What Happened to Anchorage Alaska?

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  • Опубликовано: 7 дек 2023
  • What happened to Anchorage Alaska?
    References:
    US Census
    www.britannica.com/place/Anch...
    issuu.com/alaskanhistorymagaz...
    www.econport.org/content/hand...
    www.alaskahistory.org/anchora...
    web.archive.org/web/201203240...
    www.city-data.com/us-cities/T...
    www.anchoragepress.com/news/f....
    www.alaskahighwayjourney.com/...
    www.webcenterfairbanks.com/20...
    finance.yahoo.com/news/20-mos....
    247wallst.com/city/anchorage-...
    www.cbsnews.com/amp/news/fent...
    www.politico.com/news/magazin...
    www.politico.com/news/2023/09...
    alaskatours.com/alaska-first-....
    Library of Congress
    University of Washington
    U.S. Geological Survey
    National Park Service
    U.S. Department of Interior
    U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
    USAF
    Jim Balog
    Via Films
    Images:
    “Anchorage Skyline in Winter - Hotel Captain Cook - Anchorage Alaska.jpg” by Will Buckner is licensed under CC BY 2.0.
    “Anchorage at night.jpg” by Frank K. From Anchorage, Alaska, USA is licensed under CC BY 2.0.
    "'Who will make a lamp?' Winter gold sunrise reflected from oil buildings, Chugach mountain range, sky, Anchorage, Alaska, USA" by Wonderlane is licensed under CC BY 2.0.
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Комментарии • 478

  • @whimsicalhamster88
    @whimsicalhamster88 5 месяцев назад +613

    I was born and raised there. It was good as a kid because there's a lot of nature and fresh air, but as I hit my teens I quickly realized that people were pretty close-minded and that the only real opportunities there are in tourism or the oil industry. When oil was expensive, everyone was happy and when it was cheap, everyone got laid off. Since oil is a dwindling resource and the state doesn't use the money to actually invest in anything, you can't become a medical doctor or a lawyer at any university in the state and there is only one nursing school in Anchorage, that you kind of have to leave to learn anything that's not directly helpful to the oil or tourism industries. Most kids dream of leaving. I did over a decade ago and don't miss it.

    • @jamescrock2213
      @jamescrock2213 5 месяцев назад +21

      yall should have stayed hunkered in and became the main exporters america’s black metal

    • @greenidguy9292
      @greenidguy9292 5 месяцев назад

      Loser…

    • @polar8394
      @polar8394 5 месяцев назад +55

      Also someone from Anchorage and you took the words out of my mouth- got accepted by a much better university than UAA in the lower 48, and haven't come back in 5 years (except to visit) since there's just more opportunity down here.

    • @dawg2067
      @dawg2067 5 месяцев назад +8

      I’ve lived in Kodak Alaska for about 2 years. It’s a luv h*te situation

    • @llorablan9588
      @llorablan9588 5 месяцев назад +13

      @@dawg2067 It's Kodiak

  • @MidnightSkylineMA
    @MidnightSkylineMA 5 месяцев назад +797

    I visited Alaska over the summer, and Anchorage just felt very sad. Lots of homeless, especially natives, and a lack of any strong downtown.

    • @mls515
      @mls515 5 месяцев назад +108

      In some cases they've been kicked out of the small tribal village they're from for doing something bad and they can't go back. It is sad, usually substance abuse related. And in the winter they're still out there.

    • @KanyeTheGayFish69
      @KanyeTheGayFish69 5 месяцев назад +1

      Lack of a strong downtown? It’s not New York City. I think your standards are too high. It has fewer people than Lincoln Nebraska.

    • @davidsmith385
      @davidsmith385 5 месяцев назад +44

      Homeless in Alaska means your now part of the food chain.😅

    • @joeysworldsewer
      @joeysworldsewer 5 месяцев назад +11

      ​@davidsmith385 well same in a lot of states. Florida especially, alligators EVERYWHERE

    • @bennybeeeee
      @bennybeeeee 5 месяцев назад +39

      Some of them were banished by their tribal councils

  • @jazzcatjohn
    @jazzcatjohn 5 месяцев назад +266

    People who haven't lived in Alaska view it as an outdoor place. But for more than half the year it's very much an indoor place, conducive to spending long hours drinking at the bar. I lived in Anchorage for one year in 89-90. The winters are long, cold and dark with little to do. I couldn't handle it personally. But to each their own.

    • @naptime0143
      @naptime0143 5 месяцев назад +15

      I heard ppl who live in Alaska can sometimes go weeks without seeing the sun 💀

    • @justjay6445
      @justjay6445 5 месяцев назад +7

      When I was there I filled my time outdoors-even in the winter. It’s more or less how prepared you are by the way you dress. There’s the restaurant scene as well. Just depends how quickly you can make friends, date and so on

    • @PaulaDautremont
      @PaulaDautremont 5 месяцев назад +16

      I lived there before joining the Army. I was never bored during the winter because of my hobby - snow sculpting.

    • @RareGenXer
      @RareGenXer 5 месяцев назад +3

      Sounds like Northern Wisconsin and the UP!😆

    • @okamijubei
      @okamijubei 4 месяца назад +5

      But still great for astronomers, and snow enthusiasts.

  • @kodiakkeith
    @kodiakkeith 5 месяцев назад +368

    I lived most of my life in Alaska, though not in Anchorage. People that live outside Anchorage think of it as kind of a suburb of Seattle rather than part of Alaska. It's more or less the airline hub where you change from a small plane to a large one for your annual pilgrimage to somewhere tropical, or for business in the lower 48. That's it. Alaska is big, big, very big and with few roads. Anchorage is little more than a central transportation hub.

    • @shanechostetler9997
      @shanechostetler9997 5 месяцев назад +23

      I think you hit the nail on the head. My father in law went to Fairbanks in 1947, then down to Cordova in ‘51 then outside in ‘74. My mom , in Wrangell” in ‘33 till ‘52. Myself, I have fished from 1983 till the present, what I e seen is a boom and bust economy in general, but other than that, a few romantics and transient hoping to escape for various reasons. Of course there’s the necessities of corporate branches because of the big companies having a presence in where they operate. All that being said, I would live there somewhere if I didn’t live on beautiful Puget Sould😊

    • @danielzhang1916
      @danielzhang1916 5 месяцев назад +17

      it's the same reason why no one lives in northern Idaho, Montana, etc., there's nothing keeping people from leaving, so they leave for other states and the big cities, geography is a big factor in determining why people leave

    • @tbone6924
      @tbone6924 5 месяцев назад +40

      "A suburb of Seattle".... Had to LOL the absurdity of this. Anchorage and Seattle are roughly 1500 miles apart....so this is like calling Seattle a suburb of Chicago.

    • @tbone6924
      @tbone6924 5 месяцев назад +21

      @@danielzhang1916 no, it has nothing to do with geography. I am blessed to live in one of those places you claim "no one lives"...believe me, no one ever has lived in Montana and thought to them themself, " There is nothing keeping me here, I would rather go live in some inner-city hell hole!". The main reason these areas are sparsely populated is that the economies are based around farming, ranching, and outdoor recreation...none of these industries support a dense population. It is a simple matter of economics.

    • @danielzhang1916
      @danielzhang1916 5 месяцев назад +21

      @@tbone6924 read it again, that's basically what I already said, that's why people leave for big cities and don't return, because there's no real jobs or industry making people want to stay there

  • @tonyarmbrust
    @tonyarmbrust 5 месяцев назад +110

    I lived in Anchorage from 1991-97 while working at a local TV station there. That was a pretty good time to be there, but like the video explained, the town is heavily dependent on the oil industry, which has been declining there for almost the past 20 years. Add in the high cost of living, the long cold winters, along with the darkness that happens for half the year. It’s a rough place to live, and you have to be committed to live there permanently. For me, working in broadcasting means you have to move on, if you want to move up, and I did my time there. Many go up to Anchorage, live there for a couple of years for the adventure of it, before they ultimately return back down to the lower 48.

    • @whirving
      @whirving 5 месяцев назад +6

      Which is why the rest of the state say that Anchorage is great, its only 15 minutes from Alaska! But seriously. We love people who come here even for a short time. You are right about the difficulties, it is still a relatively new state and still short of basic development. A minus and a plus, minus for most. I expect you are still welcome, and even awaited to come back. That's how it works here still.

  • @user-ew4qn1um2l
    @user-ew4qn1um2l 5 месяцев назад +71

    Finished my tour with U.S. Customs in Anchorage, we lived there from 2000 to 2008. Our two youngest sons spent their formative years there. They look back with happy memories, and still consider Anchorage their home town. Much of what was said in the video is true, but many "positives" were omitted as well. Cleanest drinking water of any metropolitan area in the U.S. The best and most extensive system of dedicated bike trails going thru beautiful wooded areas of any city in the U.S. The indefinable charm of having an 800 lb. MOOSE wander thru your city neighborhood and browse in your front yard. Yes, it's true, a military and resource based economy located in the Far North probably has a population ceiling that limits unlimited growth. Which is just fine with many of the residents of Anchorage, who for several decades have said Anchorage ("Los Anchorage " they phrased it) was becoming much too big.

    • @RareGenXer
      @RareGenXer 5 месяцев назад +4

      Moose walking through town like the TV show Northern Exposure!😀

  • @HenryBenedictUSA
    @HenryBenedictUSA 5 месяцев назад +41

    Anchorage’s population has always stuck around 300,000. It’s mainly because a lot of young people don’t like to live in a place with 6 months of winter. If there were more incentives and places for the community to get together you’d probably see more people stick around.

    • @kv4648
      @kv4648 5 месяцев назад +4

      It's just oil money and tax exemptions. I think they're trying to attract older people

    • @HenryBenedictUSA
      @HenryBenedictUSA 5 месяцев назад +9

      @@kv4648 oil and tax exemptions don’t seem like a good enough incentive to bring people to Alaska. There’s a reason why millions of people live in sunny California.

    • @travisbakeriii3053
      @travisbakeriii3053 5 месяцев назад +3

      It was 250k when I left in '85. Hasn't changed much.

    • @vipermad358
      @vipermad358 4 месяца назад +1

      Too may people live there already!

    • @kathys.8686
      @kathys.8686 Месяц назад +2

      Not to mention the tired old backwater attitudes you find too much of in Anchorage and in Alaska as a whole. Most young people prefer more progressive, enlightened areas of the country that offer more opportunities for personal and professional growth.

  • @steves9905
    @steves9905 5 месяцев назад +158

    I am a manager in a large national corporation and recently took on anchorage in my territory. Spectacular scenery outside town, all around. But it is shocking how entrenched the homeless population is, and no doubt crime. It didn’t occur to me that a location with such extreme weather would have a large population living in the elements. I guess I thought that to live there you had to have the resources to withstand…I understand that last winter they herded everyone into a sports complex, where they proceeded to prey on each other.

    • @GardenerEarthGuy
      @GardenerEarthGuy 5 месяцев назад +10

      There were some films made of those fights- people were gambling.

    • @waynetompkins3006
      @waynetompkins3006 4 месяца назад +5

      Homeless people are just bad people who have hit bottom and are content to stay there.

    • @embracedmadness
      @embracedmadness 4 месяца назад +12

      @@waynetompkins3006that’s a very careless comment.

    • @dutchymon
      @dutchymon 4 месяца назад

      A State with lots of ice cold divorce happy women and fathers who may easily get behind in their payments, due to high rents and seasonal workin. These so called "dead beat dads" get their license automatically suspended by a draconian child "support" system. This produces many homeless men, who are at risk of freezing to death. Welcome to Alaska...

    • @latituderider
      @latituderider 4 месяца назад +8

      @@waynetompkins3006 You should try it for a week. A month. Maybe a year. Not everyone in that predicament deserves to be there. Sometimes life just fucks you that hard and there's nothing you can do about it but try to get back up. I speak from experience on that.

  • @DanTheMan189
    @DanTheMan189 5 месяцев назад +88

    It started as a tent city, and has reverted back to it's roots as a...tent city.

    • @francus7227
      @francus7227 5 месяцев назад +2

      As it should..... Alaska can't compete.
      We don't fight fires with buckets of water anymore.....
      Times change.

    • @heliosign
      @heliosign 5 месяцев назад

      We read your politics loud and clear.@@francus7227

    • @aydenhinsvark3011
      @aydenhinsvark3011 3 месяца назад

      Now that's a good one

  • @RayLabs
    @RayLabs 5 месяцев назад +77

    When I lived in Anchorage in the 70's to early 80's there was minimal major crime. Now the gangs have shown up and killings are at a high. Last time I visited was in 2010 and the whole city seemed to be in a state of decay.

    • @malcontender6319
      @malcontender6319 5 месяцев назад +26

      "Now the gangs have shown up"
      Euphemism, but we know what you're trying to say.

    • @alexandergonzalez1167
      @alexandergonzalez1167 5 месяцев назад

      What’s interesting if you check FBI crime stats anchorage had a murder rate over double of today’s rate in the 70s and 80s.

    • @bbo40
      @bbo40 5 месяцев назад

      Interesting. most 'gang members' I have known are not big fans of cold weather !?! @@malcontender6319

    • @Manuel-ew3dp
      @Manuel-ew3dp 5 месяцев назад

      @@malcontender6319 the black percentage has actually gone down since the 1970s shit for brains

    • @kv4648
      @kv4648 5 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@malcontender6319???

  • @easydrive3662
    @easydrive3662 5 месяцев назад +6

    The one big thing many people dont know about anchorage is that it has one of the worlds largest freight airports, certainly through the night widebody freight flights land and takeoff every 5 mins arriving feom all parts of the globe, because of alaskas position between the east and west its a major stop off airport for freight airlines.

  • @hendrsb33
    @hendrsb33 5 месяцев назад +21

    I've visited Anchorage 3 times, also lived there for 4 1/2 months while working in tourism. I very much enjoyed spending a summer there but had to rein myself in with spending, since most things are expensive compared to Arizona, where I normally live. I fell in love with the landscape but could never see myself living there year-round; couldn't handle winters. I saw all the homeless and wondered if there were enough shelters for them in the winter.

  • @jon06169
    @jon06169 5 месяцев назад +42

    I loved my time living in Anchorage, Alaska, from 2000 to 2004. My stepfather and my mother moved here. I went to Mountain View Elementary School (some of the best times of my childhood). My teacher, Ms. Anderson, is still there! I went to Clark Middle School for a couple of months before my family moved to California. In 2005, I moved back to live with my father in Michigan and have been here ever since. I would love to go back and revisit old friends, relatives, old grounds, and remembrances of the good times.

    • @ImaTroper
      @ImaTroper 5 месяцев назад +1

      I think I remember Ms. Anderson. Told stories all the time? If so, that's wild she's still there. Judging by your timeline, Clark was torn down and rebuilt right after you left, so it'll look a bit different from what your remember. Mt View elementary is still the same though.

    • @Michorida
      @Michorida 5 месяцев назад

      I’m from Michigan

  • @alaska1girls
    @alaska1girls 5 месяцев назад +23

    Im sorry but this video does not really delve into the issues or the reality an facts of why Anchorage is in decline and the State. Thats the part you left out, ALASKA is in decline, not because of oil production being in decline. The cost of living is high here but we traditionally had higher wages. We are no more expensive in many factors than any city on the west coast. Here are a couple of real life facts, the biggest demographic leaving Alaska are working age adults, Alaska is DEAD last in recovery after the pandemic. Anchorage School District is 1000 teachers short and we are on the verge of closing schools.
    A decade ago, a GOP Governor pushed through a bill that CUT our oil taxes, with zero commitments in return. Thats less money for every thing. Meanwhile Alaskans who pay no taxes have come to expect our annual Dividend which is free money from the government. With less revenue coming in the politicians buy votes by cutting every thing to pay the dividend. So, now everything is in decline, roads, schools, ferries etc. Meanwhile there are not enough workers for local business because no one wants to raise a family in with the draconian cuts, and the economy suffers. So surprise homelessness and crime went up. Our Mayor and Governor are incompetent and corrupt, and do brilliant things like use federal dollars to beef up bridges so foreign mining companies can haul oar over them. Those are the highlights….

    • @areynoso5660
      @areynoso5660 4 месяца назад

      Do you also believe the previous mayor Berkowitz was corrupt or is it just the GOP politicians?

    • @cabracove
      @cabracove 4 месяца назад +3

      Spot on. Dunleavy and his Conoco golden parachute

    • @darthsionreven
      @darthsionreven 2 месяца назад

      Ah an anchorage assembly worshipper. Disgusting.

  • @jlvandat69
    @jlvandat69 5 месяцев назад +48

    I visited multiple areas in Alaska in the early 2000's as part of my work, including Anchorage. The winter months are absolutely brutal for multiple reasons, including severe lack of sunlight. Not mentioned here is that Alaska is in the top 3 states in terms of suicide rate, and has very serious drug and alcohol problems. It takes a very unique personality to thrive in Alaska, there are some who can.

    • @StarNBars94
      @StarNBars94 4 месяца назад +1

      I worked in AK for a summer. I couldn't imagine living there for a winter. Being in darkness half the year definitely takes a special kind of personality like you mentioned

    • @glitchchungus8318
      @glitchchungus8318 3 месяца назад

      and where did you get that info? Alaska doesn’t have many sucides per person as Texas or New York does. and 60% of drugs are legal in Alaska so “overdoses” isn’t a rare or bad thing there

    • @jlvandat69
      @jlvandat69 3 месяца назад

      @chungus8318 CDC Data: Texas: 15.8 deaths per 100,000 population ,
      Alaska: 30.8 deaths per 100,000 population, United States: 14.04 deaths per 100,000 (2021 data)....combination of factors result in Alaska having the highest suicide rate in the nation, IMO the lack of sunshine may be the main reason.

  • @WC3isBetterThanReforged
    @WC3isBetterThanReforged 5 месяцев назад +10

    I lived there 2015-18 and my heart is still there. It is easily my favorite city.

  • @FatGuyTries
    @FatGuyTries 2 месяца назад +2

    I just wanted to say thank you for using a real voice to narrate this. I am sick and tired of these lazy channels using fake robot voice narrators.

  • @mangochipps0795
    @mangochipps0795 5 месяцев назад +13

    Grew up in Taos, NM and lived in Albuquerque for many years. I'm familiar with what its like to live in cities isolated from the rest of the world. Or so I thought until I moved to N. Wisconsin; I've never been so homesick in my life. The winters here last half the year and they're brutal. Even Minn. And Chicago being within driving distance doesn't make it much better. I can't imagine what it must be like living within a stone's throw of the arctic circle.

  • @ShirleySerious
    @ShirleySerious 5 месяцев назад +29

    I went to Anchorage in July. It looked like any mid sized city but downtown was kind of lacking. The kind of person that would thrive in Anchorage is someone that would not do well elsewhere. Think of someone who went there to "start over". It's a shame because despite its problems, it's not a terrible place. Very pretty actually.

  • @patriley9449
    @patriley9449 4 месяца назад +2

    I lived there as a military brat from 1962 to 1965 . I was born in 1951, so do the math. As a kid, I absolutely loved it. Lots to do outdoors all year-round. You have to get used to the mosquitos in the summer and the cold in the winter. A great place to be a young boy. We moved away before the pipeline brought in prosperity and crime. My wife asked about going back for a visit, but I told her that I loved the memories as it was back in the day.

  • @vincentlittrell6845
    @vincentlittrell6845 4 месяца назад +5

    Thanks for posting this. I grew up in Alaska (Kenai Peninsula mostly). My mom also grew up there (Chugiak). I loved it there but after high school (Homer class of '86) I left the state excepting a couple of summers in the late 80s. I got a job as a top soil delivery guy in Anchorage the summer of '88, that was a great job. I learned the Anchorage area very well then. I used to bulldoze soil, screen it, and load up a dump truck with it at a pit off of Tudor where a *Hampton Inn* now stands (the last I knew). Good memories! My mom was in the '64 earthquake, she was with some friends in a car out on the "old" Glenn Highway when the quake hit. They could feel the road shuddering as they drove so they stopped and got out of the car and she said it was a fun experience. They didn't know how serious the earthquake actually was while they were "dancing" with it next to the car stopped in the middle of the highway. My grandfather was a supervisory electrician at the time and he was busy rewiring businesses and government buildings damaged by the quake. Thanks again for posting.

  • @tonymanero5544
    @tonymanero5544 5 месяцев назад +25

    Sorry, but the explanation of stagnant population growth seems incomplete. The entire state of Alaska is oil based, and oil prices have risen. Oil production, has been supplemented by fracking in the lower 48, mostly Texas, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, etc. so drilling for oil in Alaska harsh conditions and transportation seem less attractive. Also, Alaska was created out of a USA purchase from Russia, so the Feds control certain lands. These valuable lands are to benefit the entire country, not just people of the state of Alaska which became a state only after WW2.

    • @whirving
      @whirving 5 месяцев назад +6

      So Alaska is the USA's little battery on reserve? Or are we due our Constitutional mandate? Alaska has less than 1% private ownership of all the lands within the state. It is the largest state by a factor of 250% over the next (Texas) yet it has had the least amount of federal development per acre of any state. Extend the railroad system through Canada (as they have been hoping) and release another 1% of State and Federal land and watch what happens. Perhaps we can make up for the 1% of federal reserve by taking it from states on the Eastern seaboard as new National Parks.

    • @samueldavis5895
      @samueldavis5895 5 месяцев назад

      @@whirvinggee… I wonder why?

  • @drainer8073
    @drainer8073 5 месяцев назад +7

    First night in anchorage on my honeymoon we had to call 911 in order to get help for an in distress native person, it’s really sad.

    • @chrishuff7524
      @chrishuff7524 5 месяцев назад +2

      You mean drug od or addict?

  • @philstodd1097
    @philstodd1097 5 месяцев назад +44

    Great story!
    I was born on kodiak before Statehood, and I have worked and lived from one end of the state to the other end of it.
    it would be very easy for me to add much more content to this story, but I will spare that, an just say I like what you have done, thank you.

    • @jonathanmiller5546
      @jonathanmiller5546 5 месяцев назад +9

      no, please add more content!

    • @476233
      @476233 2 месяца назад

      @phil hope you are doing well. I was wondering if you might help me locate a hill/mountain on Kodiak before entering the city that my family has told me a lot of stories about. My grandparents were stationed there in the 70s and loved it. My grandma developed a fear of driving after sliding down a hill outside of town backwards in the truck and it took her 20-30 years. My mom has always told me about the same hill and how you could look over and see all of the town. Do you know a name for the hill they might be referring to? My grandmother passed about ten years ago, but if I could find it I would love to show it to my mom on RUclips.

  • @WilliamMurphy-uv9pm
    @WilliamMurphy-uv9pm 5 месяцев назад +15

    And it does have those darn winters at least once a year. Brutal even if you grew up in similar conditions. Fairbanks has a much wider range of temperature variation. Over 90 degrees in the summer and lows in the sub-zero range for weeks on end in the winter. That's Fahrenheit.

    • @markbajek2541
      @markbajek2541 5 месяцев назад +5

      Anchorage winters typically are milder than much of the upper great lakes states.

    • @WilliamMurphy-uv9pm
      @WilliamMurphy-uv9pm 5 месяцев назад

      @@markbajek2541 Interesting. I was there in the 70s. Being close to ocean water likely helps Anchorage. The Great Lakes, while water, are largely landlocked. Perhaps Anchorage is benefiting from the so-colled climate crisis.

  • @herzogsbuick
    @herzogsbuick 5 месяцев назад +17

    the municipality is finally entertaining some zoning changes so that we can build apartments again. if rent goes down, crime will go down. the homeless folks that many of the comments brought up, i see them everywhere i go in the lower 48. it's sad, but we just had people up from houston who have managed to get their homeless homed and stable. that solution depends on affordable housing so back to point one.
    i love it here. i'm from philly, i've lived many places including australia, but this is home. quite a few problems of course, like anywhere else. as someone else said, it's nice living in a place that's only 15 minutes away from alaska :-)

  • @Viper42041
    @Viper42041 2 месяца назад

    I used to work in Alaska. I’ve been to Ketchikan, Juneau, Sitka, Kodiak, Anchorage and Fairbanks. Love Alaska.

  • @gavincampbell7488
    @gavincampbell7488 5 месяцев назад +5

    Love your videos brother keep up the great work

  • @TheJHMAN1
    @TheJHMAN1 5 месяцев назад +26

    My wife and I lived just north of there from 1981 to 1993. We loved Alaska and at that time Anchorage was an pretty decent place to visit. It has had a mix of different political leaders Democrat and Republican so it's decline can't be blamed on just one party. It is a hard place to live and unless you make over $70,000 a year you are just getting by, it really is a rich mans play ground. But for last 20 years we have watched the deterioration of all major cities on the west coast to become cesspools. America as a whole has changed and I see no hopeful change in sight.

    • @jameshigginbottom3314
      @jameshigginbottom3314 4 месяца назад

      Brother you are right. I'm 70 and i'm ashamed of this country. No morals.

    • @masondrip42
      @masondrip42 Месяц назад

      it’s not just america. the entire state of the world is in despair. im moving my family to alaska bc it still holds itself as a place to live your own way without heavy new age cultural practices thrown on you. life shouldn’t be about how many zeros you have in the bank or toys you can afford (or barely in most cases) i want my girls to grow up with a sense of purpose. seeing people as neighbors not enemies. some say it’s not the last frontier. well it’s the closest thing to it

    • @justintempus7406
      @justintempus7406 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@masondrip42 Where are you considering moving? Have you been here before? Your success will largely depend on where you move, and if you have a good job to step into. It sounds like you would be a good neighbor, a lot of our new residents are not. Some of the newer crop seems to be moving here explicitly to be selfish (E.G. "yeah I tore up the trail you built and maintain with my pickup and now you can't get to your cabin, it's legal so F you buy a side-by-side") and generally bad for everyone. People generally don't thrive in remote places without an honor system and sense of community.

    • @masondrip42
      @masondrip42 Месяц назад

      i hate that kind of attitude honestly. im still deciding on where exactly; i want isolation but amenities and close proximity to stores etc are just better for a wife and daughter. im leaning towards anchorage in the short term to continue saving. it’s enough jobs in the big little city of anchorage for me not to worry much. ill be the sole earner. you would think living further out you would get more like minded people. but nothing really surprises me these days; im giving myself a year and some change to get prepared. alaska has more to offer when you yourself have something to offer

  • @Dankfort
    @Dankfort 5 месяцев назад +9

    I went there this fall. I actually really enjoyed it. I know it's different actually living there, but I do wish more travelers would give it a chance.

  • @markmccormack1796
    @markmccormack1796 5 месяцев назад +5

    The same thing that is happening all across the country. We are still heading downward that started in the 1980's. It's a long, sad road as all the money and power continues to flow up.

  • @michaeljdauben
    @michaeljdauben 5 месяцев назад +4

    I spent three summers in AK for work back in the 90s. I was south of Anchorage on the Kenai peninsula, though. I had a great time there exploring the outdoirs when i wasn't working. I only went to Anchorage to fly in at the beginning of the summer and out at the end, though.

  • @dianewallace6064
    @dianewallace6064 5 месяцев назад +4

    Thank you for this content.

  • @Ian44_92
    @Ian44_92 5 месяцев назад +6

    I spent 4 years stationed in Anchorage. Definitely a lot of depressing things about the city. Alaska itself is very beautiful and I really enjoyed my time there

  • @RobertThompson-nn9ct
    @RobertThompson-nn9ct 4 месяца назад +1

    I grew up there also. Left in 72 after graduation. Went back in 94 and the population was the same.

  • @DavidLimofLimReport
    @DavidLimofLimReport 5 месяцев назад +2

    Oooo drone shot intro. Nice one!!

  • @cmjcj2ktn
    @cmjcj2ktn 5 месяцев назад +45

    Whenever I look at historical videos like this, I think it's sad that there's really not going to be any opportunity to be part of a city during it's birth/growth phase like there was during the previous 100 years. That would be a fun time to live in a town.

    • @avibrar9979
      @avibrar9979 5 месяцев назад +14

      There still definitely is. A lot of towns are rezoning in Canada and doing large scale construction and growing at 10-15% annually.

    • @royale9998
      @royale9998 5 месяцев назад +6

      Any time theres a technology boom in an area it creates that effect so yes there will always be those opportunities. Also take central cali for example. Taking all the people from the bay that cant afford the prices is growing those communities exponentially.

    • @cmjcj2ktn
      @cmjcj2ktn 5 месяцев назад +7

      @@royale9998 I guess I meant the undeveloped world. There isn't much undeveloped world, and the technology is such that you're always connected wherever you are. There's no more "frontier" so to speak. Campfires, journeyman workers, building something that becomes something. No black and white photos.

    • @Felix-nz7lq
      @Felix-nz7lq 5 месяцев назад

      Svalbard's visa free you know @@cmjcj2ktn

  • @AugustusRex-nk8ze
    @AugustusRex-nk8ze Месяц назад

    So beautiful with this small, far flung city in the North: just a few modest skyscrapers gleaming in the pale winter light, and the mighty mountains beyond.

  • @futurafrlx8874
    @futurafrlx8874 4 месяца назад +2

    I've lived in a similar place in Russia. Beautiful nature, fresh air, but ultimately there was nothing to do unless you wanted to work in the oil industry. Moved to St. Petersburg and life's been much more fun. The air quality sucks there though.

  • @2BeLikeChrist
    @2BeLikeChrist 4 месяца назад

    Thanks, great video.

  • @PresAlexWhit
    @PresAlexWhit 5 месяцев назад +16

    Have you thought about doing "What Happened to Buffalo New York?"

  • @MM-vv8mt
    @MM-vv8mt 4 месяца назад +6

    I lived rough in Anchorage and Seward from 1978-82 right after the post Pipeline bust. I got a job in Seward working for Icicle Seafoods and lived in a hand-built dugout out by Bear Lake in the winter and in a small sail boat in the Municipal Boat Harbor during the summer and had subsistence hunting and fishing licenses, so things were great. Lived on fish for the most part. Had lots of fun in the bars in Seward. Spent a couple of those winters in Hawaii with a lot of other Alaskan snowbirds.

  • @jeffbwillis-dl5bm
    @jeffbwillis-dl5bm 5 месяцев назад +2

    The Jones Seaman Act, enacted in 1920 at the behest of the Seattle Stevedores Union has greatly hampered Alaska. Connecting Katchmak Bay, Alaska to the lower 48 via railroad would be a game changer!

  • @AndyM.
    @AndyM. 5 месяцев назад +1

    DUDEZILLA!!! You got a very cool shout out by JG9!!!! GOOD FOR YOU!!!

  • @fifidessources
    @fifidessources Месяц назад

    I have been there many there many times and still love it.(Actually also on the coledest day of the century)It's wonderful!

  • @Stealth86651
    @Stealth86651 4 месяца назад +1

    Not a surprise, sadly. Everyone I met from Anchorage (not a lot of people) were hellbent on getting out and staying out.

  • @GavotteGuitar
    @GavotteGuitar 5 месяцев назад +6

    Niagara Falls NY, vs. Niagra Falls ON is a weird one.

  • @zippymills8187
    @zippymills8187 4 месяца назад

    Awesome video.

  • @thommccann1770
    @thommccann1770 5 месяцев назад +3

    " Alaska Heaven for men and dogs; Hell for women and horses" Old AK saying.

  • @Cherb123456
    @Cherb123456 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you!

  • @JohnNorris411
    @JohnNorris411 5 месяцев назад +3

    People move to alaska to get away from ugly city life, Anchorage is part of that ugly city life, Hell when I lived in Alaska, most of us did not really consider Anchorage "Alaska" Just a place you used to come into or out of Alaska or do some occasional shopping or see a doctor if you had to. Always happy to get out of anchorage.

  • @heritagehillsecurity8778
    @heritagehillsecurity8778 5 месяцев назад

    I visited back in 1995 and it was awesome.

  • @fredjackson8408
    @fredjackson8408 5 месяцев назад +2

    I moved here in 2017 and the homeless population has done nothing but get worse. It's so sad that tourists that come here and visit the city are inundated with bums especially in the downtown area.
    My recommendation, if you come to visit Alaska, make it your goal to get out of Anchorage as soon as possible. There are better places to see.

  • @brandonwinterle9388
    @brandonwinterle9388 4 месяца назад

    That was the best RUclips video

  • @realbartlett8882
    @realbartlett8882 4 месяца назад

    We went there on our honeymoon.
    The few local people we were able to interact with ranged from indifferent to hostile.
    Some shops and cafes actually had signs to discourage tourists.
    Alaska is beautiful so skip Anchorage and Fairbanks and get a fishing pole and rent a camper, see the best of the state and avoid the cities.

  • @lanabyk8012
    @lanabyk8012 5 месяцев назад +1

    Decay will follow with rejuvenation and growth. Life is a cycle, so don't worry. Things will get better....

  • @knirbnosaj1158
    @knirbnosaj1158 4 месяца назад +1

    I've visited a few times. Always get a hankering for reindeer sausage gyros from the street vendors.
    Like Puerto Rico and Hawaii, commodity prices are higher than need be due to the Jones Act's perpetual impact on shipping costs.

  • @fixpacifica
    @fixpacifica 5 месяцев назад +7

    I used to live in Alaska. By far the biggest factor in stalled growth is the decline in oil production from the North Slope.

  • @gunnarrjohnson6029
    @gunnarrjohnson6029 5 месяцев назад +5

    Fear not: As the planet warms Naturally, Anchorage will become a boom town again. Anchorage will be a major shipping hub as the NW passage opens up year round. It is also a major stop for cargo flights... Money will start pouring into this area of Alaska!

    • @janedubourg4837
      @janedubourg4837 5 месяцев назад +4

      You are joking aren't you?

    • @gunnarrjohnson6029
      @gunnarrjohnson6029 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@janedubourg4837 NO! It will be much cheaper (and faster) for cargo ships to use the NW passage than go through the P. Canal. Anchorage is already a re-fueling stop for Air Freight...

    • @glitchchungus8318
      @glitchchungus8318 3 месяца назад

      smartest brainwashed democrat be like:

  • @justinmohansingh635
    @justinmohansingh635 5 месяцев назад +4

    I’m from New York City, I always wanted to visit Anchorage, it’s Alaska but with a city vibe that I was born with and love.

  • @19MAD95
    @19MAD95 5 месяцев назад +5

    If you ever go 49th state brewery is the best place to eat.

    • @eddiew2325
      @eddiew2325 5 месяцев назад

      eh i think gaslight is better.

    • @ShirleySerious
      @ShirleySerious 5 месяцев назад

      Yeah that place is legit.

    • @derbagger22
      @derbagger22 5 месяцев назад

      I was a big fan of Moose's Tooth.

  • @pohkeee
    @pohkeee 5 месяцев назад +2

    Every economy founded on extraction of resources has an endpoint, unless it transitions to a more stable foundation. This is true historically and globally.

  • @johnglenn6169
    @johnglenn6169 5 месяцев назад +3

    I lived there for 60 years until I retired pipeline really changed Anchorage.

  • @cjkelly3599
    @cjkelly3599 5 месяцев назад +8

    Have you thought about doing “What happened to Reno”

    • @JohnSmith-ho3cu
      @JohnSmith-ho3cu 5 месяцев назад +1

      Isn't Reno still growing? Or are you looking for a video that gives a nostalgic look back to when Reno was a small town?

  • @Hogtownboy1
    @Hogtownboy1 5 месяцев назад +8

    I know he brings up crime in very video but it is not important in why a city stagnates. The major problem with Alaska was very few women.
    The 2020 Censes has Anchorage at 109.1 men to 100 women. The largest split in the US

  • @GeorgeP1066
    @GeorgeP1066 4 месяца назад +2

    I have to say that this is a really shallow piece of analysis. Most of the video is just a history lesson, and then you get about one minute basically to say "the city is dependant on oil and tourism which haven't been growing much lately, and it's also expensive to live in with a high crime rate".
    No analysis of population movements within the state or of Alaska's population as a whole (is the whole state declining or is it just Anchorage?), no look at state investment (or lack thereof) in education and employment and infrastructure, etc and whether that might be playing a part, no comparison with cities in other states with economies similarly dependent on natural resource extraction, and not even any indication of what the population numbers have been over time and how long the stall in population growth has been going on for.

  • @NikkyElso
    @NikkyElso 5 месяцев назад +4

    It's not even that deep. Anchorage is in a Bowl, and that bowl is full of mostly low density housing and oversized shopping centers. Downtown is 90% Parking lots that aren't even full during Fur Rendy or the Iditarod. Meanwhile the Valley, just 1hr north, is growing extraordinarily fast. Anchorage isn't not growing, it's just becoming a typical sprawling North American Metro Area. The only way Anchorage proper is going to continue to grow is opening up much of the city to redevelopment.

    • @justjay6445
      @justjay6445 5 месяцев назад

      I was just watching videos of people driving through Anchorage and not much has changed since ‘08 but a few new buildings no greater than 15 stories. Anchorage really needs to create greater density downtown think multi story apartment buildings on a parking podium with retail stores at the base. Also, Anchorage needs to re zone some of its neighborhoods to multi family housing if they want to keep housing at affordable levels. Anchorage will suffer the same as every metro that’s too car centric.

    • @railroadforest30
      @railroadforest30 5 месяцев назад

      Exactly

  • @rhob2422
    @rhob2422 5 месяцев назад +1

    Well theres other videos saying how Anchorage is in a strategic location and poised to have another boom because of shipping and the Northwest passage.

  • @debbylou5729
    @debbylou5729 4 месяца назад

    Anchorage is just like it’s always been, there’s just more of it. I knew people who had family in Juneau. They’d often say there was no way they’d live in Anchorage. They never specified and I only heard about it through the family I knew, but they were very adamant about it

  • @tyleryoast8299
    @tyleryoast8299 4 месяца назад

    Your voice is calming. You sound like Joe Perra.

  • @damienluedtke9276
    @damienluedtke9276 5 месяцев назад +1

    From a person living in Juneau it’s called lack or consistency, better housing and job opportunities. They keep emphasizing affordable housing which is a fancy way of saying poor people housing. Anchorage keeps emphasizing democratic values of trying to help poor people instead of sweeping them out of the way. Also with Juneau being choose as the capitol instead of Ankoredge that really blew out Ankoredge. Without the Airforce outside of Ankoredge the cities will die.
    Ankoredge is a dirty shit hole and I cannot stand going there. When I have to go north for work I refuse to stay in Ankoredge. I just stay in Fairbanks.

  • @janblackman6204
    @janblackman6204 5 месяцев назад

    I lived in Fairbanks in 67 and 68. The best part was that it was small and not many people. I fear that’s not the case now

    • @TheDavidRJ
      @TheDavidRJ 4 месяца назад +2

      It's still small 😂😂😂

  • @kayzeaza
    @kayzeaza 5 месяцев назад +9

    “Why is no one moving to our remote city that gets tons of snow in winter and bakes in the summer heat?”
    Hmmm idk

    • @farmergiles1065
      @farmergiles1065 5 месяцев назад +2

      Because everyone moves someplace because of the weather? And a lot of the mid-west has worse weather, anyway. You'd never find me wishing for Houston or Phoenix for weather, either.

    • @stevemclaughlin7477
      @stevemclaughlin7477 5 месяцев назад +2

      Haha anchorage has no summer heat...75 is a heat wave there!

    • @farmergiles1065
      @farmergiles1065 5 месяцев назад

      @@stevemclaughlin7477 I expect they think of that as heat. The perception is relative to what you're used to. I've heard Scotsmen complain when the thermometer rose to a roasting 23 Celsius. That's 73.4 Farenheit. Comfortable was 15 to 18 C, or 59 to 64.4 F. I agree with you for myself. But for lifelong Alaskans? Let them say.

  • @whirving
    @whirving 5 месяцев назад +13

    Alaska is only nominally a state. Sure, it has the rights and representation due according to the Constitution, but it is exploited wholesale by outside interests for its resources. Very little of Alaska's natural resources receive "value added" processing within state. They are shipped outside in vast quantities for other's gain. We use the crumbs. The US has lost the concept of development that made the rest of the lower 48 states viable. Alaska's development started right, with railroads and agencies to assess and utilize existing resources, and to educate the masses and provide transportation. But then it stopped. Now the US and Alaska are held in a stasis of NO SPENDING for the short term (read political tenure) and little large scale development STILL needed for Alaska to gain true independence. So for now we rely on money from outside, and we accept the money they skim off to keep us quiet.

  • @charlesheller4667
    @charlesheller4667 4 месяца назад +1

    Been to Anchorage it is not a horrible place at all. The city's problem is it it's geographic isolation. That is really is the root cause of all the social and economic issues there.

  • @comeconcon569
    @comeconcon569 5 месяцев назад +4

    You would never expect high crime in a place like this, but people come from all walks of life and backgrounds.

  • @gregjohnson6398
    @gregjohnson6398 5 месяцев назад +7

    Anchorage doesn’t have room to grow. Ocean on two sides mountains on the other and military land. That’s why the Mat-Su area 30 miles to the North is booming. Lots of land and home prices half of those in Anchorage. Most people commute between the Mat-Su and Anchorage for work.

    • @adstaton8461
      @adstaton8461 5 месяцев назад +3

      Do they still call Matsu residents valley trash?😂

    • @fixpacifica
      @fixpacifica 5 месяцев назад

      @@adstaton8461 Hey, that's where Sarah Palin lives. Certainly she's not valley trash. Actually, I really like the area around Wasilla and Palmer.

    • @WildlifeWarrior-cr1kk
      @WildlifeWarrior-cr1kk 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@fixpacificashe can see Russia from her house

    • @MitchellBPYao
      @MitchellBPYao 5 месяцев назад

      Small skyline

    • @justjay6445
      @justjay6445 5 месяцев назад +5

      They have plenty of room to grow. Too many parking lots, strip malls and the like. They need to build up instead of out and get rid of zoning that prohibits true skyscrapers from being built or at least get them as tall as the FAA allows.

  • @dannyfrog
    @dannyfrog 5 месяцев назад +1

    I read that Alaska, in general, has the highest drug, alcohol and suicide rates than that of the lower 48. Nothing has ever appealed to me about the State at all.

  • @hobog
    @hobog 5 месяцев назад +1

    Thought air travel would increase due to Russian airspace closure, a return to coldwar air traffic patterns

  • @mono-no-aware.Lem.
    @mono-no-aware.Lem. 5 месяцев назад

    "thank you for watching" you are so quite welcome FP

  • @north-sea750
    @north-sea750 4 месяца назад +1

    This mirrors Aberdeen's fate. The oil capital of Europe and former fishing location.

  • @samueldegrey7718
    @samueldegrey7718 5 месяцев назад +1

    I visited the Fairbanks area this winter. No body had anything good to say about Anchorage, making it out like a cesspool

    • @areynoso5660
      @areynoso5660 4 месяца назад +1

      I’ve been here in Anchorage for four years now. And your comment is the same thing people here say about Fairbanks; it’s a cesspool. I visited there with my family several times, and would not want to live there.

  • @pudanielson1
    @pudanielson1 5 месяцев назад +1

    They should reinvest the limited tax base and resources into changing zoning laws into public transit oriented development.

  • @mls515
    @mls515 5 месяцев назад +4

    Used to be there a lot at my old job. I liked it, I'd say that city punches above its weight compared to most cities of the same population in the lower 48. I bought a pot smoking relative a T-shirt at a dispensary called "Dankorage", lol.

  • @mtadams2009
    @mtadams2009 5 месяцев назад +8

    I suppose it’s like the downfall of most areas and cities, loss of jobs. My small city in New England hit on hard times because of the lack of manufacturing jobs. Cheap imported goods have killed many cities in this country. The cost for cheap crap on Amazon and Walmart has a huge expense on our country. I assume jobs are up and down there. Given the type of jobs they have. Drugs get going when people are idle. It’s the same all over our rural areas in the U.S.

  • @KD8RAP
    @KD8RAP 4 месяца назад

    I loved going there as a tourist but after hearing some stories from people that live there, I NEVER would want to live in Anchorage.

  • @colinmccann7123
    @colinmccann7123 4 месяца назад

    Anchorage is still there despite what you may think my son retired from the Air Force there and lives in Wasilla still goes there all the time and so nothing has happened to Anchorage still part of the map

  • @tpbforlife3323
    @tpbforlife3323 5 месяцев назад +1

    Always heard it’s a sister city to Spokane wa. But never been to Alaska to see for my self

    • @big_ute
      @big_ute 5 месяцев назад

      Its not, not even close by a long shot.

    • @tbone6924
      @tbone6924 5 месяцев назад

      You do realize that the whole "sister city" is just a silly political invention that has nothing at all to do with the actual cities being in any way similar right? In fact, it was originally designed as a way for two very district cities to share cultures, but ended up being a failure as it is pretty much ignored by everyone. Go to any city and ask 1000 random people what their sister city is...I bet at least 999 have no idea and don't care.
      Edit: bored at work so I looked it up...Spokane is NOT a sister city to Anchorage which makes sense because sister cities are never in the same country.

  • @francus7227
    @francus7227 5 месяцев назад +2

    Who screwed up worse???
    Russia selling Alaska for $0.02 per acre....
    or
    France and The Louisiana Purchase for $0.03 per acre???

    • @Goorood
      @Goorood 5 месяцев назад +2

      Russia : screwed up by selling Alaska
      France : screwed up by selling Louisiana
      USA : Screwed up the most, by far ... by bringing THEM from Africa 🤭

    • @francus7227
      @francus7227 5 месяцев назад

      @Goorood
      Oooowh.

  • @richardbird9326
    @richardbird9326 4 месяца назад +1

    Been there ! Not going back !

  • @nimaiiikun
    @nimaiiikun 4 месяца назад

    As an Alaskan, the problem is that there's too many anchors in anchorage. need more boats.

  • @kevincoggeshall3079
    @kevincoggeshall3079 5 месяцев назад

    I lived outside Fairbanks for a while in the 70s, I probably wouldn't recognise it anymore

    • @jamescrock2213
      @jamescrock2213 5 месяцев назад +1

      bro it’s been 50 years, even poor mexican towns start to change up at the 50 year mark

  • @porterwake3898
    @porterwake3898 4 месяца назад

    Was there not too long ago. Did not feel safe at all. Garbage everywhere in the city, homeless people sleeping everywhere. It really felt like the San Francisco of the arctic.

  • @jeffs4483
    @jeffs4483 4 месяца назад

    'Volpe where are you' channel made some good vlogs of Alaska recently to check out.

  • @mrschwartzmc
    @mrschwartzmc 3 месяца назад

    "The nice thing about Anchorage is that it is really close to Alaska." Said a wise friend

  • @JulietteMcMonigle-hr4ig
    @JulietteMcMonigle-hr4ig 4 месяца назад

    Hello Chris Shoemaker.😊

  • @beachthor1
    @beachthor1 2 месяца назад +1

    I grew up here, and can easily answer how the population is declining. ITS FUCKING DEPRESSING

  • @ericjennings6267
    @ericjennings6267 4 месяца назад

    One point not mentioned here is demographics the US birthrate right now is 1.78 births per woman which is below replacement level of 2.1 if women arent having kids the population will drop depending on immigration numbers to alaska

  • @jimgrimes7409
    @jimgrimes7409 5 месяцев назад +1

    The population growth just froze 😭

  • @vivalaleta
    @vivalaleta 4 месяца назад

    A particularly grim looking city.