898 2 года назад +4

    I live in Queens bridge 🌉 houses today, been here since 2003, when I first moved in I was very upset coming here, but throughout the years thank God it has gotten better and better each year , today 2022 I must say a big change for the better. Ever since they started renovations on Queens Borough Plaza, it trickled down to the Projects. Major improvements to Queens Bridge 🌆🌉🌆 Houses, more police presence, and Drug dealers evicted out of there. It's not the best by any means but it's not bad living here either.

  • @donh5794
    @donh5794 3 года назад +53

    I wonder if anyone was ever held accountable for building these failed projects that were torn down and so many lives affected and money wasted.

    • @leanen6424
      @leanen6424 3 года назад +15

      It's the people, not the buildings

    • @EdMaxprime
      @EdMaxprime 3 года назад +5

      @J Smith I don't know about other cities, but the story in NYC is pretty interesting. The man responsible for a lot of housing projects was Robert Moses, known today as a virulent racist who planned his projects by flying in a plane over the city rather than visiting the streets. The legislature (democrats, republicans, etc) have NO say in these developments. So we can't blame democrats or any party for this. The power was concentrated in the hands of one man who never had to be elected. This is one of the problems with centralized planning. One of his most outspoken critics was Jane Jacobs. Her first major victory against him in the 50s was when he wanted to build a highway through Washington Square Park but she raised community voices against it. After that, she led several more crusades against super-block developments and slum clearance projects. Eventually, the city reorganized the toll collection system, which took away Moses' revenue stream (he paid for the projects by building bridges and highways and using the toll money). Eventually, his power was chipped away and by the 60s he resigned. Read "The Power Broker" by Robert Caro, a really good book about what he did to the South Bronx and how he got so much power in the first place. It's not a red vs. blue issue, but rather a "how are decisions made" issue. Modern day planners don't have the kind of power Robert Moses did.

    • @9to5Drone
      @9to5Drone 2 года назад

      @@leanen6424 Sure but I work in a public housing community and those buildings are 80 years old some of them and they were just cheaply built. Yeah you can get someone for poor housekeeping but a lot of it IS the structure.

    • @Skindiver986
      @Skindiver986 2 года назад +2

      Nope thanks Democrats

    • @adventures223
      @adventures223 2 года назад

      @@leanen6424 absolutely right about that

  • @cocosanfran2770
    @cocosanfran2770 3 года назад +237

    Brownsville Projects in Bklyn should've been the worst one!! I grew up there my entire childhood!! The most brutal 💀

    • @elliot2177
      @elliot2177 3 года назад +39

      Yep..Far worse than Marcy and QB..Shit, Pink Houses too.

    • @mikeyfn-a6684
      @mikeyfn-a6684 3 года назад +9

      I was 13 in Jr.High in Marine Park and a kid in my class asked me if I was down with taking a car to Brownsville to get it chopped. Man I grew up better than a few kids I went to school with.

    • @michaelsebea2080
      @michaelsebea2080 3 года назад +6

      Pink houses hands dwn is tho

    • @Jacdaniels
      @Jacdaniels 3 года назад +18

      I used to live on hegeman in between the pink houses and cypress house. The gangs used to meet up on linden behind my house, east new york was definitely on a different level than bedstuy.

    • @GhettoArabSage
      @GhettoArabSage 3 года назад +22

      Marcy Projects area is mad gentrified nowadays. A lot of white people play in the basketball courts in the PJs on Marcy and Flushing. You can even get vegan coffee right across the street and apartments across the street are expensive.

  • @lanikialoha
    @lanikialoha 2 года назад

    I love the content mr Briggs

  • @lavernemeeks979
    @lavernemeeks979 2 года назад +1

    I lived in Henry Horner, close to Robert Taylor Homes. I moved to Florida in 1968 when I was 15. Totally different lifestyle. Love it here.

  • @Not_Sal
    @Not_Sal 3 года назад +233

    The pink houses in East New York Brooklyn are even worse than Marcy. The Bronx also has some of the worst projects in New York such as the Bronx River and edenwald houses

    • @latayiahicks2924
      @latayiahicks2924 3 года назад +32

      Hell far rock away too

    • @TwinParksBX
      @TwinParksBX 3 года назад +28

      Highbridge projects in the Bronx the most dangerous place in the city after dark

    • @timothyelbing5048
      @timothyelbing5048 3 года назад +10

      put Starett city in Brownsville on the list too. Real crime ridden shitholes!

    • @antglizzy7720
      @antglizzy7720 3 года назад +31

      Timothy Elbing Starett City is East New York but you could put the whole Brownsville up there tbh 😂 Starett City isn’t that bad

    • @csharp57
      @csharp57 3 года назад +10

      @@latayiahicks2924 I used to live around the Far Rockaway projects. Red Fern I believe was the name. Area was rough. I was pulled over almost every day

  • @AtownCangri
    @AtownCangri 3 года назад +78

    I lost my marbles when he mentioned the one that has the U turn on the freeway exit 🤣😂🤣

    • @crazypsychoamy1021
      @crazypsychoamy1021 3 года назад +5

      That's East St Louis for ya.

    • @torque3022
      @torque3022 3 года назад +6

      Downtown ESL a tree grows out of the marquis of an abandoned movie theater

    • @robins.2749
      @robins.2749 3 года назад +5

      I live in Belleville (down the road a piece) and have hit this turn-around before...it's no joke

    • @brendenshea1312
      @brendenshea1312 3 года назад +1

      @@robins.2749 I live in belleville too, in villa hills. Living up the bluff from centreville and bond avenue my whole life has its pros and cons. I also grew up the hill from edgemont on west main. Always sum fun happening lolol

  • @MobstersInc
    @MobstersInc 2 года назад

    Great video 📹

  • @Nothingmuch1039
    @Nothingmuch1039 Год назад

    This was such an interesting video. The Candyman ref was the cherry on top. Palpable fear. Intense.

  • @emocraps07
    @emocraps07 3 года назад +174

    I always knew about Cabrini-Green because of Candy Man

    • @alycespruell3134
      @alycespruell3134 2 года назад

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @albertpope57
      @albertpope57 2 года назад +14

      Everybody forget about "Good Times" was based on the evans family living there.

    • @yourvbsx
      @yourvbsx 2 года назад +3

      @@albertpope57 omg never knew that

    • @rokylaruex504
      @rokylaruex504 2 года назад

      😂 candyman movies is based and from new Orleans my guy and he lived in the magnolia projects uptown

    • @johnmeyer4683
      @johnmeyer4683 2 года назад

      @@rokylaruex504 get yo shit right and know yo history it is based on the cabrini-green projects the original part of the projects was't torn down until they finished filming the last one in 2019 it still stood for a few years because they where having filming and production problems with the movie because that movie was supose to comme out in 2013...........

  • @spencearoo1
    @spencearoo1 3 года назад +33

    I have never been more Intrigued as I am with with the Cabrini Green. I have even bought many books of first hand statements from former tenents. Just wow. I get chills at some of the true stories...

  • @carmenmcintyre2229
    @carmenmcintyre2229 Год назад +3

    I grew up in the projects across the expressway from Robert Taylor Homes, and Stateway Gardens which was just as scary. We had to walk past those buildings every morning and afternoon to go to school. Once there a some beef between those gangs and the gangs in my projects. We had to take the bus home or walk all the way around to avoid being harrassed, hurt or killed.

  • @sandygarcia6684
    @sandygarcia6684 2 года назад +2

    I didn't catch where that first building that showed before Magnolia, but THAT place sent chills down my spine. Not that it is an unattractive building, it's actually quite appealing, depending on how much one is able to appreciate that which is finely macabre. Not often a building has that effect on me.

  • @ChrisSF2G
    @ChrisSF2G 2 года назад +38

    Projects got bad when the generations upon generations became grandfathered into the same apartment for decades creating no hope or incentive for upward mobility , and then having a requirement for no father / men coupled with lack of housing funds recipe for disaster

  • @franklinlee2868
    @franklinlee2868 3 года назад +97

    I was born & raised in Chicago. When I first started driving, my parents would warn me that one intersection that we never stop at was the intersection of Division & Halsted. (Cabrini Green)

    • @CNightFury
      @CNightFury 3 года назад +14

      I was born & raised in Chicago too, loved my home town! Cabrini Green had such a bad reputation - it was said that even the cops were scared to go there. It's always fascinated me though, wish I had gotten a chance to go there before it got torn down.

    • @cjreynolds3013
      @cjreynolds3013 3 года назад +10

      NOT TO MENTION ROBERT TAYLOR PROJECTS ALONGTHE DAN RYAN I KNOW THIS AND I AM NOT FROM OR EVER LIVED IN CHICAGO.

    • @cjreynolds3013
      @cjreynolds3013 3 года назад +3

      TO COME UP TO DATE, THE ROBERT TAYLOR PROJECTS HAVE BEEN TORN DOWN.

    • @clintontaylor8904
      @clintontaylor8904 3 года назад +4

      @@cjreynolds3013 been there and scariest neighborhood I've ever seen

    • @jenneland8491
      @jenneland8491 3 года назад

      The only projects left that they changed up as far as residents is the hillans and the state way gardens and the Dearborn’s !

  • @Solo-Road
    @Solo-Road 2 года назад +1

    Cabrini Green was still around on Division St when I moved to Chicago in the 2000s. There's a nice Target store and town homes there now.

  • @DamageLLC
    @DamageLLC Год назад +4

    I’m originally from the Bronx and other than the Chicago ones the other ones made me laugh so hard. You could’ve stayed in New York for all 10 of these lol Love your videos and thanks for sharing.

    • @nelsonmcatee3721
      @nelsonmcatee3721 Год назад +1

      I'm from Illinois and know people from Cabrini and Taylor Homes. You could probably pick a top 10 just with Chicago projects. But Pruitt Igoe belongs on here too.

  • @brklyn345
    @brklyn345 2 года назад +138

    I have a friend that lives in the Queensbridge projects. A few weeks back, the tenants in the apartment below his were murdered, and the apartment was torched. He had to go to the hospital for smoke inhalation. The evidence gathered point to a drug deal gone bad.

    • @lateefajohnson61
      @lateefajohnson61 2 года назад +5

      Wow I didn’t hear about that 😢😢😢

    • @ms.getrightwithgod9994
      @ms.getrightwithgod9994 2 года назад +2

      That's horrible 😔

    • @alphaomega1351
      @alphaomega1351 2 года назад +2

      Sounds like a great place to live. 😶

    • @ParahSalin
      @ParahSalin Год назад +10

      Why I quit being a visiting nurse. They’d be eyeing my bag like I had narcs in it.

    • @turdburglar1295
      @turdburglar1295 Год назад

      Must have been black people

  • @marvr3132
    @marvr3132 3 года назад +317

    The (Pork n Beans Projects) in Miami Should be On This List Trust Me!!!

    • @andrerivera1413
      @andrerivera1413 3 года назад +26

      Word I drove past it..I was like wtf

    • @meryannu7346
      @meryannu7346 3 года назад +13

      I was literally looking for this comment! FR! But they're "changing it" into the "NEW Liberty Square"

    • @mikec4487
      @mikec4487 3 года назад +23

      Yea I used to do roofing in miami n worked with a guy who lived there n he used to make me drop him off out front of the pjs cuz he said if I went in there I could get killed or would immediately be pulled over leaving becuz I m white lol. He used to be forced to carry gun to do a simple task such as walk to the store for juice

    • @thegoldenculture77
      @thegoldenculture77 3 года назад +6

      @beadsbydez com no, it used to be that bad, way back in the day...the surrounding areas be worse. I used to stay off 61st and 7th, you would always hear about killings but not so many in the beans
      edit: still a place where you need to keep a strap on at all times in my honest opinion, but the city changed a lot...hardly recognizable now from what it once was even from like 5 years ago

    • @andrerivera1413
      @andrerivera1413 3 года назад +2

      @beadsbydez com man heck yeah that bad...lol

  • @toddpleasants3049
    @toddpleasants3049 2 года назад

    Excellent video!!

  • @quintinbowman7993
    @quintinbowman7993 10 месяцев назад +2

    I have mixed feeling watching this. I grew up in the Robert Taylor project and while I knew it wasn’t the ideal place to grow up, it’s still home to me. It still bothers me to see the place where I grew up and have a ton of memories eradicated but I it did need to come down 🤷🏾‍♂️.

  • @melissamanning1580
    @melissamanning1580 3 года назад +83

    I stayed in the projects in Chicago called Harold Icke's home for 20 yrs. Although I've been a Legal Secretary and Admin Asst for 30+ yrs. and a trained and certified Boy Scouts cubmaster of the Chicago area council. I had no choice as a divorcee with 4 children and a ward of the state of Kentucky had no family support. So I decided to assist as many youth with instilling work ethics from my own professional experiences for an example.

    • @paultaylor328
      @paultaylor328 2 года назад +1

      My dude Lavelle came from there. He shows me wild videos all the time

    • @kevagardner4659
      @kevagardner4659 2 года назад +2

      Bless you for your accomplishments, fellow Kentuckian. You are the essence of the Unbridled Spirit.

    • @wildfiregirl1556
      @wildfiregirl1556 2 года назад +2

      God gave you purpose. Blessings.

    • @dinkyb2000
      @dinkyb2000 2 года назад +1

      Cermack and State

    • @knightclassic1
      @knightclassic1 Год назад

      I almost called them "Chinatown Projects" lol when i was little

  • @alysshart7522
    @alysshart7522 2 года назад +24

    My dad told me that when my grandmother divorced my grandfather (back in the 1960s), she had no choice but to move into the Seattle projects. From the way my dad told it, the Seattle projects were segregated at the time.

  • @glow1815
    @glow1815 Год назад +2

    I've never experienced living in the project but I'm sure there are lots of good honest folks living there. Sometimes you gotta do what you have too do no judging. This videos actually is an educational video for me.

  • @flyeaglesfly3931
    @flyeaglesfly3931 Год назад +1

    The turn around on the st Louis highway did it for me🤣🤣

  • @toko_ribbon
    @toko_ribbon 3 года назад +195

    I lived in some Miami projects during my childhood years; it was an experience that made me wiser far too early and naturally suspicious of people and their intentions. Even thou I’ve been (thankfully) living a middle class life for my adult life- I still lock/bolt my door immediately upon entry and always make sure to have keys in hand when I exit a building. It’s too ingrained in me.

    • @tiffanylpleasant4181
      @tiffanylpleasant4181 3 года назад +3

      👀

    • @renroxhrd
      @renroxhrd 2 года назад +6

      Sorry to hear that. If I ever lived in projects I'd need therapy and a shotgun

    • @terrybyte8782
      @terrybyte8782 2 года назад

      Write a book

    • @shaneldiore9267
      @shaneldiore9267 2 года назад +20

      Idk why he didn’t do Miami! Pork n beans

    • @GoodnightIrieMon
      @GoodnightIrieMon 2 года назад +21

      I immigrated to the U.S. when I was a year old. Being dirt-poor we lived in some of NYC’s most infamous projects and neighborhoods of the 70s and 80s- Kelly St in the Bronx, Brownsville East NY, Bed-Stuy….
      I was lucky to have escaped and like you have lived a comfortable middle class life in the suburbs for over 30 years now.
      Like you I suffer a mild form of PTSD from the experience. Wary of strangers, door gets locked immediately, avoid going out after dark. Is there a support group for this? LOL!

  • @terrytaylor5192
    @terrytaylor5192 3 года назад +81

    I grew up in the Nickerson Gardens and the 90s was no joke. All of south LA and Compton was war zone and still is. I now live in Texas.

    • @hiworldstephensonultranate290
      @hiworldstephensonultranate290 3 года назад

      hi terry did the Williams tennis sisters come from tr is d gt Tiger Woods fron part L. A.? Brian ireland Tk Care

    • @loretta5330
      @loretta5330 3 года назад +8

      Yup! My people still there and its getting bad again.. I had to move. im in Arizona now trying to get my mom here..

    • @Tawana_X
      @Tawana_X 3 года назад +4

      @@loretta5330 I’m praying for your success with getting your mom that’s beautiful!!

    • @laurenlocd3180
      @laurenlocd3180 2 года назад

      And ?

    • @kbsinsanewrld
      @kbsinsanewrld Год назад

      YALL dramatic AF. I've been in this neighborhood all my life. I'm in my 40's now. HELL YEAH...The 80' and 90's WAS bad, but it has calmed down alot in comparison and you can actually walk in Magic Johnsons park or go to the liquor store on Central and 120th without fear of getting shot. If anything is getting bad now, starting to see Meth heads are popping up now, replacing the crackheads walking around the 80s.. and at least the crackheads wouldnt steal our trash cans 😭 Not even alot of homeless in comparison to going down Avalon and Main street pass Rosecrans tho one encampment tried to spring up behind the church on Stanford and 118th. Theres always been those by the freeway entrance on Central, but they mostly harmless and Just be out collecting plastic and cans.
      Matter of fact, San Bernardino is probably worse than South Central right now

  • @whatifschrodingersboxwasacofin
    @whatifschrodingersboxwasacofin 2 года назад

    Hey! This was good.

  • @kathyp.9507
    @kathyp.9507 Год назад +1

    I used to live in a housing project when I was a kid in Chicago. The building was on 1237 W. Taylor St. If I may say so it was a very nice clean apartment. The building was a U shaped and in the center was a playground. After we moved in they brought us a brand new refrigerator, a new stove and painted the apartment for us. I really loved it there and I miss it. Right behind us was my school, Jacob A. Riis Elementary School. Unfortunately all that is gone now😟
    How can I find a vintage photo of this building? Thx for your video. Peace and Love ☮️❤️

  • @outbackigloo6489
    @outbackigloo6489 3 года назад +217

    Well done video. Makes me feel sorry for the decent people who have to live in places like these.

    • @myimperfectdiary890
      @myimperfectdiary890 3 года назад +19

      Outback Igloo some of us didn’t have any choice due to institutional racism of this country.

    • @MONET8iAM
      @MONET8iAM 3 года назад +13

      Right. The buildings always served the same purpose, but people continue to take advantage of them. Innocent people either fall victim to or become influenced by the negative aspects.

    • @macklifebizzle6392
      @macklifebizzle6392 3 года назад +6

      Don’t feel bad we alright 😁😁😁Cabrini 4 life💯💯💯

    • @AllDay3004
      @AllDay3004 3 года назад +1

      @Ben Dover no they won't. Name one Republican that hasn't helped destroy the Black community.

    • @AllDay3004
      @AllDay3004 3 года назад +12

      @Ben Dover MLK wasn't a republican. Ben Carson hasn't did shit for Black people nor has Donald Trump. Even if you wanted to add Trump, you see how far you had to reach for the others? Both Republicans and Democrats are the reason African Americans ended up crowded in places like this.

  • @skg213
    @skg213 3 года назад +39

    **trigger warning**violence against children***
    I grew up in Chicago and I remember the story about the 5 yo boy who was killed by 2 other kids at Cabrini green. They threw him out the window of an empty apartment. Everyone was so shocked and sad. It was really a horrible crime. The kids who did it were really young 2, like 10 or 11.

    • @Munkeishia1nOnly
      @Munkeishia1nOnly 3 года назад +2

      That's horrible. Did they get life? Tried as adults?

    • @jonsmithh3827
      @jonsmithh3827 3 года назад +1

      Maybe u right, but ik for a fact da same exact story happened further south, lowend off 39th in Darrow Homes. The boys jus recently got out not to long ago i think. Evn had a movie called ‘Our America’ based on it and it may still b on RUclips.

    • @williammorse8330
      @williammorse8330 2 года назад +2

      @@Munkeishia1nOnly No, they became members of Congress.....

    • @Munkeishia1nOnly
      @Munkeishia1nOnly 2 года назад +4

      @@williammorse8330 🙄😒 ... oh yea?? Representative of your House?

    • @yosquidd242
      @yosquidd242 2 года назад +2

      @@Munkeishia1nOnly No, back in that period they were sent to jail, and as they grew older they would graduate to age and crime-appropriate facilities. And it effectively caused the youngsters to re-commit and be recharged and spent lots of years imprisoned. Should be out now if they survived.

  • @GeraldM_inNC
    @GeraldM_inNC 2 года назад +4

    This story from my brother. There was a convenience store in Dallas right across the street from a project. After an armed robbery, the owner told the police "Hurry! They ran straight across the street into the apartment building. If you go there now you might catch them." The senior police officer there looked at the convenience store's owner like he was insane, and exclaimed: "I'm not going in THERE!"

  • @abduljabbar8984
    @abduljabbar8984 9 месяцев назад

    Great information

  • @Idahoguy10157
    @Idahoguy10157 3 года назад +207

    I’ve read that when public housing projects began their were standards to live there. If you or your family didn’t meet behavior standards you were evicted. Then lawyers got involved... And maintaining standards was illegal. So 90% of residents became at the mercy of the 10% who were criminals.

    • @CeaseProduction
      @CeaseProduction 3 года назад +26

      No. The building standards were garbage. Egress and ingress was given no thought whatsoever so there is an alleyway effect-- you were essentially trapped inside the building once you went in. If a someone chased you up, you were not coming out. You could sell drugs or run a brothel and cops wouldn't be able to catch you because you could duck into any one of the fifty or so apartments that were empty.
      Why were they empty? Because living in these apartments was absolutely fucking miserable. They were just not designed well from the ground up. They were improperly ventilated, so cooking smells and just general people smells would build up unless you keep your windows open... which is fine I guess so long as you could get away with not heating or cooling your apartment (surprise surprise, you can't do this in most of the country). They were small. They were ugly.
      They were never good and should not be compared with modern, air conditioned, secured, well designed, multifamily housing projects EVER. These old projects were boxes meant to store wage slaves off the streets until the depression was over and they were useful again. And they were built below the minimum standards.

    • @Idahoguy10157
      @Idahoguy10157 3 года назад +6

      (c ' 3')~♪♬ ♪ ♫ ♬ ..... I’ve lived in military single and family housing. Leaves a lot to be desired. But you and your family had to behave or else

    • @mrvax2
      @mrvax2 3 года назад +3

      @@Idahoguy10157 I lived in a nice USMC base housing for a few years. Sucked in So-Cal because they had no A/C. However, because of discipline rules the place was not bad at all. The base closed, the property sold to developers who promptly bulldozed the 8-10 year old apartments for brand new super expensive ones.

    • @jimmefz3328
      @jimmefz3328 3 года назад +4

      @@CeaseProduction nonsense, no different from many other apartment buildings. Its not the buildings it the people in them. They have sold some of them that end up becoming decent condo buildings. I lived in projects for 25 years before moving on.

    • @yahya4370
      @yahya4370 3 года назад +2

      Jimo idk why you people believe there are actually no adult men in the homes. Just because they don’t tell government officials men are around does not mean the men aren’t there 😂. It’s unfortunate that ppl feel the need to lie to get by but that’s what’s really happening.

  • @redrust3
    @redrust3 3 года назад +40

    Our family, headed by my single working mom, moved into a housing project around 1970. I graduated college in 1980. My younger brother graduated in 1990. He was the last college graduate from my housing project. Project is still there, 31 years later. A measure of success is not your education level, but whether you are still living on public assistance. Some of my neighbors have made it out and are successful in life. Others have formed a third or fourth generation still on government assistance. No major violence to speak of, but property crimes and drug use are still rampant there.

    • @GGGeena860
      @GGGeena860 2 года назад +10

      Loved your comment and story; keyword is assistance. I had section 8, took me 7 years to go back to school while working full-time and raising two kids but once section 8 only paid $12 of my rent and my portion was $1200; I knew it had served its purpose and I gave it up. I grew up very poor, didn't even have a bedroom slept in the living room. I wanted my kids to have better. See better and do better.

    • @pa1060
      @pa1060 2 года назад +1

      Ok story, but the subject is not about getting out, more so about trying to survive while staying there.

    • @redrust3
      @redrust3 2 года назад +3

      @@pa1060 I agree. But ultimately the way to survive is to get out, which we finally managed after 10 years. I feel for the kids nowadays, opportunities are fewer and far between.

    • @wildfiregirl1556
      @wildfiregirl1556 2 года назад

      @@redrust3 I respect your opinion. But kids have it better than we ever did and I am a 80's baby. My kids have never had it so good. So good I think we fucked them up. Nothing like me or there dad.

    • @charleyb8423
      @charleyb8423 2 года назад +1

      @@redrust3 Bail reform

  • @lyricharmony...poetryinmot473
    @lyricharmony...poetryinmot473 2 года назад +4

    I relocated to Illinois straight out of undergrad and began working with both Catholic Charities and Lake County DCFS as a case manager. I recall being told I had "earned my stripes" after my first home visit to Cabrini Green. It's been over 25 years, but I can still remember the feeling in the pit of my stomach, the smell of poverty, and despair the restless souls. I'm impathetic and empathetic; that visit would mentally, spiritually, and emotionally wipe me out. It held as much intense energy as a visit to the forensic unit of a mental health impatient facility. Many of them gave similar energy, like that of tortured souls. I recall wanting to know their stories. As many stared me down as I walked down the sidewalk, the children ran up to ask for money; some man stood in the entrance way, so I had to slide past him. A tenant alerted others of my presence
    yelling out, announcing that "5.0, probation, welfare, or the feds" were on the move

    • @tobiesky2185
      @tobiesky2185 Год назад

      FYI there is a book about Cabrini Green that tells the story from the words of residents

  • @sunshinejamaicanblazinchoc8141

    I’m from Chicago and was in Cabrini Greens and the Robert Taylor but we had plenty more bad projects like Ida B Wells Altgeld Gardens Stateway projects Just to name a few n man it used to go down everywhere wow good video n very informative and I would love to tell what I rememeber

  • @avakate7747
    @avakate7747 3 года назад +53

    If Cabrini-Green is not on this list it’s not accurate! To be able to see it was insanity! I grew up in the Chicago area and in the 80’s Cabrini-Green was on the news every night, I used to have nightmares about it as a kid.

    • @tleeg74
      @tleeg74 2 года назад +6

      Ding ding ding

    • @gameovered777
      @gameovered777 2 года назад +6

      I still get chills just hearing the name

  • @FunkyAve69
    @FunkyAve69 3 года назад +33

    The fact that there are “walking tours” of Queensbridge is a testament to how much safer Queensbridge has become. Also, some the greatest views of the Manhattan skyline are just a block away. I lived in that neighborhood back in the late 90s-early 00s, it’s mellowed out quite a bit.

    • @anthonypresley1980
      @anthonypresley1980 2 года назад +8

      Some of the greatest rappers ever came out of Queens Bridge 💯

    • @XTRABIG
      @XTRABIG 2 года назад +6

      NAS. Capone n Noreaga. Craig G. Marley Marl. MC Shan.

    • @yankees29
      @yankees29 2 года назад +3

      That neighborhood is so different now. Was there a couple years ago.

  • @pettylilthing
    @pettylilthing Год назад +2

    I’m surprised that St. Louis projects ended up on here twice. My family members live on the east side, I never realized how bad it was till I got older cause it just seemed normal to me. 😂

  • @diyonisis7790
    @diyonisis7790 Год назад +3

    I was born in Cabrini Greens and I remember they tried to open a Police substation in the middle of the projects but they ended up closing it because it kept getting shot at by the gangs and the police refused to work there.

  • @maryhildreth754
    @maryhildreth754 3 года назад +247

    I believe Cabrini Green was where "Good Times" was supposed to be set.

    • @cvdixon29
      @cvdixon29 3 года назад +8

      Yes

    • @traceyscott909
      @traceyscott909 3 года назад +6

      Exactly!

    • @traceyscott909
      @traceyscott909 3 года назад +2

      @CHICANO’S WITH DANK HaHaHa!

    • @maryhildreth754
      @maryhildreth754 3 года назад +20

      @CHICANO’S WITH DANKno, actually I meant the 1970's television sitcom named "Good Times". It was about a black family who lived in Chicago's housing projects, and was one of Norman Lear's spinoff shows originating from the "All in the Family". Although I suspect you knew that and were just attempting to be clever.

    • @renroxhrd
      @renroxhrd 3 года назад +4

      I felt bad for that family, they were nice but they lived in a horrible rat infested building

  • @Narsuitus
    @Narsuitus 3 года назад +21

    I lived in three housing projects in Chicago. I had to watch this video to see if the Robert Taylor Homes or Cabrini-Greens made the list. I wondered if there could be ten housing projects in the United States that could be considered worse. I was not disappointed.

  • @HausOfTheePrincess
    @HausOfTheePrincess Год назад +5

    I'm from Chicago. I've never lived in any of those projects but I have friends who did.
    I watched both of them among the others be demolished. My grandmother lived right across the expressway from Robert Taylor and violence was a way of life and people were immune to what happened there. I stayed away as much as possible.
    If you had a car, you didn't even want to drop residents of over there really. Now most of them are either complete grass or gentrified apartments.
    On part of Robert Taylor they have opened a tennis complex... I'm sure residents would've never imagined that. Lol

    • @kevindunne6520
      @kevindunne6520 Год назад

      I am life long Chicago resident. I believe that the South Side will be gentrafied. Too much new construstion down that way. The Powers to be displaced a lot of people to the suburbs. To Clear the books. I know Police officers who will not get involved in the Ghetto crimes simply, They do not want charges brought against them and thierin thier Job and Pensions lost. My uncle was a officer in the Shakesspear districk. I quote, The worst thing the city did was take shotguns away from the police. When you cock a shotgun everyone from any where realizes opps I f#*ed up freeze. Yes there are tennis courts. If we as a city can not educate these young people where will they learn to play tennis? The spillover is in Indiana rents were low there and realitivaty quiet. Now Insane! This Black on Black racism. Divide and conquer. The South And West sides of Chicago will be gentrafied a body at a time. Terribly Sad. I am white and had a wonderful day on Father's day in a friends back yard Barbqueing in Englewood. Peaceful. My frind said Kev it's getting dark. When the sun goes down the guns come up. As a Chicagoan this really burns me up. God Bless anyone who gets out of poverty!

  • @80sbabytothecore1
    @80sbabytothecore1 Год назад +1

    Old school Atlanta people know about Techwood. It was notorious. Atlanta had so many projects back in the day. East Lake Meadows was another notorious housing project.

  • @MONET8iAM
    @MONET8iAM 3 года назад +220

    I’m surprised Brownsville Brooklyn isn’t up here

    • @dboykrank47
      @dboykrank47 3 года назад +28

      Or E. NY, Brkln...

    • @BB-uc3mv
      @BB-uc3mv 3 года назад +62

      The BrownsvilleComplex (Brownsville, Tilden, Van Dyke, & Langston Hughes) is BY FAR the worst in NYC.

    • @richhomieant
      @richhomieant 3 года назад +18

      @@BB-uc3mv that whole area. Seth Low, Howard, Marcus Garvey Village all that shit is bad

    • @Acord718
      @Acord718 3 года назад +23

      Pink houses

    • @losdoemdirty
      @losdoemdirty 3 года назад +27

      4 corners of death. Only the real Brooklynites know about this

  • @theonlykog
    @theonlykog 3 года назад +57

    Fun fact about Cabrini Green, they had to implode it because the wrecking ball couldn't knock it down.

    • @srfoy6493
      @srfoy6493 3 года назад +1

      That is a terrifying thought !

    • @yosquidd242
      @yosquidd242 2 года назад

      Could have been used as detention homes or prisons, just add perimeter fencing, Barbed Wire, of course! It was in some plans to do just that during the Civil Rights era of riots and assassinations of Vocal black men.

  • @konfidentlykeiko1997
    @konfidentlykeiko1997 2 года назад +2

    Tbh I’m from Los Angeles and have heard a lot about how bad these projects are and while I’ve never spent too much time..the times I have been didn’t seem too bad. Ive even been to a project housing in Los Angeles with neatly cut lawns, buildings, porches, etc!

  • @jamessimpson3088
    @jamessimpson3088 2 года назад

    Great idea