For me, it was always looking out of the airplane window and seeing the pine trees when we landed at Intercontinental Airport. That meant we were finally "home".Sam and Dean said:C@LAg said:no.it is ugly.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.
there is no shame in admitting it.
but at least it is a resilient and growing city unlike many of the ****holes up north.
Having been born and raised 40 minutes from Houston, and moved away 21 years ago, I must concur that it is not an attractive city, but when I'm driving from Dallas and see that Houston skyline, its beautiful to me because that means I'm almost home.
Good catch. Add that to the list too.agent-maroon said:AgNav93 said:They're both democrat run **** holes filled with ignorant, idiot *******s. I'm ashamed they're Texas cities. We should build a wall around them and fill it with water. Add Austin too for good measure.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.
Do you even San Antonio bro?
TexAgs91 said:
Over the next year, thanks to El Nino, Houston will be even more of a swamp
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.
texagbeliever said:BoydCrowder13 said:
Houston is absolutely not a tourist city. There are no major tourist sites, it is brutally hot 6 months of the year and flatter than a pancake.
As a metro area, it is a great place to raise a family, people are nice, the food is great, and the price of living is low.
That being said City Centre, the Heights, Museum District, Galleria are all nice areas and have good nightlife.
I have lived a significant amount of time in Dallas and Houston. It's close but I think Houston is better.
Houston has: NASA, rodeo, and top professional sports teams (hosts super bowls, major tournament games). On top of that the art museums are top 10 in the nation maybe top 5 and the natural science museum is top as well. It feels like you can find a brewery every 3 miles.
Now outside of the rodeo houston's tourist things aren't Instagram sights so it just isn't seen as a tourist spot.
Yep...this "Spring" really sucks so farTexAgs91 said:
Over the next year, thanks to El Nino, Houston will be even more of a swamp
Houston METRO not Houston PROPER. Houston Metro includes all the Dark Red around Houston. Honestly it would probably be 3-3 or 4-2 GOP but Mass/CT/RI are all Dark Blue Safe Seats. Democrats don't even have to try there.Kenneth_2003 said:aggie93 said:
Hartford isn't some paradise either. It's basically generic East Coast City that no one cares about. Connecticut is for commuters.
Fun fact, Connecticut is 5000 Square miles, the Houston Metro is 10,000. Population is also twice the size of Connecticut. So maybe the Houston Metro should get 4 Senators just to be fair.
Seeing who these morons elect to run the city and the county... let's not
That makes it sound way cooler than it is...ballchain said:
"Houston is a cruel, crazy town on a filthy river in East Texas with no zoning laws and a culture of sex, money and violence. It's a shabby, sprawling metropolis ruled by brazen women, crooked cops and super-rich pansexual cowboys who live by the code of the West -- which can mean just about anything you need it to mean, in a pinch." ~ Hunter S. Thompson
Agreed.Old Ag 74 said:
If you've ever driven down Westheimer going west from the Galleria, you know that the description of "Butt Ugly" was actually being kind.
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.
Why do people think that Houston sucks?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.
I'd agree that west and northwest Houston was pretty cool in the 80's and 90's. I had cousins who grew up at Memorial and Eldridge. We visited many times and while I was at A&M in the mid 90's I was down there probably every other week for a day or two, mostly because my aunt and uncle had a great house and he BBQ's all the time.BG Knocc Out said:
I loved growing up in Spring Branch in the 80's and 90's. West Houston was pretty awesome back then, don't care what anyone says.
ballchain said:
"Houston is a cruel, crazy town on a filthy river in East Texas with no zoning laws and a culture of sex, money and violence. It's a shabby, sprawling metropolis ruled by brazen women, crooked cops and super-rich pansexual cowboys who live by the code of the West -- which can mean just about anything you need it to mean, in a pinch." ~ Hunter S. Thompson
I fully support a budget amendment tomorrow on HB 1 to purchase the state of Connecticut & turn it into a parking lot for the Houston Rodeo. You can never have too much parking. #txlege https://t.co/VNUfYGWv0d
— Dade Phelan (@DadePhelan) April 5, 2023
I know several people from out of state that came to work in Houston, *****ed about everything while they were here, got homesick, went back home, and then returned to Houston 5 years later.93MarineHorn said:
I have good friends from Houston. That said, Houston sucks. It's ugly, uncomfortable, terrible traffic. No one from there wants to go back once they leave.
lb3 said:I know several people from out of state that came to work in Houston, *****ed about everything while they were here, got homesick, went back home, and then returned to Houston 5 years later.93MarineHorn said:
I have good friends from Houston. That said, Houston sucks. It's ugly, uncomfortable, terrible traffic. No one from there wants to go back once they leave.
If it weren't so hot, humid, flat, and ugly, everyone would want to live here.
Urban Ag said:I'd agree that west and northwest Houston was pretty cool in the 80's and 90's. I had cousins who grew up at Memorial and Eldridge. We visited many times and while I was at A&M in the mid 90's I was down there probably every other week for a day or two, mostly because my aunt and uncle had a great house and he BBQ's all the time.BG Knocc Out said:
I loved growing up in Spring Branch in the 80's and 90's. West Houston was pretty awesome back then, don't care what anyone says.
From there, I didn't spend much time in Htown except dropping in for meetings now and then. In and out. But I had to take a project at the end of 08 that had me in Houston every week for two years. I grew to pretty much hate the place.
Last week the wife and I went on a cruise out of Galveston. First time I had driven across the city since before Covid. What a dump. Sure there are nice areas but so much of it looks like a third world country. And the roads are just f'ing terrible. Dallas, Austin, and SA have their fair share of third world charm to be certain but Houston just seems to go on forever. Terrifying thought to me to get stuck there during some natural or man made disaster or social upheaval. No thanks.
I'm currently on the edge of rural Texas and 70 minutes later at the gate to my ranch. Not changing that.
aggie93 said:
Hartford isn't some paradise either. It's basically generic East Coast City that no one cares about. Connecticut is for commuters.
Fun fact, Connecticut is 5000 Square miles, the Houston Metro is 10,000. Population is also twice the size of Connecticut. So maybe the Houston Metro should get 4 Senators just to be fair.
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.