That's just like your opinion, man.
Im no Houston defender, but come on! A few blocks away from Le Meridien is Main st, and theres tons of bars, clubs, restaurants on Main st. It gets packed with people on the weekends. Go on any random weekend and you will see tons of people walking around on Main st at night, and the bars will be packed.HollywoodBQ said:I found the rooftop deck at Le Meridien in downtown Houston was pretty cool but it's not like you can leave there and go to 5 other bars like you could if you were on Rush Street in Chicago.BG Knocc Out said:HollywoodBQ said:
I worked in Downtown Houston two weeks last year. As far as downtown areas go, Houston sucks.
During the day it's not too bad but after dark, it's deader than a door nail.
But compared to places like SF, LA, NY, etc. There is less of a chance of stepping in human excrement in Houston.
It used to have zero night life, but it actually gets pretty bumping on the weekends nowadays.
I was in downtown LA for a business conference last summer. I couldn't believe they even held it there. It was like a dystopian nightmare. No one felt safe there and they told everyone to avoid the streets and walk in groups if you had to. You could just leave downtown LA as is and film a post apocalyptic movie there. Drugged out homeless psychos everywhere and absolutely zero night life or day life. I don't see that place ever coming back. Complete sh**hole.
Houston at night is great for about an hour after an Astros game and it was pretty hopping after the Bad Bunny concert I went to at Minute Maid. But the rest of the time - dead.
Yes - but I think most of them have San in the name - Diego, Francisco, Juan, Antonio.ea1060 said:Im no Houston defender, but come on! A few blocks away from Le Meridien is Main st, and theres tons of bars, clubs, restaurants on Main st. It gets packed with people on the weekends. Go on any random weekend and you will see tons of people walking around on Main st at night, and the bars will be packed.HollywoodBQ said:I found the rooftop deck at Le Meridien in downtown Houston was pretty cool but it's not like you can leave there and go to 5 other bars like you could if you were on Rush Street in Chicago.BG Knocc Out said:HollywoodBQ said:
I worked in Downtown Houston two weeks last year. As far as downtown areas go, Houston sucks.
During the day it's not too bad but after dark, it's deader than a door nail.
But compared to places like SF, LA, NY, etc. There is less of a chance of stepping in human excrement in Houston.
It used to have zero night life, but it actually gets pretty bumping on the weekends nowadays.
I was in downtown LA for a business conference last summer. I couldn't believe they even held it there. It was like a dystopian nightmare. No one felt safe there and they told everyone to avoid the streets and walk in groups if you had to. You could just leave downtown LA as is and film a post apocalyptic movie there. Drugged out homeless psychos everywhere and absolutely zero night life or day life. I don't see that place ever coming back. Complete sh**hole.
Houston at night is great for about an hour after an Astros game and it was pretty hopping after the Bad Bunny concert I went to at Minute Maid. But the rest of the time - dead.
I've noticed people think downtown is dead because they never go out there at night on the weekends. Is any big city's downtown popping on a random Wednesday or something?
Have you seen that Apollo 10 1/2 show on Netflix?halfastros81 said:
Just to be clear, I don't hate Houston at all but it does have it's issues. I have made a good bit of
My living there and I also went to school K-12 in the clear lake area back in the 60's & 70's and it was a good place to grow up imo. I don't want to live in Harris County ever again but it's nice to be within a stone's throw due to the big city amenities and medical facilities.
As far as big metro areas go, it's probably not all that bad. I have only lived in one other big metro area, DFW and I do like Houston better mostly because I think the people are more real. I actually even like the weather better in Houston area than DFW. Not a big fan of tornadoes and super nasty thunderstorms that came with DFW. That's offset for sure by hurricanes and floods but at least you have more warning with those.
Username does not check outUrban Ag said:
I'm currently on the edge of rural Texas and 70 minutes later at the gate to my ranch. Not changing that.
I've lived in Denver and LA and I'd put it like this.Kellso said:I don't know.....I've seen much worse Cities.halfastros81 said:
Other than ridiculously hot and humid weather for 6 mos of the yr, ridiculous traffic, flooding potential, some (not all) unsightly areas , high crime rates , and generally poorly run city and county governments I can't see why people would think it sucks.
I've honestly never understood the hate for Houston.
I had a buddy from Denver that lived just north of The Woodlands. He lived in a very nice neighborhood in either Conroe or Montgomery Country.
He hated Houston. He hated living there, and he said that I wouldn't understand when I'm only there for a few days on business, or a random weekend. I go to Houston a lot for business.
He's since moved his family back to Denver, but what he stated was that Houston wore on you......just like Los Angeles.
He said that LA has a lot of the same urban problems, but at least they have great weather, and fantastic scenery.
Even when I was a student, it was hilariously weird to me that BCS people thought there was something far superior and magical about sitting in traffic in front of strip malls on on (Business) Highway 6 in College Station as opposed to doing the exact same thing with the exact same scenery on Highway 6 in Harris County.Jock 07 said:Esteban du Plantier said:
It's sorta like how Fran Lebowitz described New York. Nobody actually enjoys it, it sucks. But New Yorkers are proud of how tough they are for living in such a terrible place. They don't like the place, they like how cool they are for enduring the terrible place.
All my Houston friends act the same way. When I visit every 3-6 weeks from the most incredible place to live on earth (College Station), I'm blown away by how much Houston sucks.
College Station is basically a cypress suburb/NW Houston at this point
Many times as the plane is preparing to land at Hobby and I am viewing the surroundingn area, I ask myseld why I live here. Then I remember it has one of, if not the best, earnings/cost of living ratios you can find.LegalDrugPusher said:
I will say this as a native of Dallas. Houston is friendlier and much much better food selections. But Houston is a crap hole and dirt
Hates Houston so much that he only lives in Houston suburbs just outside of the city limits so he can say he doesn't technically live in Houston.Captain Pablo said:Cinco Ranch Aggie said:
I was born in Bellaire, spent my first 8 years in Sharpstown, then moved to Lake Jackson. Now I live in Katy Cinco Ranch. Would not live in Houston even if gifted a home inside that cesspool. When I finished at A&M and was deciding on a place to live, I never once considered doing the "hip" thing and moving into the midtown or downtown areas of Houston. Just no appeal to that for me. Since A&M, I've spent two years with an actual Houston address, but even that one was in far west Houston. Also lived in Missouri City, Richmond Pecan Grove, and now Katy.
I go to great lengths to limit my time in Houston. My employer has an office at City Centre, which I go to once a week, but that is it. Haven't been to the Museum district since my daughter was little. Haven't been to a Texans game since 2012 and an Astros game since 2018. Did plan to get to Minute Maid last month for the Ags vs Rice, but had a foot injury that kept me from venturing into the Houston ****hole.
Lol. I've had some great times in recent years at the museum district, Minute Maid, Menil, midtown, But you showed them
BluHorseShu said:Not sure you get how CMs generally vote. Especially in Texas. It's the leftists you want to stay away.zagman said:Dan Scott said:
It's not so much that Houston is ugly, it's there's nothing to do as a tourist. Downtown Houston is dead and has nothing worth seeing. Reliant Stadium is isolated surrounded by nothing. You need a car to get around.
I love it even more if it gets CM's to stay away.
Parents are concerned after seeing a video showing a student punching a teacher in the face on Thursday.
— D. Scott @eclipsethis2003 (@eclipsethis2003) April 7, 2023
Students are sharing the video on social media.
It happened at Lamar High School, Houston, Texas, and those who have seen the video are upset, saying it should have never… pic.twitter.com/Bke5YcRwFO
True, but Houston's having their fair share right now with all the robberies in the nice areas and such. It's gotten much worse just in the past 10 years.Cynic said:
That's everywhere now
AxelFoley85 said:
The story about that rapper getting killed is pretty wild. He killed a friend of the dudes that killed him and got off on self defense. Decided to run his mouth and got killed.
Tex100 said:Many times as the plane is preparing to land at Hobby and I am viewing the surroundingn area, I ask myseld why I live here. Then I remember it has one of, if not the best, earnings/cost of living ratios you can find.LegalDrugPusher said:
I will say this as a native of Dallas. Houston is friendlier and much much better food selections. But Houston is a crap hole and dirt
So he is correct, it is not beautiful. But f him, anyway.
AgreedBG Knocc Out said:Tex100 said:Many times as the plane is preparing to land at Hobby and I am viewing the surroundingn area, I ask myseld why I live here. Then I remember it has one of, if not the best, earnings/cost of living ratios you can find.LegalDrugPusher said:
I will say this as a native of Dallas. Houston is friendlier and much much better food selections. But Houston is a crap hole and dirt
So he is correct, it is not beautiful. But f him, anyway.
I have traveled the entire country plenty over the years and Houston is probably my fav food city.
My sister lived in Lemon Grove and in her idealized view it was the most wonderful place in the world. She was born in Alabama but we were both raised on the gulf coast of Florida. She can have California, I will take Florida any day. I moved to the DFW metroplex for work, but I like this area also.AlaskanAg99 said:buda91 said:
Old line: "houston is a great place to live, but you wouldn't want to visit there"
100%. I'm here for career development and low cost of living. I came from San Diego which is pretty but brutal to live there.
2aggiesmom said:My sister lived in Lemon Grove and in her idealized view it was the most wonderful place in the world. She was born in Alabama but we were both raised on the gulf coast of Florida. She can have California, I will take Florida any day. I moved to the DFW metroplex for work, but I like this area also.AlaskanAg99 said:buda91 said:
Old line: "houston is a great place to live, but you wouldn't want to visit there"
100%. I'm here for career development and low cost of living. I came from San Diego which is pretty but brutal to live there.
Microwave Onions said:Even when I was a student, it was hilariously weird to me that BCS people thought there was something far superior and magical about sitting in traffic in front of strip malls on on (Business) Highway 6 in College Station as opposed to doing the exact same thing with the exact same scenery on Highway 6 in Harris County.Jock 07 said:Esteban du Plantier said:
It's sorta like how Fran Lebowitz described New York. Nobody actually enjoys it, it sucks. But New Yorkers are proud of how tough they are for living in such a terrible place. They don't like the place, they like how cool they are for enduring the terrible place.
All my Houston friends act the same way. When I visit every 3-6 weeks from the most incredible place to live on earth (College Station), I'm blown away by how much Houston sucks.
College Station is basically a cypress suburb/NW Houston at this point
LegalDrugPusher said:
I will say this as a native of Dallas. Houston is friendlier and much much better food selections. But Houston is a crap hole and dirty.
A lot of people don't think living 30 miles outside of the city and dealing with insane commutes is all that appealing.Houston Lee said:
The greater Houston area, especially in the NW part, is one of the best places to live.
-Low cost of living. Houston has one of the best real estate markets in the country. People from the east and west coast have been flocking to Houston in DROVES.
-Houston has one of the best job markets in the world.
-Great neighborhoods with big homes and your back yard oasis. (The land of backyard swimming pools, outdoor kitchens, covered patios and natural gas fire pits and a whole home generator)
-Some of the best school districts in the country (Tomball ISD, for example)
-The suburbs are packed with top of line grocery stores, restaurants, bars, live music, golf courses and entertainment venues.
-It can get hot, but there is something called air conditioning. And don't forget about your pool that you can swim in year round.
-Lots of easy access to freeways which make your commute from the burbs to the city easier (Get to work early and go home early to beat the traffic)
-Houston may be subject to the occasional Hurricane, but there is not much of a worry about earthquakes, forest fires, tornados or tidal waves.
-So many different cultures and people.
-IAH is a major hub airport with direct flights to the world.
-You can get to lakes, rivers and the ocean within 1-2 hours and there is a Buc-ees on every outgoing route!
Hartford is ugly as hell. That's what I don't get about all the Houston hate.Muy said:
Has anyone seen Connecticut? If it's better, why is everyone moving to Texas?
Kellso said:Hartford is ugly as hell. That's what I don't get about all the Houston hate.Muy said:
Has anyone seen Connecticut? If it's better, why is everyone moving to Texas?
Where are all these beautiful cities???????
The West Coast is full of beautiful cities like Los Angeles, Seattle, San Diego, San Francisco....,etc. But LA and San Francisco have horrible urban problems, and deal with many of the same issues that Houston does.
Miami is beautiful near the water as well as certain inland neighborhoods like Coral Gables or Weston.....but most of Miami looks like a 3rd world country.....see names like lil Havana and Lil Cuba as examples.
Wow....Hartford. What a beautiful city. I always see Hartford on the list of upcoming, growing cities that everyone is moving too.
Hermann Park and Memorial Park don't count as green spaces?ATM9000 said:Kellso said:Hartford is ugly as hell. That's what I don't get about all the Houston hate.Muy said:
Has anyone seen Connecticut? If it's better, why is everyone moving to Texas?
Where are all these beautiful cities???????
The West Coast is full of beautiful cities like Los Angeles, Seattle, San Diego, San Francisco....,etc. But LA and San Francisco have horrible urban problems, and deal with many of the same issues that Houston does.
Miami is beautiful near the water as well as certain inland neighborhoods like Coral Gables or Weston.....but most of Miami looks like a 3rd world country.....see names like lil Havana and Lil Cuba as examples.
Wow....Hartford. What a beautiful city. I always see Hartford on the list of upcoming, growing cities that everyone is moving too.
Downtown Hartford is ugly… but you can get to a lot of green 10 minutes out of it. If you get 10 minutes out of Houston… you get a lot of concrete, strip malls and continuous litter on the entire 10 minute drive.
MAROON said:
Hartford has about the same # of people as Sugarland. You really can't compare it to a large city like Houston.