My mom would always refer to the L train as the “BMT-Canarsie”. Would frustrate the heck out of me when I was an obnoxious teenager who knew everything. You’ll find that, in NYC, some older folks still refer to the subway lines by their private company and its terminus.
I was born and raised in Brooklyn NY, I've been using the NYC subway for at least 40 years and I never refer to it as BMT, IRT, etc. I just call it the train or the subway. That's what I like about tomdnyc videos, they are informative, even to native New Yorkers. I feel like I'm just getting to know the city I live in. And I love Tom's funny querks and the new SAT vocabulary word feature. Also, love the "Sick Plug" feature, it keeps all the videos connected so that you don't have to repeat the whole thing. 👍🏾
Funny, too, how we called it “the train” in the city (and still do). Those taking the commuter rails are more likely to call it the “subway”, to differentiate from the LIRR, NJT, and MetroNorth.
Like most native New Yorkers, I know a lot about where I live and work but not as much about the rest of this diverse city. Very informative! Thanks for giving New York style of guided tours- unfiltered, a bit sarcastic, even a bit fatalistic at times, but always good-humored and very well-done. Great job!
Interesting and informative video. Coming to NYC again this week (son has lived in Manhattan for 16 years). We love to visit and it might sound crazy but we look forward to riding the subway.
Tom you’re a pretty great host, and I always enjoy your humour in the videos as well. This was a great one and I’m really looking forward to more on the subways in the future.
Thanks a lot for watching! Check out the Patreon if you can (tomdnyc) and feel free to reach out through my website (www.tomdelgado.net - I couldn't get the freakin' ".com") or IG (tomdnyc) for a tour.
Dude, Fulton Street before the new station was a friggin nightmare. It was a rat's nest of disconnected (or barely connected) stairways, mezzanines, platforms, entrances / exits, etc. The new spot might be a little Disney but holy hell is it easier to navigate.
17:30 missed opportunity to mention that that station (Queensboro Plaza) is the only one in the entire subway system where IRT (A Division) and BRT (B Division) trains can be seen across the platform from each other (7 and N)
Tom !...Great video about the NYC Subway and how it was built privately at the beginning ... at the end of this video your best sentence was "Before I get Crotchety" ... LOLOL Your humor just gets better and better! I didn't know August Belmont was an investor. In Newport, "Belcourt Castle" (built by the son of August Belmont) was recently restored by Carolyn Rafaelian. Put this on the list!.... Stay well! You know your stuff! Well done you!
The Subway is great . My Brooklyn friend got sick and tired of driving me around sightseeing so he showed me how to use the subway. It's amazing that a system so complex can be so simple and user friendly. I always took the local cars so I didn't miss where I got off. It's also great that it's so dependable you don't need a schedule to know when the next train comes. August Belmont, Jr, had his own private subway car, the Mineola, that he took to inspect the lines. It was restored and is in a transit museum. I'm sure you've been to the Transit Museum in Brooklyn to see the old cars. You could done the video from there. My friend lived about 10 to 12 blocks from the L Line.so I knew how to get there and ride into Manhattan. I also took the line to Coney Island.
Tom didn't give Eric a hard time about the Matrix movie AND he told everyone to love each other during the wrap-up. Coincidence?? I doubt it, no siree. In all seriousness though, I was so excited to watch this episode! The subway has always fascinated me. I was mystified by it as a kid because I'd always see it on TV and in films and wonder how it was possible for such a massive project to be tunneling around beneath a giant city. You're the best, Tom.
You keep amazing me with how casually and easily you spout off encyclopedic knowledge of NYC….i love how you deliver it with humor…I will be in NYC in the next 12 months…this time I’m going to hire you for a Central Park tour Plus your ability to sing on cue any song is only surpassed by James Corden…(new show idea…Sidewalk Karaoke with TommyD?)
the city of my birth. I've ridden those trains since the late 50's. currently the "R" line, Brooklyn. oh the stories I could tell. excellent video, well done👍✌
Tomdnyc, thanks for telling us about the Manhattan grid. I see how significant it is. It helps with orientation to location. I don't mind that you mentioned it often in several videos. It helps as a reminder and reinforces the significance. 👍🏾🙂
When I worked when I was in high school at 34th and Fifth at B.Altmans in the late 60s they had a pneumatic tube along the main first floor which would send receipts and notes from one dept to another.
I feel bad you had to deal with cold rain when doing the video. But, it was good! Wish we could have some of that rain down in the South! Thank to you and Eric now we know how the construction of the subway got started - I've always wondered about that. Thank you!
I enjoy your videos, Tom, but this one had a major omission.Brooklyn is the city's most populated borough, partly because 4 private railroads were all competing to take riders to Coney Island. The beaches and the amusement parks were major attractions. As time went on, developers built housing along the route to Coney Island. Those private railroads were eventually taken over by NYC. Today we have the B & Q trains on one line, the F train, the N train, and the D train all providing transportation to Manhattan and beyond. All of those make their last stop in Coney Island.
At least Brooklyn had the common sense to connect all the lines at the end. When I was in high school I lived along the 6 train, but my school was on the 4 train, both in the Bronx. I had to go into Manhattan 125th street just to transfer back into the Bronx (or take two buses). Would be amazing if the Bronx ever connected all the lines.
I lived in Flushing, Queens, NYC and would take the No 17 bus to Main street, Flushing, Queens. Then take the 7 train to Time Square then transfer to others trains to Downtown Wall Street for my job. Back in the 1980's Memories. Did you Tom ever visit the Subway museum in Brooklyn?
Speaking of Design there's some subway tiles making up the domed "pergola" of the building which could be liberated for home kitchen and bathroom DIY projects.
At City Hall prior to 1940 and 1953, the Fulton Street EL ran over the Brooklyn Bridge and it was discontinued and removed. 2nd and 3rd Avenue ELs terminated in the area until the station was discontinued in 1953 and removed by 1954. BRT lines included Fulton Street, Myrtle Avenue, Lexington, 5th, and 3rd Avenue ELs in Brooklyn. Mayor LaGuardia was not a fan of Elevated lines, he and Robert Moses were responsible for their removal.
Keep in mind that while Queens and the Bronx certainly saw considerable population growth as a result of the subway expansion, Brooklyn was developed around a bunch of private surface and elevated railroads that later became part of the subway system.
I was hoping you would mention Martha Cooper/Henry Chalfant and Subway Art/Style Wars! Lots of connections to be made between the social conditions of NYC in the 70s/80s, graffiti and the rise of street art/NY art scene at large in the 80s, and NYC politics. And of course, it reflects an artform unique to the city in that time. I can't imagine you have a lot of people asking for this, but if you ever did anything covering it I'm sure it'd be great. Plus Keith Haring loved Subway Art!
OMG A RUclips Channel only a bus driver from San Francisco could love! Sick plug #6, 'The Dao of Doug: The Art of Driving a Bus.' And yes I loved the tips on how to ride at the end.But don't forget my favorite subway movie with Wesley Snipes, Woody Harrelson, and Robert Blake: Moneytrain. Robert Blake is the evil General Manager out to fire our transit cop heroes."Nobody stops my Moneytrain!'
Cult movie classic The Warriors I believe had the most Manhattan, Queens and Brooklyn locations scenes both outside and in the subways. Maybe you can create a series on that. Love watching your videos.
That was a great film. A friend and I saw it at a drive-in in a small college town in Kentucky in like 1980. We were bored silly before we ran across it that night, and it was just the right amount of 'different' from the place we were in to really hit the spot. I'll never forget the ghostly effect of that one gang that had painted Harlequin faces...so cool!
I would like to see Tom heart and reply to comments like a lot of other RUclipsrs do. If he did I would be more inclined to comment, because then I would know he is at least reading my comments. I do like his videos though. It is fascinating to listen to him teach about NYC history, and he has a great teaching style too, coupled with humor. I think he would make a great school teacher. His students would love him. Hope you are reading this, Tom! LOL
Ha, yes, I usually do read them. I have a hard time replying though. I should be better about it. I appreciate you watching and commenting though!... I'm always watching...(inset Psycho theme song)
@@tomdnyc1 -- LOL .... See, you even make me laugh with a comment. You're a very funny guy. Thank you so much for replying. You could've knocked me over with a feather when I got the email notice that you had hearted my comment. LOL. Take care there in the big city!
17:25 information.... "Long Island City readies to add another residential high-rise to its burgeoning ranks, as completion approaches at Silverback Development’s 22-story, 109-unit luxury condo at Hero LIC at 24-16 Queens Plaza South at the foot of the Queensboro Bridge. The Woods Bagot design perches a sleek Art Moderne tower atop a prewar base, preserving a touch of history at one of the oldest neighborhoods in Queens. Currently available one-bedroom units start at $775,000, and two-bedrooms go from $1.15 million."
Your subway tour/history was great. I think more NY infrastructure like water supply, power supply, steam usage as well as highways and parkways. Robert Moses always gets people talking but usually negatively but he did a lot of positive things too like Parks, beaches and transportation.
@@JulienB_BTW That's somewhat true but I think back before WWII Harlem was more Italian than black and the number of blacks and Puerto Ricans in NYC was relatively low. After the war many blacks and Puerto Ricans migrated to the city. The parkways and overpasses were designed to be low profile to blend in with nature. However you are right that Moses design was not bus friendly and prevented some people from enjoying the beaches on Long Island. Moses was heavey handed with evictions too but the majority of buildings removed in eminent domain were 19th century buildings without indoor toilets and bathrooms. If they weren't torn down they would have made living conditions worse for the people. Also it's important to judge people in context with the conditions of their times and not apply todays standards on them. After all many government officials like in Tammany Hall with boss Tweed were as corrupt as can be and if you wanted to get thingsdone you needed power and you had to show results.
A subway movie you missed was "Die Hard with a Vengeance". It also features Tompkins Square Park, as covered in your Alphabet City video ... Sick Plug #1! And then there's "The Warriors", gang members trying to get back to Coney Island by subway, as mentioned in your Coney Island video ... Sick Plug #2!
I've never been to NYC as a tourist, but have as a trucker. I think it would so cool to ride the entire train system there, both underground and above ground, and see everything that way. I wonder how many hours and days it would take to do that, and how much would it cost?
My mom would always refer to the L train as the “BMT-Canarsie”. Would frustrate the heck out of me when I was an obnoxious teenager who knew everything. You’ll find that, in NYC, some older folks still refer to the subway lines by their private company and its terminus.
Yes! They lived in a different NYC!
I still think of the numbered trains as the IRT. I learned that term from my parents.
I was born and raised in Brooklyn NY, I've been using the NYC subway for at least 40 years and I never refer to it as BMT, IRT, etc. I just call it the train or the subway. That's what I like about tomdnyc videos, they are informative, even to native New Yorkers. I feel like I'm just getting to know the city I live in. And I love Tom's funny querks and the new SAT vocabulary word feature. Also, love the "Sick Plug" feature, it keeps all the videos connected so that you don't have to repeat the whole thing. 👍🏾
Funny, too, how we called it “the train” in the city (and still do). Those taking the commuter rails are more likely to call it the “subway”, to differentiate from the LIRR, NJT, and MetroNorth.
@@conniedelio That's correct. Technically, the NYC train is a subway because it runs underground.
Please never stop doing this. 🙏
Like most native New Yorkers, I know a lot about where I live and work but not as much about the rest of this diverse city. Very informative!
Thanks for giving New York style of guided tours- unfiltered, a bit sarcastic, even a bit fatalistic at times, but always good-humored and very well-done.
Great job!
Interesting and informative video. Coming to NYC again this week (son has lived in Manhattan for 16 years). We love to visit and it might sound crazy but we look forward to riding the subway.
"The Taking of Pelham 123" is one of my favorite movies. It's like a time capsule of NYC in the early seventies.
One of my favorite NYC movies. Walter Matthau was a genius.
Tom you’re a pretty great host, and I always enjoy your humour in the videos as well. This was a great one and I’m really looking forward to more on the subways in the future.
Sick plug for Tom !
@@fiftylester Haha hopefully !
@@artmaltmanhe’s a stand up comedian. #fail
Thanks a lot for watching! Check out the Patreon if you can (tomdnyc) and feel free to reach out through my website (www.tomdelgado.net - I couldn't get the freakin' ".com") or IG (tomdnyc) for a tour.
Great special effects! I almost believed it was raining.
best fx
One of the most fascinating memory of my visit to USA was the New York subway, this is a very informative video and I learned so much.
Cheers 🍻 Tom , you’re efforts are much appreciated from this side of the pond here in England 👍🏻😉🤗
Cheers and all the best Rich T!
I like how Eric doesnt get your jokes and you just continue on🤣🤣🤣
Tom, You're still the best.
Dude, Fulton Street before the new station was a friggin nightmare. It was a rat's nest of disconnected (or barely connected) stairways, mezzanines, platforms, entrances / exits, etc. The new spot might be a little Disney but holy hell is it easier to navigate.
Tom, improving NYC one video at a time. Thanks Tom.
👍👏😊❤️ thanks Tom for the ride on the subway
Absolutely LOVE your videos and was just visiting Brooklyn and used the subway and buses. Zero issues and lots of cool pics!
The camera quality is CRISPP
This was so helpful! I live in nyc and the subway fascinates me, thanks for the information!
Awesome info video Tom! Sick Plug!!
17:30 missed opportunity to mention that that station (Queensboro Plaza) is the only one in the entire subway system where IRT (A Division) and BRT (B Division) trains can be seen across the platform from each other (7 and N)
I love your videos, your humor, and knowledge of NYC! Thanks for doing these and making them so fun to watch!
It’s amazing how much knowledge you have
Wow I learned so much , and I thought I already knew a lot
It really sounds well thought message of the first ever subway tracks..thank you guy
Tom !...Great video about the NYC Subway and how it was built privately at the beginning ... at the end of this video your best sentence was "Before I get Crotchety" ... LOLOL Your humor just gets better and better!
I didn't know August Belmont was an investor.
In Newport, "Belcourt Castle" (built by the son of August Belmont) was recently restored by Carolyn Rafaelian. Put this on the list!.... Stay well! You know your stuff! Well done you!
Perfect combination of history, interesting facts and comedy. I love your videos Tom. Hi from Perth Australia
PERTH WOOOOOO
The New York subway is intriguing and almost like a world of it's own.
The Subway is great . My Brooklyn friend got sick and tired of driving me around sightseeing so he showed me how to use the subway. It's amazing that a system so complex can be so simple and user friendly. I always took the local cars so I didn't miss where I got off. It's also great that it's so dependable you don't need a schedule to know when the next train comes. August Belmont, Jr, had his own private subway car, the Mineola, that he took to inspect the lines. It was restored and is in a transit museum. I'm sure you've been to the Transit Museum in Brooklyn to see the old cars. You could done the video from there. My friend lived about 10 to 12 blocks from the L Line.so I knew how to get there and ride into Manhattan. I also took the line to Coney Island.
Tom didn't give Eric a hard time about the Matrix movie AND he told everyone to love each other during the wrap-up. Coincidence?? I doubt it, no siree.
In all seriousness though, I was so excited to watch this episode! The subway has always fascinated me. I was mystified by it as a kid because I'd always see it on TV and in films and wonder how it was possible for such a massive project to be tunneling around beneath a giant city. You're the best, Tom.
Tom man you and your buddy Eric are doing a great job brother! Fricken outstanding content it's great. Keep it up!
You keep amazing me with how casually and easily you spout off encyclopedic knowledge of NYC….i love how you deliver it with humor…I will be in NYC in the next 12 months…this time I’m going to hire you for a Central Park tour
Plus your ability to sing on cue any song is only surpassed by James Corden…(new show idea…Sidewalk Karaoke with TommyD?)
I'm in. Reach out to me and let's hang!
Enjoyed this one because of the serious talk. Thanks!
Great videos from Tom as always featuring tours of new york city (nyc tour, nyc history etc)
Love you guy!!
I loved the "Coold Bloooded" reference lol. You are a pretty dope dude, Tom. I enjoy watching these vidoes
I love the dedication.
the city of my birth. I've ridden those trains since the late 50's. currently the "R" line, Brooklyn. oh the stories I could tell. excellent video, well done👍✌
An excellent book by Clifton Hood titled: 722 Miles. That is the definitive history of the NYC subway system.
I love your work Tom- this video is a particular favourite!
Love your videos
Tom put in work on this video. Takes dedication to get drenched like that for art.
For real though ! Paid off this was a great video
Also takes a little miscalculation on what should have been a covered location!
Love the rain! Thanks for all the great tours!
Great video...Sick plug!
Cool tour! As a fan of the London underground it was really good to learn more about the NYC subway. Keep doing what you're doing!
Your adorable Tom….great video! 🥨🥨🥨
Best Tomdnyc i've seen.
This is beautiful
I always enjoy the byplay with Eric, Phil, Stewie, and the other camera people.
I agree. My wife and I really like listening to him interact with whoever the cameraman is. But the cameraman needs a mic!
The "Doors Closing" profanity chime was just perfect🤣🤣
I have in my library an authoritative history of the NYC subway by Brian J. Cudahy (sp?). Thanks for this update!
Q train, that’s my favorite line. It’s new, it’s relatively clean, and it doesn’t smell like a shoe yet… Give it time
Tomdnyc, thanks for telling us about the Manhattan grid. I see how significant it is. It helps with orientation to location. I don't mind that you mentioned it often in several videos. It helps as a reminder and reinforces the significance. 👍🏾🙂
When I worked when I was in high school at 34th and Fifth at B.Altmans in the late 60s they had a pneumatic tube along the main first floor which would send receipts and notes from one dept to another.
Hey Tom! What's up ! Wow! Another awesome video as always !!!
Sensational, as always! Scorsese needs to film *you* at Hoyt-Schermerhorn, waiting for the GG, or the G, as the kids say.
When I was a young boy The Seabeach, the B train, the D the F trains. The R/R train. The Culver Line. The BMT.
I feel bad you had to deal with cold rain when doing the video. But, it was good! Wish we could have some of that rain down in the South! Thank to you and Eric now we know how the construction of the subway got started - I've always wondered about that. Thank you!
Perfect, Tom!
A Tomdnyc and Cash Jordan collab on the history of any addresses for rent would be awesome!
That WOULD be an interesting combo!
I enjoy your videos, Tom, but this one had a major omission.Brooklyn is the city's most populated borough, partly because 4 private railroads were all competing to take riders to Coney Island. The beaches and the amusement parks were major attractions. As time went on, developers built housing along the route to Coney Island. Those private railroads were eventually taken over by NYC. Today we have the B & Q trains on one line, the F train, the N train, and the D train all providing transportation to Manhattan and beyond. All of those make their last stop in Coney Island.
At least Brooklyn had the common sense to connect all the lines at the end. When I was in high school I lived along the 6 train, but my school was on the 4 train, both in the Bronx. I had to go into Manhattan 125th street just to transfer back into the Bronx (or take two buses).
Would be amazing if the Bronx ever connected all the lines.
Really like the new editing style with the humorous segue cuts and background music. Keep it up!
I lived in Flushing, Queens, NYC and would take the No 17 bus to Main street, Flushing, Queens. Then take the 7 train to Time Square then transfer to others trains to Downtown Wall Street for my job. Back in the 1980's Memories. Did you Tom ever visit the Subway museum in Brooklyn?
Speaking of Design there's some subway tiles making up the domed "pergola" of the building which could be liberated for home kitchen and bathroom DIY projects.
A SENSE OF HUMMUS ALWAZE HELPS IN ANY VIDEO OR SITUATION..& U SIR SURE GOT ONEOF THE BEST ON RUclips!..NO SHIT!
At City Hall prior to 1940 and 1953, the Fulton Street EL ran over the Brooklyn Bridge and it was discontinued and removed. 2nd and 3rd Avenue ELs terminated in the area until the station was discontinued in 1953 and removed by 1954. BRT lines included Fulton Street, Myrtle Avenue, Lexington, 5th, and 3rd Avenue ELs in Brooklyn. Mayor LaGuardia was not a fan of Elevated lines, he and Robert Moses were responsible for their removal.
Tom D in the place to be. You and Eric have a great dynamic, the content is Fuego 🔥. Most entertaining channel #bestshowever
Thomas Delgado Belmont ...Nice ring to it...! ;)
"Tomas" Delgado Belmont has an even better ring to it!
Keep in mind that while Queens and the Bronx certainly saw considerable population growth as a result of the subway expansion, Brooklyn was developed around a bunch of private surface and elevated railroads that later became part of the subway system.
Thank you for your new vid, still learning from you. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
17:12 Tom has a future career as a stock model
I actually took pictures for some back in the day! They're probably in some workplace harassment brochures somewhere...
I was hoping you would mention Martha Cooper/Henry Chalfant and Subway Art/Style Wars! Lots of connections to be made between the social conditions of NYC in the 70s/80s, graffiti and the rise of street art/NY art scene at large in the 80s, and NYC politics. And of course, it reflects an artform unique to the city in that time. I can't imagine you have a lot of people asking for this, but if you ever did anything covering it I'm sure it'd be great. Plus Keith Haring loved Subway Art!
Great Idea for a tour!
OMG A RUclips Channel only a bus driver from San Francisco could love! Sick plug #6, 'The Dao of Doug: The Art of Driving a Bus.' And yes I loved the tips on how to ride at the end.But don't forget my favorite subway movie with Wesley Snipes, Woody Harrelson, and Robert Blake: Moneytrain. Robert Blake is the evil General Manager out to fire our transit cop heroes."Nobody stops my Moneytrain!'
Great video. Made me chuckle a few times too :) 😀
Cult movie classic The Warriors I believe had the most Manhattan, Queens and Brooklyn locations scenes both outside and in the subways. Maybe you can create a series on that. Love watching your videos.
That was a great film. A friend and I saw it at a drive-in in a small college town in Kentucky in like 1980. We were bored silly before we ran across it that night, and it was just the right amount of 'different' from the place we were in to really hit the spot. I'll never forget the ghostly effect of that one gang that had painted Harlequin faces...so cool!
A pretty good video, as usual.
Props to Eric’s camera work. A really clean video in the rain
The first segment of the line, with service at most stations, opened from South Ferry to Grand Central Depot on August 26, 1878
Love these!!!
love your videos. thank you
I can't believe you forgot perhaps the greatest movie ever featuring the New York subway system, "The Warriors"! Warriors! Come out to plaaaayyyy!!
I would like to see Tom heart and reply to comments like a lot of other RUclipsrs do. If he did I would be more inclined to comment, because then I would know he is at least reading my comments. I do like his videos though. It is fascinating to listen to him teach about NYC history, and he has a great teaching style too, coupled with humor. I think he would make a great school teacher. His students would love him. Hope you are reading this, Tom! LOL
Ha, yes, I usually do read them. I have a hard time replying though. I should be better about it. I appreciate you watching and commenting though!... I'm always watching...(inset Psycho theme song)
@@tomdnyc1 -- LOL .... See, you even make me laugh with a comment. You're a very funny guy. Thank you so much for replying. You could've knocked me over with a feather when I got the email notice that you had hearted my comment. LOL. Take care there in the big city!
Hi Tom, I love your videos, Thanks!
From Kew Gardens
great video
"I'm right over here Eric" 😂😂😂😂
Great video Tom, most interesting
" Good Lord I'm soaked" lol.. You're too funny! ❤
17:25
information....
"Long Island City readies to add another residential high-rise to its burgeoning ranks, as completion approaches at Silverback Development’s 22-story, 109-unit luxury condo at Hero LIC at 24-16 Queens Plaza South at the foot of the Queensboro Bridge. The Woods Bagot design perches a sleek Art Moderne tower atop a prewar base, preserving a touch of history at one of the oldest neighborhoods in Queens. Currently available one-bedroom units start at $775,000, and two-bedrooms go from $1.15 million."
Tom you are too funny. And camouflaged right into the everyday life underground., “Laying down on the train seats” 😂😂😂 🙏🏾
Interesting, thanks! Regards from Baltimore.
Love your videos!!
Love the ambiguity of your "BIG DEAL" exclamations, because they could just as easily be followed by "WHO CARES?" or "HOW AMAZING!"
You filmed last Saturday? You madman!
The algorithm waits for no man!
Your subway tour/history was great. I think more NY infrastructure like water supply, power supply, steam usage as well as highways and parkways. Robert Moses always gets people talking but usually negatively but he did a lot of positive things too like Parks, beaches and transportation.
He did like to build parks and beaches for white people.
@@JulienB_BTW That's somewhat true but I think back before WWII Harlem was more Italian than black and the number of blacks and Puerto Ricans in NYC was relatively low. After the war many blacks and Puerto Ricans migrated to the city. The parkways and overpasses were designed to be low profile to blend in with nature. However you are right that Moses design was not bus friendly and prevented some people from enjoying the beaches on Long Island. Moses was heavey handed with evictions too but the majority of buildings removed in eminent domain were 19th century buildings without indoor toilets and bathrooms. If they weren't torn down they would have made living conditions worse for the people. Also it's important to judge people in context with the conditions of their times and not apply todays standards on them. After all many government officials like in Tammany Hall with boss Tweed were as corrupt as can be and if you wanted to get thingsdone you needed power and you had to show results.
We are all Eric. I dig this channel. Funny and entertaining. I subbed
i cant believe you were in the rain! that’s dedication!
Pretty Good Video. Damn good, I enjoyed it like crazy.
I lived in NYC most of my life, worked for many years in Brooklyn but stll dont know much about the subway.
A subway movie you missed was "Die Hard with a Vengeance". It also features Tompkins Square Park, as covered in your Alphabet City video ... Sick Plug #1! And then there's "The Warriors", gang members trying to get back to Coney Island by subway, as mentioned in your Coney Island video ... Sick Plug #2!
I lived in NYC half my life and I had no clue about all that history. you made it enjoyable. I always hated history because it was boring to me.
Enjoyed this, do more on NYC Transit
I've never been to NYC as a tourist, but have as a trucker. I think it would so cool to ride the entire train system there, both underground and above ground, and see everything that way. I wonder how many hours and days it would take to do that, and how much would it cost?
Can’t comment on the number of hours you’d need, but it’ll cost you $2.75.
Sick Plug!
My Mom used to call the subways “IRON HORSE”