Subregions of the U.S. Defined

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  • Опубликовано: 13 июн 2024
  • An in-depth look at which places in the U.S. are parts of what regions and subregions. Whether it be the Northeast, South, Midwest, or West, each region has different subregions within.
    If you would like to support the channel or to purchase a pin for the viewer pin wall map, please visit my Patreon page at:
    www.patreon.com/geographyking
    Album displayed:
    B.B. King - "Take It Home" (1979)
    0:00 Intro
    0:35 New England
    1:33 Mid-Atlantic
    2:50 The South
    7:03 Midwest
    9:48 The West
    12:08 Outro

Комментарии • 3,2 тыс.

  • @joelkrause388
    @joelkrause388 Год назад +2415

    As an over the road trucker with 1.2+ million miles covering all 48 contiguous states, I think you did a great job parsing the regions! 🚛

    • @Mattrino101
      @Mattrino101 Год назад +102

      thank you for your service.

    • @sollymondo1226
      @sollymondo1226 Год назад +38

      respect

    • @kennyholmes5196
      @kennyholmes5196 Год назад +78

      Respect for the deserving one. You truckers and your rail-brothers of the train operators are the backbone of our country, as you operate the logistics of this nation.

    • @vendingdudes
      @vendingdudes Год назад +39

      I'm a 25 year driver myself and have to agree with you. America is such a beautiful diverse place and Kyle outdid himself here. Keep Rollin!

    • @johnschuh8616
      @johnschuh8616 Год назад +6

      Good job

  • @giorgikharchilava7258
    @giorgikharchilava7258 Год назад +753

    As a Buffalonian, you're spot-on with the Midwest connection. We feel way closer to the Midwest than the Northeast.

    • @Blipblorpus
      @Blipblorpus Год назад +39

      I would have also included Syracuse and Onondaga county as well as even Utica. You can see a lot of rust belt influence that ties them more to buffalo than Albany, NYC, Boston, etc.

    • @frigginjerk
      @frigginjerk Год назад +63

      @@Blipblorpus Syracuse seems to be the dividing line: to the east you have Jets/Giants fans who drink soda. To the west, you have the people who (correctly) drink pop while watching the Bills.

    • @vicepresidentmikepence889
      @vicepresidentmikepence889 Год назад +12

      Just like Pensacola, Florida, culturally, is completely different than Miami, Florida

    • @ES2990
      @ES2990 Год назад +33

      I'm from the Midwest and noticed this as well. Accent and everything. Buffalo is actuually a lot closer to Detroit than I thought

    • @d.g.2896
      @d.g.2896 Год назад +9

      they should not even have given Cleveland a new football team when the Browns left. They could have rooted for the Bills

  • @garrettgreen9667
    @garrettgreen9667 Год назад +392

    Thank you for splitting the South like you did. It's so different even intra-state.

    • @jblue04
      @jblue04 Год назад +7

      Yes because where I live in Mississippi is more like Louisiana.

    • @dan-patrickobrien3580
      @dan-patrickobrien3580 Год назад +4

      ​@@jblue04 The section of South Carolina that I live in is more like Louisiana than the rest of SC. Same goes with Georgia.

    • @jackkeown6370
      @jackkeown6370 Год назад +4

      I live in Atlanta and I agree, anythin north of like Gwinnett or Cobb is a whole different thing but goin south and east its pretty much the same

    • @jackkeown6370
      @jackkeown6370 Год назад +6

      @@dan-patrickobrien3580 oh yeah you talkin bout like Charleston and Savannah. I jus call em New Orleans Jr. 😂

    • @dan-patrickobrien3580
      @dan-patrickobrien3580 Год назад +2

      @@jackkeown6370 lol yeah I live in the Charleston area.

  • @zsoren42
    @zsoren42 Год назад +173

    I love how California is so many different regions. Hot low Desert, High Desert, pacific northwest rainforests, north rocky coastline, southern sand beach coastlines, fertile flat San Joaquin Valley, Northern wet Sacramento Valley, Northern High Cattle country and forest areas, and Eastern foothills and massive Seirras mountains that have many many different mountain passes and canyons in them. I would even devide the Seirras into 3 different regions north central and south because they and their foothills are so vastly different as you go north to south

    • @el_lo
      @el_lo Год назад +3

      Don't forget about skid row. It's another level, its make california so diverse 🤣🤣🤣 i think texas don't have something like that. It's hot topic here in asia.. So when someone comment about california, first thing pop up in my head isn't hollywood but your beautiful street full of sh eet 🤣🤣
      That street make me memorized about our capital on 90s... but yall have that in california is quite amazing 🤣🤣

    • @ghoulannabanana
      @ghoulannabanana Год назад +24

      @@el_lo Man, you're not even from the US and you're shitting on our state lmfao. Skid Row isn't even that bad it's so close to everything else in LA. It's sketch yeah but there's way more dangerous streets in that city you don't want to dream of going down.

    • @Trenz0
      @Trenz0 Год назад +12

      Skid row is just infamous and it has been for decades. It's really nothing special lol. There's plenty similarly run down areas in the US and even in California.

    • @firstylasty9417
      @firstylasty9417 Год назад +24

      @@el_lo Yeah, you're clearly not from CA, and you sound like you have a political agenda. Maybe next time try writing your comment completely with emojis. It would make more sense.

    • @timsanford5310
      @timsanford5310 Год назад +10

      ​@@el_lo You think you're being clever and funny but your comments are equal to that of what a kindergartner would say who is trying to impress his classmates. Embarrassing for you but you obviously didn't realize that.

  • @EresirThe1st
    @EresirThe1st Год назад +170

    As an Australian who has never quite got his head around American geography this was very useful. Similar videos for places like India, China, Russia and Brazil would be so helpful.

    • @UberLummox
      @UberLummox Год назад +12

      I'd think one on Great Britan would be fascinating. Or anywhere in Europe. Or the World. 😬

    • @UberLummox
      @UberLummox Год назад +2

      I'd think one on Great Britan would be fascinating. Or anywhere in Europe. Or the World. 😬

  • @dakotabock2612
    @dakotabock2612 Год назад +710

    You’re the first person I’ve heard outside of the lakes states region to call northern WI, MN, the U.P., as the north woods. It’s nice to hear someone outside of the region address it as that, because that’s what we call it. Keep up the good work!

    • @nickolaibuck9301
      @nickolaibuck9301 Год назад +19

      In Michigan we call the northern half of the lower the north woods as well not just the U.P.

    • @mikegugg1201
      @mikegugg1201 Год назад +15

      In WI, it is generally North of Wausau. I am a North Woods native ;)

    • @mikaeelmalik1724
      @mikaeelmalik1724 Год назад +9

      In maine we call our northern woods the north woods too. Ik very creative

    • @trowwzers5057
      @trowwzers5057 Год назад +32

      Most people call it “up north”

    • @hoist8111
      @hoist8111 Год назад +13

      @@trowwzers5057 I've lived in Wisconsin my entire life (not "up north") and I've only ever heard it as "up north". Never heard the term "north woods" before.

  • @paulachiarmonte3473
    @paulachiarmonte3473 Год назад +55

    Finally. An intelligent, witty, accurate and educational utube video depicting US regional geography with great style. Kyle, you rock.

  • @omargoodman2999
    @omargoodman2999 Год назад +186

    In Florida, there's a saying: "The more North you go, the more South you get." This references how the Southern part of Florida is distinctly separate from the Northern part, which can be generally lumped in with The South. But I'd say it's got a fair bit of gradient to it; it _gradually_ transitions from South Florida culture, through Central Florida, and into North Florida. And, from a lot of other comments, I get the feeling that a lot of other regions/subdivisions have similar soft/overlapping borders.
    If you want to refine this idea, I'd suggest taking into account how the subregions connect to one another. Is it an overlap where an area can be considered a full blending of two subregions, like South Florida and The South overlapping in the middle to form the blended Central Florida distinction? Or is it a more distinct border like a hard or soft border without significant overlap? A "hard" border would have little to no significant cultural influence and would usually arise from physical barriers: rivers, mountains, wetlands, etc. "Soft" borders would have a recognizable degree of cultural cross-influence/fuzzyness across each side, though without the multi-county gradation of regional overlap. Thus, you can distinguish regional and sub-regional boundaries as either "hard" (little/no influence), "soft" (cross-influence one county deep), or "overlaping" (cross-influence of more than one county). So some of the "sub-regions" may, in fact, actually be just the "overlaping" areas where two other sub-regions connect. This can also cover some of those areas like where the suburbs of NYC bleed over into New England; that could be an example of a "soft" border.

    • @jellydarling1008
      @jellydarling1008 Год назад +2

      I really like this idea! I would definitely add a region for the southern tip though. That’s it’s own place

    • @sirraf23
      @sirraf23 Год назад +3

      Too bad he ignored the Florida panhandle and majority of Alabama. I was curious as to what we here in the panhandle were considered and he just noped right on past us lol.

    • @omargoodman2999
      @omargoodman2999 Год назад +4

      @@sirraf23 I mean... to be fair, even most Floridians would nope past the panhandle. Y'know... when we remember that it's there.

    • @sirraf23
      @sirraf23 Год назад

      @@omargoodman2999 that's funny because where I live seems to have a lot of people moving from south Florida complaining about the crime down south.

    • @desertdc123
      @desertdc123 Год назад

      Good way to put it - soft and overlapping borders help, even county vs. state lines. New Mexico and even Colorado can join Florida on some of that overlap.

  • @damonx6109
    @damonx6109 Год назад +478

    Americans often view Canada as one whole homogenous country. But Canadian regions generally share more in common with the American subregions they border. Being from the Pacific Northwest in BC, I seem to have a hard time explaining to Americans that it doesn't snow where I live and my cultural ties are closer to Seattle, Portland or San Francisco than to Montreal, Toronto, or Halifax.
    Anyone interested should check out American Nations by Collin Woodard.

    • @Marylandbrony
      @Marylandbrony Год назад +1

      I actually have a physical copy. It's a lot more grounded in the 70s than i imagined.

    • @ES2990
      @ES2990 Год назад +30

      I'm from Detroit so I defuntely understand. Windosr, Ontario is right across the river and it's literally like another suburb of Detroit. If you go to a bar or something there you'll see Red Wings games on TV and the Canadians always come across the border to attend games

    • @pyrho1
      @pyrho1 Год назад +4

      Damon, you must live near Vancouver, no?

    • @carpetbaggerface
      @carpetbaggerface Год назад +8

      @@ES2990 but us windsorites still say ‘eh’ all the time when in detroit, we stand out!

    • @westtownshend5661
      @westtownshend5661 Год назад +2

      @@ES2990 To officially be an old man, back in the pre-cable days, having Channel 9 in Windsor, including Hockey Night in Canada, made us some of of the most privileged viewers in the US. Great kids programming too.

  • @nashvillain171
    @nashvillain171 Год назад +178

    Observation: Some subregions overlap and some parts of the country aren't included in any of these subregions.

    • @tasnim569
      @tasnim569 Год назад +17

      yeah because these are really rough personal subregions, nothing official

    • @Carson218
      @Carson218 Год назад +9

      I noticed that the area that I'm from, Middle Tennessee, was never included.

    • @mikemgmail
      @mikemgmail Год назад +25

      A large swath of California - SF, LA, SD, Scramento, and more - weren't mentioned.

    • @nashvillain171
      @nashvillain171 Год назад +10

      @@Carson218 We're included, as you can see at 2:52, in the South region, but not in a subregion. The regions aren't necessarily divided into subregions such that every part is in a subregion. The subregion is simply a part of a region with distinct geographical characteristics. I don't think Kyle explained that very well.

    • @MikeP2055
      @MikeP2055 Год назад +2

      Especially when weighing things a little more anthropologically, such as the Intermountain West -- the area with a large historic link to the Mormon pioneers in addition to proximity to Salt Lake City. A sub-sub-region, if you will.

  • @piercemathena2125
    @piercemathena2125 Год назад +254

    As a Marylander, thank you thank you thank you for understanding that we are Mid-Atlantic and actually discussing that point. I hate the lump categorization that we are south just because we're below the Mason Dixon. And having family from southwestern VA, you're again right in that there is a distinction between us.

    • @mannfan12
      @mannfan12 Год назад +22

      Completely agree about Maryland. I grew up in the real South and moved to Maryland for a job after college. And I always bristled when some Northerner called Maryland the South. There is NOTHING about Maryland that reflects the South in any way. Mid-Atlantic best describes it.

    • @thedunelady
      @thedunelady Год назад +11

      I came here to say the same thing. I grew up in central MD. I think you can see the trend towards the South in the more rural parts of the state, like in the western two counties, the Eastern Shore, and counties south of DC. I remember seeing pickup trucks with gun racks and the Confederate flag on the highway, with MD plates - that's not "mid-Atlantic". On the other hand, I wouldn't classify anything along the corridor between DC and Baltimore as "southern", and folks there will get offended if you try to tell them they're southern. Maryland is its own thing, maybe "Chesapeake" is a better description for most parts of the state, and more "Appalachian" for those counties in the west. My Wisconsin cousins always thought I had a southern accent, but folks from southern Virginia thought I didn't.
      To quote from The Devil and Daniel Webster by Stephen Vincent Benet:
      "'Tis true the North claims me for a Southerner and the South for a Northerner, but I am neither." -- The Stranger

    • @dan-patrickobrien3580
      @dan-patrickobrien3580 Год назад +4

      Nobody ever considered Maryland the south. From my understanding it was always the northeast.

    • @jeremiah_12
      @jeremiah_12 Год назад +9

      @@dan-patrickobrien3580 Definitely not true. It’s on the edge of the South but it was never “considered Northeast from the start.”

    • @dan-patrickobrien3580
      @dan-patrickobrien3580 Год назад +3

      @@jeremiah_12 middle Atlantic but definitely not the south.

  • @63DW89A
    @63DW89A 11 месяцев назад +29

    I've been a trucker for more than 3 decades now, and have driven all of the lower 48 States. Your video is the closest to 100% accurate I've seen yet, in defining the regions of the U.S. I feel your accuracy is because you define the regions not only geographically, but culturally as well. I grew up in the "Mountain South", the Clinch Mountains of Virginia, and as an adult, have lived in AZ, CA, NC, GA and MD. It always irritated me when people (most who had never been there!) describe the "South" as if the region were one homogeneous culture, when nothing could be further from the truth! Your ID of the various Southern regions is as accurate as I've ever seen, and that is a very pleasant surprise. In the years I was living in CA and AZ, I was often asked, "What part of Texas are you from"? The confused looks I got with my reply of "I'm originally from the Clinch Mountains of Virginia, in the SW part of the State" were hilarious, so to ease the confusion, I'd continue with, "Texas was settled by Virginians and Tennesseans, so they ought to sound like us"!

    • @threefiveseven
      @threefiveseven 11 месяцев назад +2

      How about the people who like to say Virginia and Kentucky aren't southern because they arent like their home states of Alabama? Kills me every time.

  • @Rum-Runner
    @Rum-Runner Год назад +131

    As an Alaskan, I think it’s probably best that the state would be split into 3-5 regions. Southeast resides firmly within the Pacific Northwest Bioregion. South-central and southwest would either be lumped together or have their own separate groupings. And then the Interior and Far North regions would probably be a single subregion considering their weather patterns and low population density. With a state as massive and diverse as Alaska, it would be an injustice to classify it as a single subregion.

    • @TheRealBrook1968
      @TheRealBrook1968 Год назад +11

      The Anchorage borough from Palmer / Wasilla to Seward could be separate, also, culturally and politically. Kenai peninsula, Kodiak and across the Aleutian chain. I subdivided the regions for FNBA in the early-1990s per new lending guidelines and this was our division.

    • @Rum-Runner
      @Rum-Runner Год назад

      @@TheRealBrook1968 I like that

    • @gogogaga7441
      @gogogaga7441 Год назад

      Biodiversity and climate zones, sure, but I had to chuckle at “low population density” and “diversity.” It’s fucking Alaska. The only diverse and culturally significant population are the indigenous people that are shat on.

    • @Rum-Runner
      @Rum-Runner Год назад +2

      @@gogogaga7441 Alaska is a diverse state both in environment and in population. On what grounds do you measure “cultural significance”? Surely, the cultural heritage of the state lies mostly with the many Alaska Native peoples, but about 66% of the state’s population is made up of white people, and a notable 5% of Asians.

    • @pills-
      @pills- Год назад +4

      I agree. Having grown up there, it's not something you can lump all together in terms of geography or culture. I would divide it into 6 regions: the Panhandle, Cook Inlet, the Aleutians, Western, Northern, and Cental. You could subdivide some of those as well, depending on how detailed you wanted to get.

  • @northstarnick8366
    @northstarnick8366 Год назад +192

    Spot on with the sub regions of the Midwest! The north woods region definitely deserves a distinction because of how vastly different it is compared to what most people think of when the term Midwest is used.

    • @csnide6702
      @csnide6702 Год назад +8

      and the North woods region is SPACTACULARLY beautiful this time of year through October...... If you ever get a chance - GO THERE.

    • @slimegoo27
      @slimegoo27 Год назад +1

      Hello, fellow Nick 👋

    • @northstarnick8366
      @northstarnick8366 Год назад +1

      Howdy Brother!

    • @richardwaugh2049
      @richardwaugh2049 Год назад

      @@csnide6702 vvvv VV you are you saying voice bc the bc I was giving him to get BV v back vv the VV bb g vvvv

    • @kcsniper1243
      @kcsniper1243 Год назад +6

      I agree the only difference I have as someone who lived in Arkansas, Kansas & Missouri. I would say that the Ozark sub region for the south should stretch up to the Lake of Ozarks in Missouri.

  • @jeffweed3947
    @jeffweed3947 Год назад +60

    Texas is 773 miles wide thus more than one region. Houston is close to Louisiana, while El Paso is close to New Mexico.
    East Texas and West Texas are VERY different!

    • @jamesgoode9246
      @jamesgoode9246 Год назад +1

      Let's separate everything west of the Pecos River off into its own region.
      Then, let's separate the area between the Pecos and the Balcones Escarpment off into its own region.

    • @Heavywall70
      @Heavywall70 9 месяцев назад +3

      Orange County Texas is damn near
      Louisiana-esque
      with the food we eat and the lives we lead in our lil corner of the swamps.

    • @squatchwatch5237
      @squatchwatch5237 7 месяцев назад +2

      West is desert, east is THICK woods and swamps. Couldn't get anymore opposite

    • @larsedik
      @larsedik 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@Heavywall70 I would also put extreme SE Texas with the southern Louisiana region. Even Houston has lots of bayous and swamps, not to mention a large Cajun population.

    • @dchi2012
      @dchi2012 3 месяца назад

      True I always say anything east of Austin is the south whereas anything west of Austin is the south west

  • @fsmith45
    @fsmith45 Год назад +18

    The interesting thing is that a lot of regional cultures don’t really follow state lines, so somewhere like eastern Tennessee is more similar to West Virginia than it is even to other parts of Tennessee.

    • @bread9173
      @bread9173 Год назад

      Oh very! It is basically appalachia just like WV lol

  • @TaylorMMontgomery
    @TaylorMMontgomery Год назад +468

    I noticed you didn't include West Virginia in any of the main regions! Not sure if this is on purpose or not, but I've always felt that other than Texas, WV is one of those states that doesn't have a solid identity of where it fits. The southern portion of the state is very rooted in Appalachia and has a southern culture, while the north is influenced by Pittsburgh.
    It's a beautiful state though, the mountains are just stunning. It's a shame the economy didn't diversify.

    • @danieltolan8443
      @danieltolan8443 Год назад +29

      He talks about that in his video “regional terms in the us defined”

    • @angelmart08
      @angelmart08 Год назад +48

      Most of WV, is depressing...

    • @LukeO-1234
      @LukeO-1234 Год назад +66

      I agree, I live in WV someone in Cali will tell me I'm east coast, someone in pa will tell me I'm Midwest and West Virginians themselves mostly identify as Appalachian

    • @nashvillain171
      @nashvillain171 Год назад +105

      @@angelmart08 It's in the Methamphetamine Subregion 😂

    • @kevincinnamontoast3669
      @kevincinnamontoast3669 Год назад +20

      He is only identifying states in the regions. WV is being canceled as a state,Manchin introduced a bill.

  • @mariowalker9048
    @mariowalker9048 Год назад +122

    Maryland is the reason why the mid-Atlantic term exsit because of it being the transition between the Northeast and the South.

    • @charlietaylor5047
      @charlietaylor5047 Год назад +11

      Honestly all of Northern VA, Maryland, and Delaware are all part of that transition

    • @mariowalker9048
      @mariowalker9048 Год назад +6

      @@charlietaylor5047 Yea but Maryland went from a southern state to a northern state while Delaware was historically always in the middle colonies the southern portion of the state aligns more with Southern culture than Phily culture

    • @Miami7
      @Miami7 Год назад +6

      Actually there is also a subregion there. The eastern half of Maryland, Virginia, and all of Delaware is called "Delmarva." Part of it (after crossing Bay Bridge) going east, is also called "The Eastern Shore because most of it is saltwater marsh land. I always considered Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, North Carolina, and South Carolina the Mid Atlantic states, with the Low Country being the coastal areas of the Carolinas. Now what you are calling the Mid Atlantic, I would take Virginia and part of Maryland out of there. Beginning in Maryland from Baltimore and points north, and what you included, I would call the Eastern Rust Belt, since there is so much industry in the area. This is a very interesting video. Thank you!

    • @jnyerere
      @jnyerere Год назад +9

      @@Miami7 Baltimore and Philly are definitely a hybrid of Rustbelt and East Coast. So I agree with the term "Eastern Rustbelt."

    • @jnyerere
      @jnyerere Год назад +6

      The Eastern Shore is Southern. I would say the Western Panhandle is basically Appalachia. West Virginia 2.0. Southern Maryland (Charles, St. Mary's, Calvert Counties) are a hybrid of South and Mid-Atlantic. But I would argue Charles County will become more and more Mid-Atlantic as it grows in population and becomes an extended suburb of DC.

  • @Suzicherie7777
    @Suzicherie7777 Год назад +27

    I’m a native of Northern Kentucky and I’m glad to see you included us in the Midwest. We aren’t southerners here, more southern Midwesterners. Our area was big in the Underground Railroad.

    • @MitchJohnson0110
      @MitchJohnson0110 Год назад +6

      I live in Michigans U.P. but always loved visiting Northern Kentucky. As you said it still feels a lot like the Midwest but with just a touch of that southern charm. Very nice place to visit, always have a good experience.

    • @ElTigre12024
      @ElTigre12024 Год назад

      Having gone through Kentucky via Cincinnati on several occasions, Northern Kentucky really does feel like where the Midwest meets the South. I remember stopping for breakfast at a Waffle House once just outside of Covington and I could hear a lot of southern accents.

    • @imalwayspanicking
      @imalwayspanicking Год назад +3

      I very much agree. I’m from south eastern Kentucky, and when I went up to northern Kentucky for college I could really see the difference. Northern Kentucky very clearly shows when the south starts to transition into the Midwest imo. Even had people asking me about my accent, when I’m also from Kentucky, just the south 😅

    • @Suzicherie7777
      @Suzicherie7777 Год назад +2

      @@imalwayspanicking Yes there’s a difference in culture, but we are Kentuckians all the way.

    • @markbeck8384
      @markbeck8384 9 месяцев назад +1

      I was originally from Evansville, Indiana. My dad was from Louisville. I think I am right on the cusp of the South; but mostly Midwestern. I have lived in Ohio/Fla/Illinois/San Francisco; so much has been lost; but I think a little of that original impression remains.@@imalwayspanicking

  • @grantholladay1386
    @grantholladay1386 Год назад +20

    As a lifelong resident of the Mississippi Gulf Coast, I would argue that the Mississippi gulf Coast shares a lot more with south Louisiana than northern Mississippi or Alabama to the east. We celebrate Mardi Gras, eat gumbo, etc. My grandparents spoke creole French. While we don’t have as many swampy areas as in Louisiana, we definitely share culture! I would love to hear what y’all think though!

    • @jamesgoode9246
      @jamesgoode9246 Год назад

      When you said the Mississippi Coast is more similar to South Louisiana than Northern Mississippi,
      I think that you meant more similar to South Louisiana than Northern or Central Mississippi,
      or even South-Central Mississippi.

    • @grantholladay1386
      @grantholladay1386 Год назад

      @@jamesgoode9246 Yes Agreed! Thank you!

    • @AnnaS1371
      @AnnaS1371 Год назад +2

      Mardi Gras in the US was actually started in Mobile, AL

    • @leah-station88
      @leah-station88 Год назад +1

      I thought it was odd he didn’t include a specific “Gulf Coast” region at all 🤔

    • @crazydrummer181
      @crazydrummer181 3 месяца назад

      He completely left out the Gulf Coast region of Mississippi and Alabama.

  • @JamesCovington-WX5JJC
    @JamesCovington-WX5JJC Год назад +67

    As a Meteorologist I've learned all the subregions I could. You seem to be missing "Mid-South", "Ohio Valley", "Intermountain-West", "Four Corners", and "Texoma". Texoma is the area of TX and OK along the Red River. Texoma has 2 television DMAs (Sherman and Wichita Falls), both call their region Texoma. Oh and there's a giant lake 2 miles south of me named Lake Texoma. :) Oh by the way, the Ouachita and Ozark regions are separate and have somewhat different cultures, with the Ozarks having more tourism. The valley I-40 runs through is the line between them.

    • @davidkermes376
      @davidkermes376 Год назад +7

      don't forget southeastern minnesota, the valleys of the upper mississippi and st. croix rivers. it has been called "little switzerland" for its climate and scenery.

    • @AngelaMastrodonato
      @AngelaMastrodonato Год назад +5

      I think he overlooked Alabama. Isn’t there some sort of region around the Mississippi River? He may have mentioned it and I missed it

    • @ghoulannabanana
      @ghoulannabanana Год назад +2

      @@AngelaMastrodonato The Mississippi Delta, no?

    • @RoddyBiber
      @RoddyBiber Год назад +4

      Yeah he Completely missed Mid TN/Central AL

    • @retroryan838
      @retroryan838 Год назад +3

      He also missed the “Driftless” area in Southwestern Wisconsin, Southeastern Minnesota, Northeastern Iowa, and Northwestern Illinois. It’s a very beautiful area with sprawling hills and bluffs. The area is called that because the glaciers didn’t flatten it when moving.

  • @briancole1950
    @briancole1950 Год назад +66

    You really nailed it when you talked about how Buffalo and Rochester are more similar to say Cleveland, Pittsburgh, and Detroit then say New England. Something to also mention when it comes to these Sub regions is the accents that people have. For example folks in northern Ohio Have very different accents compared to say south east Ohio.

    • @alukuhito
      @alukuhito Год назад +1

      *than

    • @cdw2468
      @cdw2468 Год назад

      having lived in both i don’t notice it, what’s usually the difference in accent?

    • @johndenis7687
      @johndenis7687 Год назад +1

      i always thought of that region as the rust belt. in my head, i defined the area as going from west virginia through buffalo reaching towards cleveland, through pittsburgh and binghamton, into buffalo and rochester

    • @Undecided0
      @Undecided0 Год назад

      Rochester reminds me of Wilmington, DE & Buffalo reminds me of Bridgeport, CT.

    • @eliweikart7800
      @eliweikart7800 Год назад

      Very true. I grew up just south of Youngstown. Anything south of there pretty much begins Appalachia and you get a noticeable southern accent. Cleveland and Akron have their own unique accent (mostly sharper “A’s”)

  • @GanMic
    @GanMic Год назад +13

    I’d include extreme eastern Texas around Beaumont as part of the Cajun country as well.

  • @BaaFoKeemb
    @BaaFoKeemb Год назад +15

    So glad to see someone take the time/effort to actually split a mostly empty place like South Dakota into our three regions. We have a huge variety for a plains state, it's just that you still have to drive hours and hours between each zone 😅

  • @derekhiemforth
    @derekhiemforth Год назад +69

    Interesting that coastal California south of Eureka, and the central valley of California, wasn't included in any of the western subregions. But honestly, even though they're both entirely within California, I think they would be their own subregions anyway.
    "Coastal California" would basically be a band of land reaching about 50 miles inland, extending from Mexico to the outskirts of the northern S.F. Bay Area, and thus including all of the coastal Californian population centers and the central coast. Though these areas are fairly culturally, politically, and geographically distinct across that long, thin band, they're actually much more similar to each other than they are to the interior of California or other western subregions.
    "Central Valley" would be the land between Coastal California and the Interior Northwest/Interior Southwest regions west-to-east, and from Kern county in the south up to Shasta county in the north. In many ways, this subregion would be something of a blend of the Interior Northwest and Interior Southwest, both culturally/politically, and geographically (with sort of a milder version of the heat and dryness of the ISW, with more agriculture and ranching-friendly land similar to some in the INW).

    • @GeographyKing
      @GeographyKing  Год назад +33

      To be honest, in my attempts to not over discuss California since I'm from there, I sometimes under discuss or leave it out without thinking about it. But I do think that south of the northernmost part of the state and north of the Grapevine is a separate subregion. "Not-quite-desert agricultural and coastal" subregion.

    • @svenmorgenstern9506
      @svenmorgenstern9506 Год назад +5

      @@GeographyKing and good luck clsssifying the Owens Valley. Most of it would be very similar to the Central Valley, then you get to Bishop which is where tourism and agriculture have a head-on collision.
      Let's face it - you could just about turn the state into a country with all the cultural diversity.

    • @vendingdudes
      @vendingdudes Год назад +2

      @@GeographyKing Indeed. One can easily make the case that California itself contains or parts are contained within four or five separate subregions

    • @criss8552
      @criss8552 Год назад

      @@GeographyKing while I think the Central Valley is under discussed and interesting, you played it right by not over-doing California. This was about off the radar multi state regions and you nailed em.

    • @SpargeTheBand
      @SpargeTheBand Год назад +5

      @@GeographyKing Nice overview. I was wondering what happened to Coastal California! I do agree that Riverside and SB counties belong in the southwest. The only other thought is that the Rocky Mountain Region got lumped with the Southwest and I would say that from SLC over to Denver, down to Santa Fe up through western Montana could be broken out.

  • @superchargedhelium956
    @superchargedhelium956 Год назад +62

    I love the granular level of detail you put into your videos. As a geography nut, your content really scratches that itch, since most people find this stuff pretty mundane.
    You are the Dream Theater of geography channels lol

    • @rewanthr
      @rewanthr Год назад +1

      Your itchy nut has been scratched 😁🤣

    • @rewanthr
      @rewanthr Год назад +3

      But I totally get it. 😁😁 I feel the same as a geography nerd.

    • @DankWilliams66
      @DankWilliams66 Год назад +1

      Viper Geography King

    • @cobano
      @cobano Год назад

      Same I'm also a geography nut and I appreciate these videos

  • @ctorres228
    @ctorres228 Год назад +12

    I've been all over the country and this is a pretty solid breakdown. I would say that people in Buffalo, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, and Detroit (maaaaaybe Chicago but not really) think of themselves as a subregion commonly called the Rust Belt due to all of the manufacturing and trade that has taken place across the Great Lakes between these cities and their surrounding areas. All these cities are culturally very similar.

  • @gjustgaming3683
    @gjustgaming3683 Год назад +20

    The Midwest is so underrated because people are either mountains, forests, or beach’s. But the cornfields are so amazing and the random tree lines and bluffs make the beauty pop.

    • @whoopydingdong3138
      @whoopydingdong3138 Год назад

      that’s pathetic

    • @markbeck8384
      @markbeck8384 9 месяцев назад

      I love the Midwest. I do see the beauty of farms, trees, small hills, wildflowers, clear seasons, enough moisture, small cities, short commute times. all the normal foods--theater-stores.

  • @xerorenegado15
    @xerorenegado15 Год назад +118

    Love your channel Kyle, I'd love to see a video with you talking/explaining the "rust belt" region of the US!

    • @jthomashair
      @jthomashair Год назад +3

      I was thinking the same!

    • @Speedster___
      @Speedster___ Год назад +4

      TLDR it’s small/medium size towns taht we’re big manufacturing hubs that have been in steep decline. SW NY W PA OH especially Appalachia OH parts of IN MI WI. Sections of IL can be seen as RB

    • @goldfieldgary
      @goldfieldgary Год назад +2

      Now that even the Mountain States salt their roads, perhaps we should consider "rust belt" to be outmoded nomenclature.

    • @goldfieldgary
      @goldfieldgary Год назад +1

      I've made many of the same observations over my trucking career, although I would note that the boundaries are not always defined so neatly by county lines.

    • @louf7178
      @louf7178 Год назад +1

      I had a "word person" tell me that the "rust belt" was not about rusty cars. She, IIRC, contended it was about the soil. I was not familiar with that. I could never find my saved reply, but I can say for sure people mean rusty cars.

  • @Swim2TheMoon
    @Swim2TheMoon Год назад +4

    I love this video, Kyle! I've driven all over the U.S. and I think your divisions capture the cultural and geographic nuances of each subregion you identified. Thanks, as always!

  • @swrpggm
    @swrpggm Год назад +9

    An additional sub region is the Rocky Mountain Front Range running from Pueblo, Colorado up to Cheyenne, Wyoming. It is culturally and economically different from the High Plains and Southwest.

    • @nathanielrogers2429
      @nathanielrogers2429 9 месяцев назад +1

      In general the whole southwest is a lot less homogeneous than described in this video.

  • @chawndel8279
    @chawndel8279 Год назад +18

    I've lived my entire life in the Pacific Northwest. We are officially Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Northwestern Montana. Once on the Eastern side of the Cascades, we do call ourselves the Inland Northwest, which is a subregion of the Pacific Northwest. Idaho very much considers itself Pacific Northwest, as does Eastern Washington and Northwestern Montana.

    • @PsychicMycelium
      @PsychicMycelium Год назад

      California is not welcome. Dont worry. OR and WA will firmly tell you California has cooties. ID and MT can kick it with us. Northern Californian wish they were from OR.

    • @heatherpaige8897
      @heatherpaige8897 Год назад +4

      He is not disputing that but merely talking about the geographical landscapes and people therein. You have to agree that Western Washington is very different than eastern Washington vs southern Oregon despite it being the "PNW."

    • @jakeaaron
      @jakeaaron 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@heatherpaige8897 and Eastern Oregon is basically Western Idaho.

    • @gillboardman8998
      @gillboardman8998 11 месяцев назад

      Chawndel said it perfectly. Saaa-lute.😎👍

    • @HelloAceqwenfifn
      @HelloAceqwenfifn 9 месяцев назад +3

      Spokane area considers itself Pacific Northwest but its just more similar to Montana than Seattle. The wet vs dry difference is what divides them

  • @noelbecker7002
    @noelbecker7002 Год назад +4

    Thank you for this video. I appreciate that you took the time to do a whole video on this topic. It is so helpful to understand the subsections when exploring the history of our country.

  • @frida507
    @frida507 Год назад +53

    Thanks! This was educational for me as a European. The south for example is larger and more diverse than I thought.

    • @francisdashwood1760
      @francisdashwood1760 Год назад +3

      That's an understatement. You could fit 3 UKs into Texas, alone.

    • @nick3718
      @nick3718 Год назад +1

      @@francisdashwood1760 he said the south, not just texas

    • @francisdashwood1760
      @francisdashwood1760 Год назад +2

      @@nick3718 LOL...I know what he said, genius. You may note that I wrote ''alone'' after Texas, duh...lol.

    • @iambored7440
      @iambored7440 9 месяцев назад

      Maryland is a southern state btw, I don’t blame the guy because only half the counties are

  • @JB-qt4hp
    @JB-qt4hp Год назад +11

    An additional subregion, at least culturally, would be what is often called "The Mormon Belt," which of course would be Utah, but also south, east, and central Idaho, a large portion of Arizona, plus a number of counties in Nevada, Wyoming, and western Montana.

  • @vercingetorix444
    @vercingetorix444 9 месяцев назад +7

    As someone who's lived all around the Great Lakes region you absolutely nailed it down to the county level. Nicely done. Northern MI doesn't have a lot in common with southern MO except nice people, nice to see them distinguished.

  • @michaelgarlick5686
    @michaelgarlick5686 Год назад +61

    I have lived in Nevada and Utah most of my life and the subregion I hear people most often refer to this region as is the "Intermountain West", which I understand to basically be a circle you could draw connecting Salt Lake, Boise, Reno, and Las Vegas. Basically the basin and range area between the Rockies and Sierras. Love your videos Kyle.

    • @zoey2211
      @zoey2211 Год назад +8

      Honestly I’ve always associated Las Vegas and Salt Lake with the Southwest culturally and geographically, albeit a specific subregion of it. Both are desert cities with high elevations and both were at one point claimed by Mexico, and later by Mormons -This goes for a lot of northern/central Arizona too
      I feel the 15 freeway between SLC and Reno sort of loosely marks the northwestern border of the Southwest if that makes sense, any further into Nevada you start to hit eastern Oregon/Idaho which is very much a different thing

    • @jazzcatjohn
      @jazzcatjohn Год назад +6

      @@zoey2211 Grew up in St. George and have never thought of Salt Lake City as Southwest. Kyle got it right.

    • @honeybadger0810
      @honeybadger0810 Год назад +7

      I agree. I was disappointed he never mentioned the Intermountain West. People always forget the overwhelming influence the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints had in settling the area, and how its reflected in the culture. I grew up considering everything as far north as Boise ID to as south as Phoenix AZ, as far west as Las Vegas NV and as far east as Denver CO as the Intermountain West.
      Also, when I moved to the Portland area, I was surprised by how many people considered Idaho part of the Pacific Northwest. Maybe they're only thinking of the panhandle?

    • @zoey2211
      @zoey2211 Год назад +6

      @@jazzcatjohn grew up in eastside Salt Lake and went to high school in Tucson, and I always have 🤷‍♀️

    • @ST19859
      @ST19859 Год назад +1

      @@zoey2211 I15 is between Vegas and SLC, Reno to SLC is I80.

  • @ELMS
    @ELMS Год назад +6

    This is an excellent analysis. You really identify some distinctions and sub-distinctions that are spot-on. 👍

  • @toastedpastries
    @toastedpastries Год назад +23

    As a long time resident of South West Missouri, the sub region here makes so much sense. Although Missouri is a Midwest state from a far, being in the Ozarks has a much more southern feeling and mentality to it. Much like you could find throughout Arkansas.

    • @Snarkapotamus
      @Snarkapotamus Год назад +4

      Yep. Once you get out of the Springfield/Branson metro area, it gets pretty hicky, pretty fast! It's completely different from the rest of the state above I-70 or the cotton fields in the SE part of the state.

    • @MintyLime703
      @MintyLime703 Год назад

      The Osarks felt lonely as hell to me. I live across the river in Illinois further north, not far from Hannibal. In 2018 I drove down there to bail out a friend who had no way home. I had never been that deep into Missouri before and I was expecting more of the same I was used to seeing along the river, but no. It still had the caves and geography, but it seemed so empty. For a popular vacation area the towns surrounding the lakes are just depressing to look at. Well at least the ones I traveled through from the north and into Laurie. I was in town for about 20 minutes before my friend and I headed home as I just wanted out of there. It made home in Adams county Illinois seem comparatively comfortable.

    • @lf4061
      @lf4061 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@MintyLime703 and yet, those people are mostly content and would likely give you the shirt off their back if they thought you needed it. Most actual towns are not right off the highways, most want to live further away from traffic noise. I have traveled to most states and I am always happy to get back to Missouri where people have more manners and are extremely friendly and caring, even in the suburbs of big cities.

    • @Eyesorecrymore
      @Eyesorecrymore 5 месяцев назад

      I live in central iowa. Northern Missouri is definitely like us. It's only the very southern part of Missouri that I would even consider South

  • @Mbongmaxhl
    @Mbongmaxhl Год назад +9

    Alaska is actually a giant plot of land, with several different subregions. The interior (where I live) has different weather and cycles when compared to that of someplace like south central or south east (which I have also lived in)
    For context I’m from Texas originally and I just decided that when I was 18 I wanted to travel so I did, and I’ve been to almost all of these regions lmao it’s crazy

  • @NicksDynasty
    @NicksDynasty Год назад +7

    Shoutout to Great Lakes Industrial

  • @badguy5554
    @badguy5554 Год назад

    Well done. Don't believe I've ever seen analysis as good as the one you just presented.

  • @erikberg8098
    @erikberg8098 Год назад +6

    The High Plains/Low Plains difference is spot on. There is a noticeable climate difference if you travel just 250 miles from central Nebraska to our home in Kansas City, MO. It’s green & more humid in KC, and the air feels a bit dryer out in that part of Nebraska.

  • @Clydes.Shop78
    @Clydes.Shop78 Год назад +13

    Those of us from Mississippi would definitely disagree that all of Mississippi is the Delta. The MS Delta is it’s own animal, but hey it’s a start.

    • @naydee
      @naydee Год назад +3

      Surely left out Biloxi, Ocean Springs, Mobile and Pensacola. 🤷🏻‍♀️

    • @markbeck8384
      @markbeck8384 9 месяцев назад

      Really interesting. i would love you to explain. ,@@naydee

  • @builderbbob
    @builderbbob Год назад +6

    I like how there are regions that get smaller and smaller and smaller, like West Coast, Pacific Northwest, SoCal, San Diego region of SoCal, and I can go on and on up and down

  • @Amcsae
    @Amcsae Год назад +6

    Great video!
    One nitpick- it was a bit visually confusing in the High/Low Plains section when you talked about the 'green plains' as a possible name for the low side, but the high/brown side was colored green on the map shown, and the low/green side was a goldenrod/orange-y color. Maybe swap those?

  • @TyCannonPeace
    @TyCannonPeace 7 месяцев назад

    Just stumbled upon this video.... Awesome content, and very detailed and factual explanations of regions in the United States...Love geography and history, so I subscribed.

  • @jasonrotolo8271
    @jasonrotolo8271 Год назад +57

    Great video, Kyle! As a trucker, I get to see all of this exactly as you described. And as a southern Louisianian, it was nice to get some recognition as not being part of the cultural south. Of course, southern Louisiana can be divided into the New Orleans metro area -where I live- and the Cajun part of the state. New Orleans is unlike anywhere in the USA, including the rest of Louisiana.

    • @la7era1u54
      @la7era1u54 Год назад +3

      I totally agree. I am originally from Maine, but I moved to the New Orleans area about 7 years ago. Then about 3 years ago I moved just south east of Baton Rouge and I was amazed by the difference from N.O. to B.R.. Especially the accent. I'm always telling people how amazed I am that people here in south east LA sound totally different from only 30 or 40 miles away. And I mean totally different. One thing that is very obvious is that the people around N.O. tend to not pronounce their Rs in many words similar to the North East, but 30-40 miles northeast and they use a hard R like people from the south. I've lived in many areas of the country, but I've never seen anything like this

    • @chewy99.
      @chewy99. Год назад +1

      From the family of mine that’s been to NO, they say it’s similar to Key West. Well not including any French stuff obviously.

    • @jasonrotolo8271
      @jasonrotolo8271 Год назад

      @@la7era1u54 keen observation. One thing that Hollywood has never gotten right is the NOLA accent.

    • @jasonrotolo8271
      @jasonrotolo8271 Год назад

      @@chewy99. that's an interesting comparison.

    • @gxlorp
      @gxlorp Год назад

      No new Orleans is not unique. Citation: some dick hipster who made a youtube video: "Your city is not unique"

  • @andrewchristensen1609
    @andrewchristensen1609 Год назад +27

    Being from the West I'm not as familiar with the name/sub-region 'Piedmont' but having French as a second language quickly helped me understand. Piedmont literally translated is 'foot mountain' which I assume refers to the foothills that are prevalent in this region. Many times I wish I had learned Spanish instead of French simply (living in the West) for day-to-day usefulness. But knowing French can be quite helpful when deciphering many words in English and/or place names
    Thanks for another great video Kyle!

    • @alanlight7740
      @alanlight7740 Год назад +4

      The Piedmont region borrowed its name from the same region in Italy, but the etymology is the same: at the foot of the mountains. And yes, the Piedmont is more or less the foothills, though in North Carolina the Piedmont region is actually sandwiched between two mountain ranges - the Appalachians and the Uwharries. The one issue I have with the video is with saying that the culture in this region is more or less the same as on the coastal plains (or low country). It isn't. The food culture, for instance, is quite different. That's not to say that there is no overlap, of course, but once you get into the Piedmont seafood is far more scarce than it is along the coast. Along the coast it seems like everyone has a boat, in the Piedmont most people do not and boating is generally something one does on vacation if at all. Culturally, much of the Piedmont has more in common with Appalachian culture than with low country culture.

    • @K.b.173-dog
      @K.b.173-dog Год назад +2

      Im from the piedmont south! Nice to meet you 😊

    • @wesmorgan7729
      @wesmorgan7729 Год назад +1

      @@alanlight7740 I think it depends on the state. I'm from Piedmont VA and historically it was settled by people from Tidewater, so it had that plantation culture (although smaller than in Tidewater). Even the Piedmont Virginia dialect is very similar to the Tidewater dialect. I do agree with the food comment and regardless of the state, Appalachia certainly influenced the Piedmont's culture.

    • @alanlight7740
      @alanlight7740 Год назад

      @@wesmorgan7729 - no doubt there's some overlap and some variance. I grew up in Charlottesville before moving down to the Waxhaws (near Charlotte), and I even spent a year in the Piedmont part of Alabama. Each place has similarities and distinct differences. Charlotte is about in the middle of the Piedmont in the Carolinas, and it also marks a meeting point for three distinct cultures: Tidewater, Appalachian, and Deep South. But the dividing line is blurry. This particular region also has German influence from the gold miners who came in the early 1800s, and the Piedmont area of Alabama has a bunch of Italians who came in the 1870s.
      My point was simply that lumping the Piedmont together with the Tidewater culture is far too simplistic.

    • @jamesgoode9246
      @jamesgoode9246 Год назад

      @@wesmorgan7729 -- I think the Piedmont region was named for the Piedmont region of Italy
      because of its topography, not because of its culture.

  • @ColonelSanders17
    @ColonelSanders17 Год назад +4

    The cool part about where I live in Colorado is that I live close to where 3 of those sub-regions converge. I love living in the American West, I can still feel the reminiscence of the Old West when I go places around the state. I get to see the Rocky Mountains everyday, I love my home state!

  • @williamjones7163
    @williamjones7163 8 месяцев назад

    You did a pretty good job of identifying the different subsections. The fact that you broke it out by county is pretty specific. Good Job.

  • @west5500
    @west5500 Год назад +4

    Hi Kyle. I love your videos. I used to teach Social Studies to 6th, 7th, and 8th graders. Your topics are often the most fun things we studied. Anyway, one comment on this video. (By the way, I grew up in Wyo, Mont, and ND, and lived a long time in Seattle, and now live in the Bay Area. And...I lived in many places during a four-year hitch in the Navy in the early-mid 1970s). One thing I once heard is that "Baltimore is the northern-most southern city." I always liked that for its sensitivity to what is "southern" and the character of Baltimore. Anyway, thank you for your videos.

  • @Fiatbob
    @Fiatbob Год назад +13

    As someone from San Bernardino-Riverside Counties (i.e., the Inland Empire), it so nice to not be lumped in with LA for once. The Inland Empire has always felt more Southwestern economically and culturally than the coastal regions of Southern California. Thanks for the insight!

    • @zacharymartin826
      @zacharymartin826 Год назад +7

      As someone from this same area, but living in LA I totally agree; however, I do wish he would’ve spent some time on coastal south and central California. He sorta skipped it

    • @ghoulannabanana
      @ghoulannabanana Год назад +3

      I agree. I hate to be *that person from California* but our state alone has so many different biological and social regions it's worthy of its own video imo. Coastal south vs coastal north, wet vs dry forests, Central California, the High Desert, the Sierra Nevada's, the chaparral/Inland Empire, the rural north, etc etc. Also as someone from the IE as well, I always considered us to be where the Southwest meets the LA sprawl specifically, both a gateway to the Southwest and to coastal California as a whole. Completely socially separate from LA.

    • @mechashiva8328
      @mechashiva8328 Год назад +4

      @@ghoulannabanana I hate to be that person too but, none of us in Nor Cal say Central California. It just seems to be everyone in So Cal that gives that distinction. I never really get the opportunity to ask them why they call it that. We all consider it (the Valley) a sub region of Nor Cal no different than the Bay Area.

    • @freedomlover8412
      @freedomlover8412 Год назад +3

      Kyle grew up in Ca. Thats why he knew.

  • @wynntaylor1
    @wynntaylor1 Год назад +1

    Love your channel Kyle. Never change

  • @eastcoasttone3952
    @eastcoasttone3952 Год назад +3

    As someone who grew up in MD and has spent a lot of time in VA too your description of the mid atlantic was 100% on point imo

  • @JonathanAllen0379
    @JonathanAllen0379 Год назад +4

    You hit it out of the park with this one.👍🏻

  • @Daveissocool
    @Daveissocool Год назад +6

    Your Great Lakes industrial was spot on. I’m from Cleveland and I’m always surprised how much Buffalo, Pittsburgh, and Detroit are similar. My buddy from Buffalo rolls his eyes when someone says New York City 😆

    • @stopmakingsense9915
      @stopmakingsense9915 Год назад +1

      I’m from Albany and do the same when someone says Buffalo.

  • @humdinger7275
    @humdinger7275 Год назад

    Intelligent breakdown, I like the thoughtfulness behind these regions.

  • @BornofFire117
    @BornofFire117 Год назад +6

    Creole country here. You did a great job marking off the individual parishes in Louisiana. I’m an Acadian and I can definitely confirm that when you hit I-10 and go north it’s no longer Cajun country.

    • @ConnorM1995
      @ConnorM1995 Год назад +1

      Wouldn’t say I10 is the line depends where you are. Heavy cajun influence all along 190 and even into avoyelles parish. As long as you stay more central in the state

    • @BornofFire117
      @BornofFire117 Год назад +1

      @@ConnorM1995 yea. That is a nice little pocket, although, there are differences in the way those people and the more southern people speak and understand.

  • @cosmicfleur9032
    @cosmicfleur9032 Год назад +5

    Thanks for the content! ..your videos are always interesting

  • @elise85391
    @elise85391 Год назад +11

    As a Texan, I think people in El Paso and San Antonio, and those areas of the state that you put in the Southwest, would consider themselves in the Southwest too. Culturally they have much different influences than the other major cities like Dallas, Austin, and Houston

    • @desertdc123
      @desertdc123 Год назад +4

      I need to travel more below Del Rio. But one guy I know who teaches in San Antonio, but lives in Harlingen on breaks plus travels all over. He considers south Texas the "southwest" but not the "desert southwest". The latter he says is where creosote bush takes over west of the Pecos. Sounds good!

    • @jamesgoode9246
      @jamesgoode9246 Год назад +1

      @@desertdc123 -- Yee Mon, I believe that your "one guy" is correct.

    • @Chesemiser
      @Chesemiser Год назад +1

      I felt like the Colorado and Utah portions I kinda disagree with, that is more intermountain west than anything else

    • @ad8110
      @ad8110 Год назад

      id say that makes sense. it is culturally more closer to NM, Arizona and inland southern california than austin, or san diego for example

    • @adams8132
      @adams8132 8 месяцев назад

      El Paso, yes, because it sticks way out there in the Southwest. But not San Antonio, it is just regular (ugly) South Central Texas. Not the Southwest.

  • @stevewaterhouse3025
    @stevewaterhouse3025 2 месяца назад

    thanks Kile, love your work

  • @brandona.2494
    @brandona.2494 Год назад

    I greatly appreciate the accuracy of this video.

  • @studgerbil9081
    @studgerbil9081 Год назад +5

    Don't be afraid to ignore state boundaries when defining regions.

  • @grantmiller9614
    @grantmiller9614 Год назад +23

    As someone from Missouri I would say that the ozark region extends much more east and north than you show. Basically anything south of St. Louis and about 10 miles west of interstate 55 is more culturally and geographically similar to the Ozark Plateau than the Great Plains. Also, the “boot heel” region extending up to cape girardeau generally alines more culturally with the Mississippi Delta. Even though they are equidistant between Memphis and St Louis, you see a lot more people wearing Grizzlies merch. Great work with the video! I just know you like hearing the perspective of locals

    • @williammollyvanronzelen8241
      @williammollyvanronzelen8241 Год назад +1

      I caught that too. Having grown up in Dent County, the idea of classifying it as anything other than the Ozarks is laughable.

    • @TheKeksadler
      @TheKeksadler Год назад +4

      I agree, the majority of the Ozarks *is* Southern Missouri, all the way up to St. Louis. (It's odd to me that he didn't even include Springfield- the Queen City of the Ozarks, or, hell, the Lake of THE OZARKS) Culturally, St. Louis, in my opinion, feels like an exurb of the "industrial Midwest", while the "boot heel" is definitely more aligned with the Mississippi Delta (I mean geographically speaking, it's the same!).

    • @LukeWapelhorst
      @LukeWapelhorst Год назад +3

      I was going to come here to say exactly this, even south St. Louis county, you start to see some Ozark culture seeping through. I-44 is a good divider between Midwestern and Ozark culture

    • @williammollyvanronzelen8241
      @williammollyvanronzelen8241 Год назад +2

      @@LukeWapelhorst yes, apart from being the gateway to the west, St. Louis is also pretty much the gateway to the Ozarks... much to the chagrin of some city residents, I am sure. I would somewhat disagree with the I-44 divide, although to me it seems like a spectrum of difference. Getting super micro, I look at a town like Hermann and basically see the Midwest, but Owensville is definitely Ozarks, and they are both north of I-44 and within 20 minutes of each other. I suppose there is some subjectivity to the boundaries though

    • @davehughesfarm7983
      @davehughesfarm7983 Год назад

      Yep...And KC and Omaha are THE HEARTLAND.....

  • @user-vf3gf4xq3v
    @user-vf3gf4xq3v Год назад

    You are spot on with your descriptions!

  • @rdspam
    @rdspam Год назад

    Great call on these. For the regions with which I’m familiar, these are spot on.

  • @Will-fn7bz
    @Will-fn7bz Год назад +72

    I feel like the way you defined the different regions has a lot of merit. However, as someone who lived many years in the Texas cities of Lubbock, Midland/Odessa, DFW, and Bryan/College Station I'm not sure if grouping the South Plains the way you have is accurate. There are very distinct differences in factors such as industry, climate, and economy that make the Oklahoma, Texas Panhandle, and Northcentral Texas area very different from East Texas and the Houston/Galveston areas of the Gulf Coast. A fairer assessment might be to divide it just to the East of a line from Waco through DFW to Lake Texoma. East and Southeast of that is a very different part of Texas that doesn't go together with Northwest or Northcentral Texas, and is also very different from Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Arkansas. Just a thought. Love your channel.

    • @zacwiltz2959
      @zacwiltz2959 Год назад +7

      Agreed. There’s always that discussion of “is Texas the South?” And culturally, it’s more like everything east of I-45 (Dallas to Houston) ties more to the South. It’s not so much as plains as it is Piney Woods up north and then the coast having a similar geographical feel to Louisiana. Ft Worth is “the gateway to the West”

    • @comondantemendez4732
      @comondantemendez4732 Год назад +2

      Being from odessa, was feeling the same way.

    • @hanksilman4016
      @hanksilman4016 Год назад +3

      Even then I think it'd be valid to carve out another narrow region down the center starting at San Antonio and going up to (at least) Abilene for the Hill Country, because it is so different with all the turbines and hills. Basically that diamond-shaped corridor between 83 and 281.

    • @johnindigo5477
      @johnindigo5477 Год назад +1

      @@hanksilman4016 central Texas with no borders then?

    • @johnindigo5477
      @johnindigo5477 Год назад +1

      I would say Galveston to Brownsville is the third coast. San Antonio and everything north is central Texas, hill country. West of eagle pass to Laredo is where west Texas really starts. Underneath all this is the valley. My dad always called dfw south Oklahoma.

  • @willandiah2193
    @willandiah2193 Год назад +5

    Well done! I lived in Colorado for 40 years and knew it was west but, it always felt more than just land locked west. You described it perfectly.

  • @stinka4079
    @stinka4079 Год назад +1

    I love this channel. I've gone down the complete Rabbit Hole watching all of your videos. Great work.

  • @PaulDubsy09
    @PaulDubsy09 Год назад +1

    Good video here, thanks for posting GK.

  • @thebusiness70
    @thebusiness70 Год назад +44

    As a Virginian man who has lived here for over 20 years, you described Virginia PERFECTLY!! Well done!
    We have three groups of Virginians: Mid-Atlantic people (NOVA & VA Beach), Southern people (Richmond or lower) and Appalachian people (Roanoke, Radford, Bristol etc) out west.
    I’m from Fredericksburg, VA and I’m stuck in the middle of two accents (Southern and Mid-Atlantic) and It’s sooo dam annoying that I have to re-wire my brain to understand both accents depending if I go *30 minutes* north or south on I-95 to see family or friends🤦🏾‍♂️people think I’m from NY when I’m in Richmond, VA and I’m like…. “I live like 25 minutes away from here like what?!”😂

    • @brandonmoss9103
      @brandonmoss9103 Год назад +6

      It’s a relief to see this from a native Virginian. I moved to VB from the Midwest and when I tell people from the Hampton Roads area that this isn’t the south, boy do they throw a fit.

    • @sovietturtles1131
      @sovietturtles1131 Год назад +2

      @@brandonmoss9103 can confirm I am currently throwing a fit. You can’t tell me that Hampton Roads isn’t more similar to Richmond culturally than it is to NoVA

    • @brandonmoss9103
      @brandonmoss9103 Год назад +1

      @@sovietturtles1131 certainly more similar to Richmond than Nova, but “similar” doesn’t mean the same.

    • @sovietturtles1131
      @sovietturtles1131 Год назад

      @@brandonmoss9103 with that logic we should just lump all of tidewater VA including Richmond in the mid Atlantic category

    • @brandonmoss9103
      @brandonmoss9103 Год назад

      @@sovietturtles1131 not really sure how you came to that conclusion but okay dude.

  • @paulyC
    @paulyC Год назад +4

    Great video. One comment I would make is to put the State Abbreviations on the zoomed-in map areas. It would certainly help us non-US folk.

    • @steviesevieria1868
      @steviesevieria1868 Год назад

      I guess you get a break since you’re not from the US, because I was about to say if you need the states labeled you’re on the wrong channel! 😉

  • @richardbeckeman3794
    @richardbeckeman3794 Год назад +2

    Great video. You did a good job summarizing the Midwest despite never living thier. I’m from Michigan and have spent time in both the Great Lakes industrial and the upper Midwest. Two things that stood out to me was that the Great Lakes industrial is more colloquially known as the Rust belt and it might be relevant to mention the yooper/ Wisconsin /Minnesota accent as it’s quite unique from the rest of the Midwest.

  • @jamesdyer376
    @jamesdyer376 Месяц назад +1

    Kyle, you da' man. Thanks for the great content.

  • @LuckyDT
    @LuckyDT Год назад +7

    Really great video! I'm very happy you included us Cajuns as well, we are still here! Hurricanes, gun violence, Who Dat! Honestly though, I'm very proud of this heritage, and it genuinely makes me happy to see it recognized as the unique brand of everything that it is. it's a culture into itself that can only be found in south Louisiana (thank God for that right?) haha. I thought you had lumped us in with Mississippi at first...Gross! lol always interesting to me to see which smaller groups of culture are able to keep it rolling in the USA, and wear that culture loud and proud. It is fascinating to see what survives over the years, and why it survives. Lassiez le bon temps rouler and whatnot!

  • @randylee1777
    @randylee1777 Год назад +11

    I’m from Baltimore. I always considered the Mid Atlantic as Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia, After watching your video my opinion stands.

    • @athos1974
      @athos1974 Год назад

      I lived in Roanoke VA for 5 years. Western VA definitely does not see itself as Mid Atlantic. Western VA residents identity themselves as Appalachian.
      I have friends in Richmond, and they identify as Mid Atlantic. Somewhere in-between the two cities is the psychological dividing line between the two regions.

    • @pcariola1
      @pcariola1 Год назад

      New Jersey and NYC are absolutely mid Atlantic in fact to me NJ is as mid Atlantic as it gets

    • @randylee1777
      @randylee1777 Год назад +4

      New Jersey probably is a Mid-Atlantic state but most consider it a suburb of New York and Philadelphia. Like this video there are gray areas subject to opinion and interpretation.

    • @daholyspirit2783
      @daholyspirit2783 Год назад

      @@randylee1777 Definitely even Connecticut is what I’d consider a bedroom state to nyc as Ri is to Boston.

    • @frankaltaccounter1275
      @frankaltaccounter1275 Год назад

      Given how much the South was divided in the video, I'd think it'd be fair to divide what's called the Mid Atlantic here into at least two sub regions, one Baltimore area to Norfolk, the other one, the greater NYC area going as far north as Albany.
      Arguably metro Philly, southern NJ and DE would be another one. But if we want to avoid just dividing into metro areas, I'd lump them in with the more northern region.

  • @brettcallero5519
    @brettcallero5519 Год назад

    Really great job on this.

  • @skrabacz58
    @skrabacz58 Год назад +1

    Really enjoy your videos about US geography. Live in Memphis now but lived in Florence, SC

  • @tonyward3496
    @tonyward3496 Год назад +35

    Southern Indiana was missed. As a native of that area, I would classify it as "Southern". Early immigrants were from Kentucky and that set the tone which still exists today. Its very agricultural and rural. A lot of muddy rivers and bottomland. Southern accent compared to Central and Northern Indiana. Cusiine also Southern without the grits. Just thought I would share this with you and your audience.

    • @joshuameadows9546
      @joshuameadows9546 Год назад +4

      Yeah he missed South Eastern Illinois too. I’d say we pretty much are spot on as far similarities. We’re literally on the Illinois Indiana boarder. 45 min from Terre Haute and 25 min from Vincennes.

    • @dogfrosinos70
      @dogfrosinos70 Год назад +3

      I lived in Fort Wayne for a while and the first time I went to southern indiana I was shocked by how different it was from northern indiana. Northern indiana I boring af

    • @nobodyreally7339
      @nobodyreally7339 Год назад +6

      And western Kentucky/Tennessee too

    • @arcticg7644
      @arcticg7644 Год назад +5

      Southern Ohio is very similar. Definitely Appalachian.

    • @joswift360
      @joswift360 Год назад +5

      Yeah the subdivisions were impressively good but the south definitely cuts the bottom tips of Missouri, Illinois, and Indiana. The boot of Missouri in particular is well known across the state for being like our own piece of Dixie

  • @help8help
    @help8help Год назад +11

    Maybe you could do a video on where the watersheds, aquifers, and aqueducts feed water to cities and farms. Yes it’s nerdy and contentious.
    It’s also complex. I think it’s kinda cool that Idaho has the Lost River that disappears into a huge aquifer that re-emerges hundreds of miles away in the Thousand Springs as clear pure water that’s 58 degrees year round.

    • @eedgerton769
      @eedgerton769 Год назад +1

      I actually think you are onto something re watersheds and regional consciousness. Certainly in a state like NY which has a complex drainage system (made more complex by an artificial river that gave rise to so many of its cities). I live in a part of NYS that drains north to Lake Ontario and the St Lawrence River and our local news media seems to coincidentally cover those areas more frequently. I think nationally you probably see this happening as well. It likely has an effect on what you consider to be “home” or “neighbors.”

    • @help8help
      @help8help Год назад +1

      @@eedgerton769 I know it’s a much smaller scale, but the region of Idaho I live in is called the Magic Valley. It was named for a century old irrigation system that transformed the desert into a huge farming area. It really does connect us because we all depend on it.

    • @steviesevieria1868
      @steviesevieria1868 Год назад

      @@help8help where does the water come from, river or?

  • @Nethanel773
    @Nethanel773 8 месяцев назад

    I really enjoyed this, specifically trying to identify subregions. It's fascinating to consider the dynamics between an exceptionally vast land mass, broad diversity of geography and biomes, the diversity of its inhabitants both New World native nations and Old World migrant nations, and unique circumstances that brought about this about.
    Often when looking at maps of the country, I see economic and cultural differences between the rural areas of states and their cosmopolitan counterparts. The cosmopolitan regions are so dense and dynamic that they appear like city-states. And when you include the satellite cities and large towns in that subregional grouping, they seem like they could become their own states. Not getting into current politics, but just observing how human dynamics operate.
    Thanks for putting this up.

  • @fireworksfanatics2777
    @fireworksfanatics2777 Год назад +1

    I absolutely love geography, this video was awesome

  • @MC-810
    @MC-810 Год назад +11

    When you talk about the subregions of New England generally speaking you are correct, you have Northern and Southern New England. However look at a population heat-chart of New Hampshire and Maine. The majority of the population of these states live in the southern parts and many people who live in these areas actually commute into Boston for work (particularly southern NH).
    An argument might be made that even those states can be cut in half and the southern portion could be southern New England.

    • @jrf527
      @jrf527 Год назад

      I was going to say the same thing. As someone who lives in Massachusetts but very close to New Hampshire there isn't much difference when you cross the border. It's basically still Greater Boston. I'd say you really hit the cultural shift at the lakes region.
      Also, I think the Berkshires in western MA probably belong more in the Northern New England subregion since they're more similar to Vermont than eastern MA.

    • @B586MT
      @B586MT Год назад

      Agreed

  • @soonerdave01
    @soonerdave01 Год назад +5

    As a former resident of Virginia, you nailed it on the head. Western and Eastern/Northern Virginia are 2 distinct regions both culturally and geographically. Especially culturally.
    Same for Oklahoma, where I grew up. NW OK and SE OK are completely different with people in SE OK (aka "Little Dixie") identifying with the old South due to immigration into the region following Reconstruction. Blizzards are not uncommon in the panhandle whereas snow is not common at all in SE OK.

    • @desertdc123
      @desertdc123 Год назад

      Yes. When I was in college in Norman, Oklahoma City area people were strongly "southern" or they didn't seem to care! Coming from Denver, most Oklahoma speech had a slight southern accent, thicker in people from the east and hardly at all from Ponca City west.

  • @MartinReiter143
    @MartinReiter143 Год назад

    Excellent breakdown

  • @bsdnfraje
    @bsdnfraje Год назад

    Glad I watched. I was gonna gripe about that thumbnail, but you surprised me and included NE AL in Appalachia. Good man.

  • @highbrass3749
    @highbrass3749 Год назад +4

    We moved from Southern California to East Tennessee a year and a half ago. A year later we went on vacation to Charleston SC, driving through that area was the first time I actually felt like I was in “The South”. It just has a different feel and I love it. There are “Southern States”, and there is “The South”.

  • @mbkarhu1
    @mbkarhu1 Год назад +3

    You make learning about USA geography easier and fun. Thanks!

    • @firstylasty9417
      @firstylasty9417 Год назад +1

      Seconded! Narrator's knowledge corroborates my experiences of the regions / sub-regions I've been to, also.

  • @atlaskinzel6560
    @atlaskinzel6560 Год назад

    You really did a great job with this.

  • @jimjames1920
    @jimjames1920 5 месяцев назад

    Excellant analysis, Kyle.

  • @albertconstantine5432
    @albertconstantine5432 Год назад +28

    Always thoughtful, always interesting. Of course we quibble, and I'd put the Bootheel Region of Missouri in the Mississippi Delta & Surroundings. The change is noticeable when driving south of Cape Girardeau as one reaches the low, flat Mississippi delta area and its deep-soil/controlled wetlands. The four Missouri counties involved raise a lot of cotton, rice and watermelons and no one who lives there considers themselves Midwesterners.

    • @bignix23
      @bignix23 Год назад

      Amen to that

    • @williammollyvanronzelen8241
      @williammollyvanronzelen8241 Год назад +1

      yea, also, as kind of a wildlife/cultural anecdote, I think you can say you've left the Midwest and entered the Ozarks/the South when the average fisherman has 6 dozen different crappie jigs in his tackle box but has never seen a walleye in his life.

    • @johnsyler8580
      @johnsyler8580 Год назад +3

      Here in southwest MO the attitudes and way of life are far more southern than midwestern.

    • @davehughesfarm7983
      @davehughesfarm7983 Год назад +2

      Thats right South of Missouri river ya in the south... And KC and Omaha is the Heartland of America...Not midwest..

    • @johnsyler8580
      @johnsyler8580 Год назад +2

      @@davehughesfarm7983 I learned that the heart of the confederacy in Missouri was in the KC area and east along the Missouri River with good soil where was a need for slaves.

  • @scout3058
    @scout3058 Год назад +5

    Wow. I've lived in multiple subregions (Cajun/Creole, Great Lakes, Peninsular Florida, Southwest Coastal, Mid Atlantic, and Lowcountry) and never realized it. That said I grew up in Johnstown PA (Cambria county, which you have as Greal Lakes) and we always considered ourselves as Appalachians.
    Good video. 👍

  • @ayo3968
    @ayo3968 Год назад

    Great video as always

  • @mattt.4395
    @mattt.4395 Год назад +3

    I love how he colored the "green plains" brown and the "brown plains" green

  • @TheSamknu
    @TheSamknu Год назад +5

    Have you already done a video on the driftless region of N.E. Iowa, S.W. Wisconsin's and S.Western Minnesota?
    If not, I bet you'd like it.
    Missed by most of the glaciation that flattened the great plains, the old hills, glacial deposits and ancient meteor impacts as well as the flora and fauna make this region pretty special.

    • @TheSamknu
      @TheSamknu Год назад

      @@aaronpalmer1895 I grew up in Decorah.

    • @denveringram2304
      @denveringram2304 Год назад +1

      I worked in LaCrosse and agree that the absence of glaciation makes this area of Se MN, ne IA, Sw Wi very unique. Beautiful territory.

  • @AllanEvansOfficial
    @AllanEvansOfficial Год назад +11

    Why did you skip the southern California coast? You have to account for all regions!

  • @rebeccaketner816
    @rebeccaketner816 Год назад

    Love this! Very informative.

  • @shirleybalinski4535
    @shirleybalinski4535 Год назад

    Great job!! Hit the nail on the head.

  • @richardparisi9747
    @richardparisi9747 Год назад +5

    You may already know that in Louisiana the Cajun country parishes are often collectively referred to as Acadiana, of which the hub is Lafayette (pronounced as "Laugh-ee-yet") though the culturally French southern part of the state includes several parishes, including parts of metro New Orleans, where many people have French sounding names though they aren't descended from the Acadians who left Nova Scotia but instead are descended from Germans from the Alsace-Lorraine region.

    • @erinjohnson1124
      @erinjohnson1124 8 месяцев назад

      I’m a creole from New Orleans and not descended from Germans at all, not all of us are. My people are African and French. And yes, Alsace-Lorraine was part of the German Empire at one point, but my French ancestors pre-date that time period by 50 years.