Comments by "" (@omfgCantGetaUsername) on "CharlieBo313"
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@MrSmartboy1983 No one. But, when anyone brings up, "the black Chicago accent", the first thing everyone "always" like to point out, is about their southern heritage. Like, hello, knock knock!: Blacks in the Pacific NW, and Northeast didn't just appear out of thin air. Many of our families are from the south too. (Not Caribbean NY blacks) Lack of integration, and segregation from ethnic whites speaking the local dialect is the reason. Whether it was school, churches, playgrounds, or living within the same block. It played a big role on how we speak today, regionally.
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@johnnygarcia33133 Did you really just say all we have is NY and Miami??? 🤦🏽♂️🥴 Boston, Philly, Atlantic City, Baltimore, Rehobeth, DC, Richmond, RDU, Charleston, Jacksonville, Atlanta, and Orlando doesn't come to your mind?
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@zaytime4156 Actually, the NYC accent developed from different immigrants like the Dutch, German, Anglo, and other earliest immigrants speaking the southern English which was standard to the area from the southern English that settled the area. Boston NYC South England, Phl Baltimore Quaker England.
(That wasn't a such thing as standard American yet until later generations lost the more British accents to develop different colonial regional accents)
Remember NYC used to be New Amsterdam. Parts of Southern English don't use R's, so once the Irishman, and Italians moved in it shaped the accent even more. Not all Britsh neglect the R sound if you pay attention to different Britsh UK accents like those of West Country, I think Bristol, the Scottish, Northern Ireland use the R sound. Quaker British settled Philadelphia therefore that area spoke Americanized Quaker English. Standard American and the western accent probably developed in the latter 1700s to early 1800s when people started moving west to establish western civilization.
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I'll give a list of the cleaner, safer, and/or in general chill areas of Philly for the non natives. There's probably more than I listed. I should've made this my main comment on all his Philly vids. 😂🤣
Uptown/Northwest Philly: Olney, East Oak Lane, Fern Rock, West Oak Lane, Ogontz/Belfield, Stenton, Cedarbrook, East Mt. Airy, West Mt. Airy, Chestnut Hill, Tulpehocken/ Morton (G town), Penn Knox (G town), Roxborough, Upper Roxborough, Shawmont Valley, Andorra, Manayunk, Wissahickon, East Falls.
Upper North: Juniata-Feltonville, Parts of Logan.
Lower North Philly: part of Brewerytown/Sharswood, Fairmount, Francisville, Spring Garden, West Poplar, East Poplar, Ludlow, Yorktown homes, Norris Sq, *East Kensington, *Olde Kensington, Northern Liberties.
*Not the same Kensington as in all the 🤡 addict videos on YouTube. 🤣
Lower NP/River wards: Fishtown, Olde Richmond, Port Richmond.
Center City: Chinatown, Society Hill, Olde City, Jewelers row, Gayborhood, Market East, Rittenhouse Sq, Logan Sq, Franklin Sq, Callowhill, Filter Sq, Market West (Financial- business district).
South Philly: Queen Village, Hawthorne, Graduate Hospital/SW Center City, Devil's pocket, Bella Vista/Italian Market, Newbold, Melrose, East Passyunk Square, East Passyunk Crossing, West Passyunk, Lower Moyamensing, Packer Park, Girard Estates, Dickinson Narrows, Whitman.
West Philly: Wynnfield, Wynnfield Heights, Overbrook, Parkside, Powelton Village, West Powelton, Cobb's Creek, Spruce Hill, Cedar Park, Squirrel Hill, Angora, University City.
SW Philly: Eastwick, Clearview. Anything down by Lindbergh Blvd and Island Ave lol not too familiar with SW.
Greater Northeast: Holmesburg, Lawncrest, Somerton, Bustleton, Mayfair, Tacony, Fox Chase, Wissonoming. Pretty much the whole Northeast except Frankford that's the trenches.
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@utah2nyc250 What's the name of that source or documentary film because I find that hard to believe? I saw Detroit videos and that looks worse than here by far. I don't care because the homes are single homes with gaps in between they're still more vacant and deserted. I don't see how anyone could think this is worse. Here is only pockets of rundown vandalized, abandoned, vacant areas. And the most fucked up area is bad lands, and the bottom. And parts of Strawberry, Kingsessing, and Grays Ferry. Chestnut Hill, Roxborough, Manayunk, Mt. Airy, West Germantown, West Oakland, Stenton, Ogontz, East Oak Lane, Olney, Parts of Logan, Fern Rock, East Falls, Overbrook Farms, Wynnfield, Lindbergh area in SW, Hunting Park, and the Greater NE, and Francisville is not rundown. Most are black areas except Rox, Yunk, Greater NE, and East Oak Lane. I live in Wynnfield it looks nothing like my hometown neighborhood you're tripping to say 90% of Philly looks like in this video. The entire North Philly doesn't look like this video. The houses around 19th and 20th near Indiana and Cambria are rundown and trashy because it's near a bunch of old vacant factories and junkyards but not the whole Philly. Baltimore looked a lot worse too because everywhere you turn there was boarded cribs for entire blocks. 😂💀
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@Phillyhomicide Most of West? Have you not seen Wynnfield Heights, and Wynnfield, Overbrook, especially Overbrook Farms. West Mt. Airy, West Gtown, Stenton, West Oak Lane, East Oak Lane, Roxborough, Manayunk, East Falls, West Allegheny passed 28th st to 35th st, Ogontz, Cedar Park, Spruce Hill? Cobbs Creek isn't that bad, neither is Lindbergh in SW., Brewerytown is okay, and so is Francisville. Where I'm from is the second to the worse areas but there's pockets of clean nice blocks in mansion (33rd st).
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@Jstaywinnin The Mid-Atlantic dialect family consist of Philly (the main epicenter), Trenton, Camden, Atlantic City, Norristown, Wilmington, and Baltimore. However, I believe because of Baltimore's southern proximity with DC(a southern accent) is the reason for the different accent we hear from Baltimore. "O, U, Dug, Jawb(job), cawmbo(combo), fawther, etc. If Baltimore was more Northeast like maybe next to Wilmington I believe they'd speak the accent more like we do in Philly.
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@productionf1lms The whole city isn't like this. Stop the lies right now! You could take a drive right into lower North Philly hoods and they don't look like this at all. Olde Kensington (the better looking Kensington*), Poplar, Francisville, Northern Liberties, Fishtown, Spring Garden, Fairmount, Brewerytown etc. Uptown, NW Philly, Greater NE Philly, West Philly. I'm from NP, and used to live in Wynnfield which doesn't look remotely like this. Wynnfield looks more like uptown or the Northeast.
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@thatGuyQuincy "Philly not mentioned as Baltimore's cousin based off accent." Okay, now that's out of the way so, what bc of housing architecture, wider streets, food, pace, it's why we're alike? We're not alike though. Lol They have chicken boxes we got cheesesteaks, Harbor vs Penns Landing, they got old bay/crabs, different accent, small skyline vs bigger skyline, they have one downtown, we have two cities, University & Center cities, wider streets vs narrow streets, 590k ppl vs 1.6mil ppl, we dress different. Only similarities are housing architecture. Philly is just Philly! Lol But hey, we can be distant cousins though since the hood design look similar, and the woodah (wauduh) pronunciations. 👌🏽🔔
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@C.R. the RUNDWN Champion And mock how everyone have Islamic names here. Baltimore used to wear bucket hats back then when we wasn't, and they still wear new balance. We never dressed or talked alike. I knew a girl who dated a guy back then from there and she'd always talk to me about how they dress. The only thing they do similar is that bike life riding through the city. Our haircuts are even way sharper. You'll find a dude from Norristown, Chester, Camden, or Trenton that'll look like us before Baltimore. Lol all these things stood out on Christ.
But that whole O thing is the whites in Philly for real. Black Philly black Baltimore not the same. Even Baltimore say jawb and fawther like NYC not us. Lolol And, all blacks say, "bed as bid, red as rid", and honestly that's the only southern influence we have are those words head, dead, bed, red, bread. NYC will say, head as hed, everywhere else outside of Boston NYC hid. The same way NYC say, head as hed is how we'll say, thread, shed, fed, Feds, led, bred, med, Fred, Ed, dreads, Ted with a regular short E but most of the rest of the country outside of this region will say all of that with a southern drawl E like hid. Lmao so when NYC say we have a light drawl that's what they mean because anything else they'd just be exaggerating or lying. Our accent is 99% Philly. One thing all Northeast cities have in common is our aggressive nature in how we're speaking normally.
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@washingtondc9290 I know. I'm aware of the 70s, 80s, 90s, and even early 2000s for some places of how bad things were. I know how high DC numbers were. NOLA's highest was 493 (something like that) back in '93 or '94. Stl and Detroit all of those cities were bad. Too many to name.
Recently, Detroit reached record lows which is good. But, the reason I talked about Memphis is because this is what's happening in present day. Although, DC's past was bad, but the past is the past. Because if you really dig into it NYC, Chicago, Detroit, and LA had some of the highest atrocious numbers in the 70s, 80s, and 90s for either city.
Each city went well pass the 600 mark with Chicago going up to 900. LA and NY were the only two cities breaking 1000 with NY going pass 2000. I come from Philly saying this. It wasn't good for us the last few pandemic years (2020-2022), but things have calm down a bit.
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@Whyyoumadcuz__ Even around Sharswood and Blumberg area was renovated, rebuilt, and modernized with traditional older row homes still mixed in. Philly always get downplayed especially NP.
North Philly has nicer areas: Northern Libs, Fishtown, Olde Richmond, Olde Kensington, West/ East Poplar, Ludlow, Spring Garden, Fairmount, Francisville, parts of Brewerytown,etc. Most of lower North Philly.
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@davidw7 I didn't say all the streets are zombie under el train, but of the videos here he still films within the vicinity of the same hoods Kensington and Harrowgate area. Sometimes a little Fairhill gets mixed in which falls inline with the drug addict homeless epidemic videos because those 3 hoods border each other and are very dirty. So, just cus you didn't see the EL Kenzo and Allegheny aves doesn't mean he ain't spinning the same blocks of those hoods I can tell. Those are some of the ugliest filthiest areas. Right down the way there's Port Richmond yet he never shows you guys. Juniata is right in the other direction north of Kenzo with alleys and garages lmao. There's a purpose for his content, but it's sad too. And I'm a native saying this.
It gives our city a bad rep from outsiders. Everywhere that's modern and nice doesn't strictly mean gentrification right off the bat. I lived in Wynnfield, West Philly. Though there are many lower north, and gentrified south Philly hoods. Not all of it is. Overbook, Uptown, the Northeast, germantown, and Roxborough, East falls, Manayunk, isn't gentrified it's old time residents.
Philly is an old ass colonial city so not all of it was meant to be Brady bunch single town home green. The city was designed to fit a high volume of residence and was once 2 million population. There's a lot of alley way blocks in Lower north Philly and all throughout South Philly. Many of which are nice tucked away quiet little blocks. And most recently Philly sanitation is cleaning up the stinking filthy trash loads in Kensington by order of the new mayor. Too much has went on for too long under poor democratic officials in the past. Enough is enough with that.
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@lizardvideoz Second of all, you also keep saying, "it's not about crime it's about living conditions". So tell me, was I or was I not CLEARLY talking about living conditions throughout the city including my personal living conditions? Which debunks your thoughts on all of Philly because of what you see on your computer screen from an armchair and think you know something about my city. Why do you think so many ppl in the comments go, "I could never live there, it's dirty there, I would never drive through there, it's more like Filthydelfia, you see the skin color of where they are must be a coincidence"? I know why because this the only perspective they're shown. That's why I say it's misleading that ppl believe all of us black and brown live in shambles here like there's no actual decent updated housing architecture. I'm sitting up here telling you that there's plenty of desirable cleaner living conditions comparing to this in Philly and you just say stuff to me again like, "again it's about the living conditions" like mf what do you think I'm speaking on, spaceships. Lmao
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@lizardvideoz You're right his channel is mainly about poor living conditions. I would make my own videos if I had the equipment, and a working computer. Unfortunately, I don't because trying to do this kind of filming, editing, and uploading just isn't going to cut it with a smart phone. Right in the very neighborhood I sit in while typing this used to be mainly Irish and some Jewish. And, the Phillies baseball stadium used to be down the street from me. It was demolished in 1976, then the Veteran stadium was built. The Veteran stadium was knocked down I forget the exact year, but now we have what you'll as Citizens Bank Park in South Philly. If you were to come here by plane you'd see it. And, the neighborhoods are segregated but believe it or not blacks used to live around the whites upon arriving here for some time. The reason our grate grands & grandparents obviously picked up the accent from whites dropping most of southern accent. I should say there's a lot of areas very integrated more than you'd think. Like in South Philly you'll see Vietnamese Cambodians, Mexicans, in the same hood as the Italian whites, and blacks. In Juniata it's white, Hispanic, and Asian. Olney it's black, Chinese, Vietnamese, and some Hispanic.
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@ChopStixx900 Yeah no amount of death by homicide is okay by any means. The point I was trying to get across is that the rate in which ppl die is at a lower pace than it may seem just cause the homicides are more than the small cities. The way you explained it before made it seem like smaller cities are obsolete when they very much count. Like New Orleans is only but 380k ppl within a small dense geographical area with the numbers reeling closer to 300. It's getting unsafe for tourist down there. Shootouts happened right on Bourbon St involving tourist.
So, with that logic again about you can't compare big cities with small cities, and that they should only be grouped with the top ten also doesn't make sense. Why? Well, because LA is dam near 4mil ppl and NY is dam near 9mil. So, that means you absolutely cannot compare Philly to NY because NY is a world city and should only be compared to other world Intl' cities. Such as; Shenzhen, Tokyo, Shanghai, Wuhan, Beijing, Hongkong, New Delhi, Bangkok, Moscow, Paris, London, Sao Paulo, Rio De Janerio, and Mexico City. Am I right? According to your logic even though Philly recorded higher #'s than NY with 5x less ppl making it have a worse murder rate. But that don't count I can't do that because Philly is a drawf city to NY. Small cities don't count.
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@ChopStixx900 Murder rate is very important my guy why do you think they use it. So, Philly was under 300 four consecutive years that was the best the city did cracking down on weapons with overall shootings down. I'm not going hooray but it does mean the city was safer and not out of control like now. I'm hoping Philly can become as safe as NY, Portland, Seattle, Anchorage, Boston, Des Moines, Salt Lake City, Wichita, Denver, or even better Calobasos(A small Northern Californian city that has 0 each year). All ppl gotta do is stop picking up guns over every little thing and thinking it's a flex to be hard. Box if they wanna act hard. Did you see how the bul kept walking in front of CharlieBo's car acting like he forgot something? It's that type of stupid silly hood mentality "I wish a n*gg would" honk me. Like he was really acting like he was talking about something important only to be smart again and double back twice. Smh
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@BR-it2qe Many non black linguist obviously mainly being white did not care to study these characteristic features outside of white speech due to migration and segregation. Tell me why a British guy thought my accent sounded partially South African? And to me SA sound Australian, and many ppl think Philly sounds Aussie for some reason. Can you explain to me why a different British guy thought my accent had some Baltimore in it, that was his exact words?
Mind you, I never told him I was Philadelphian yet and I'm aware the two cities are within the same dialect family amongst white speakers because black Philly, and black Baltimore doesn't sound alike. I think black Baltimore speak more like white Baltimore than they realize. I even asked a British guy before, "did I sound southern at all to him even just a little?"...he said, NO. I was told my accent is mixed up and that it has different features in it that's there's a bit of Boston (I get a lot) Baltimore, south African, Philadelphian, with maybe a little southern and I'm only claiming that because of AAV.
But, no one ever asked me was I from the south with a straight face because you and I both know what a true southern accent sounds like, whether it's from a white or black. Chicago is the perfect example of what a black southerner is going to sound like because I too hear this country accent. For you to think this is what I sound like is hilarious. We don't say fa(fire) like Chicago in Philly we say (fi-yer), and we don't say "finna" in the Northeast surprise surprise. I'm pretty sure you thought blacks said that everywhere across the board. I grew up not knowing what that meant but later in life I learned it's meaning and that's a part of AAV. Lol
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@BR-it2qe You think you know more than me but if you took the time to stop being a stone dick head you'd hear where I'm coming from. This accent isn't typical of the Northeast cities because it wasn't as heavily segregated during early migrations. So, there was plenty of intermingling going on. Do we have a subtle form of Aave? Of course, but the point I'm making for the final time in your puny peanut brain is that our "accent", meaning intonation/inflection isn't southern sounding like black folks you'd hear in; Chicago, Milwaukee, Detroit, Gary, Indianapolis, Flint, St. Louis, etc. This is what I've noticed it's so clear cut, and obvious to any who has ears. Smfh! You're just trying to look YT smart. Man get your armchair linguist ass out of here! Rofl
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@ninoontheroof2067 👆🏽🤔🤔🤔 We've never tried to be like NYc tho. Personally, I fk wit NYc I have no hate in my blood for them. But, we have our own signature foods, slang, accent, clothing style, rappers, actors, directors, singers, clothing lines, comedians, boxers, basketball players, casinos, so many historical places. We have the Greater Philadelphia film industry. There was movies shot in NYc, but they had to use Philly to pretend it was NYc. They filmed so many movies here I can't name them. Philly been lit bro bro. I onno what type time you on. They may be a sister city, or brother city whatever u wanna call them, but we're self made, and NYc know that. And NYc do fk wit us wym? Only haters from any city not gone fk wit the next.
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You need to tread very careful out here bro it was just a mass shooting on that very block of Allegheny like two nights ago 9 ppl got shot and a few were killed I believe. Some guys hoped out of a parked car and just started spraying the crowd down. I don't know who they were after. Start doing these walking tours elsewhere bro bro. There's way more nicer scenic walkable less trashy hoods than this. And it's mainly these thirsty clout chasing teenagers out here doing all of these senseless killings.
This is why even in less drug fiend areas are becoming crime ridden from the 14-25 yr hitmen just jumping out on whoever wherever they see fit that they may or may not have any beef with. It's a scary and sad mentality they have killing over a IG TikTok beef. Smh! Anyway start going down Spring Garden, Fairmount, Francisville, Brewerytown, Strawberry Mansion (If you can keep doing zombieland Kenso you can go anywhere), East Falls, Many, Queens Village, The Italian Market, Pennsport, Point Breeze, Grays Ferry, SW Center City Devil's Pocket, Olde City, Cobb's Creek, Wynnfield, Overbrook, West and East Mt Airy ffs. Pls bro change the narrative of our city in these dark ass times besides tranqville Allegheny.
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@CharlieBo313 And, show none of Philly's. 😂🤣🤣🤷🏽♂️ I'll break it down to you by hood. Andorra(it's basically a suburb), Manatawna Farms, Shawmont, Roxborough, Manayunk, East Falls, Chestnut Hill, West Mt Airy, East Mt. Airy, Stenton/Cedarbrook, West Oaklane, Ogontz, Fern Rock, East Oak Lane, Olney(there's good and rugged parts), Lawncrest, Crescentville, all the greater Northeast, Frankford(it's rugged and nice parts), Tacony, Bridesburg, Mayfair, Juniata/Feltonville, West Germantown, Allegheny West(around Huntington Park & Allegheny & Indiana), Brewerytown( it's rugged and very nice), Francisville, Spring Garden, Fairnount, Poplar Richard Allen projects, Northern Liberties, Fishtown, Port Richmond, Olde Kensington(the upscale Kenzo not K&A), Yorktown, Overbrook, Parkside, Cobbs Creek(there's good & bad), Spruce Hill, Eastwick, Elmwood, Girard Estates, SW Center City/Schuylkill Park, Queen Village, Italian Market/Bella Vista, Society Hill, Lower Moyamensing, Mantua. Try South Philly for a change there's ratchet hood and chill parts, but overall South Philly is less rugged looking than North.
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@coreyladson883 I'm not sure why you're replying without @ me and then mixing up my comment with the OP. I never said I was biased, the OP did. Yeah, I wrote "lmao", and so? You upset? I'm telling the truth that the only section of North that this content creator shows his audience is Kenzo over and over every time. There's 30 different hoods in NP. Are some rundown, and trashy? Of course! But, there's no other hood in Philly popularized for its homeless, filth, and drug infestation the way it is in Kensington.
I'm sure there's videos of other sections of my city on here from other content creators, but not from him. He doesn't tour South Philly, and West Philly. He did uptown one time, ONE TIME. His focal point is the grit and grime. This dude barely even show the entire Strawberry Mansion. Lol he'll make sure he pick the most rundown block in Strawberry, and circle the same 3 block raduis then post it. Lol 🤷🏽♂️
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Charlie said we're neighbors. 🤣😂. No disrespect to DC I actually wanna hang out down there, but we're not neighbors, we're 2 and a half hours away. DC and Bmore are neighbors, and even they're different. Only thing that is the same is their population, their city's shape, and how they say errea. But that strip he is on reminds me of my city. Camden, Norristown, Wilmington, Chester, Newark, and Trenton are our neighbors.
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@johnnygarcia33133 This is mind boggling that you would fathom Philly isn't intl known. Hahaha!!! It's always NYrrs with y'all superiority complex delusions. Okay, let's forget the other cities since I thought you were just name dropping, and wasn't specific. When I spoke to ppl from other countries they knew exactly what, and where Philly is. Music festival? Okay?? Philly has the Made in America, and the Wawa welcome America concerts(ppl fly in intl for both get wit me). We have the first Zoo. Oh and the mummers parade. The liberty bell is just as iconic as the statue of liberty. Our tourism scale isn't on the level of LA or NYC obviously, but it's there brody. Second of all, Aer Lingus shamrock connects here directly, and so does, PR/DR, Iceland, France, Germany, Etihad, Qatar Airways fly direct, and more etc. Come on now get wit me! It be shocking me when some customers I deliver to be straight off the boat Britsh living here. Why would we have an Intl port if we ain't intl? Ppl come from all over the world just to run up the Art Museum steps. It's not special to us but, they love it. Your selling us way way too short to say the least. Talking about what do we have to offer. The same as any city. Stop the cap bruh!! Lol
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@chination1796 I'm crying at this comment yooooo, I didn't like the pizza I had in Brooklyn either. That jawn was a plate of cheese and grease. 😂😂😂. My plate was doused bruh. And, about the transit card thing ours used to be swipe at the turnstiles with a trans pass, or cash/tokens at the booth. Tokens could go in turnstiles too, but they discontinued tokens first.
They did away with that ancient swipe system, and now we have what they call, key cards that you just add, tap, and go as well. You can refill them at any kiosk, or online through your account which is the best part about it. So, if my card had 0 balance I could load more on my phone, so the driver can't kick you off. They look like regular credit cards with a chip in them because you can buy things with them at any store that takes debit.
Most big cities always get ideas from other major cities it's how they keep updated I found out. So, it's not really copying because a lot of smaller cities I found out adapted to Philly's system, and Philly is trying to convert its regional rail to a German like S bahn system to make them more like rapid transit style subway to make up for the lack of subway/el lines here. We only have 3 subway lines which one is also an El plus 6 light rail lines.
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@thescribbler495 Oh, so that's why I'm seeing all of these 2014, 15, 16, 17, 18 PPD Ford Taurus, SUV, 2016, 17, 18, 19 PFD Fire trucks ladders, Rescue, squads riding around. Brand new street dept trash trucks too. Brand new bike lanes and rental bike stations. And new housing developments being built. But we're the poorest city with all this new stuff just rolling in. 🤔
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@jpgm2015 Okay! I see what you mean. I notice regionally many cities look alike depending on their region. I noticed little similarity in DC, I'll have to really look again. I feel like it's a Northeast port city thing cus believe it or not, Wilmington, Camden, Trenton, Chester, Norristown, Reading, Allentown, even far as Harrisburg (almost 2 hours from Philly), and even parts of NYC like East New York, Brooklyn have that rowhouse look. Lol
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@bvsteel990 Yes there is! I've heard country sounding AA accents in STL, Cincinnati, Columbus, Indianapolis, Gary, Detroit, Flint, and Milwaukee. It F'd me up at first. KC could be the exception I never heard ppl from there, but KC is the heartland of the states, and it's said to be very generic(media accent) there amongst whites, so I'm sure it's the same for blacks.
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@bvsteel990 On top of that, when we said Midwest no one mentioned KC except you and W S. Plus things might sound different for you because you're Midwestern, and live south of these many Great Lake cities so it'll sound different to you. Question: How do you pronounce, "on" like, (ahn, auwn, or own), or "bell" ( bell or bail). One thing Midwestern about Detroit is how they say, Sean, Shawn, Shaun like Shahn. Here it's shauwwn.
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@chriswil5919 Saying you guys sound country ain't a flex. It's just a widespread accent in most midwest hoods. It's what we hear. Some ppl are horrible at detecting accents. But, California do slighty sound country a lil but not fully. It depends its like a mix of proper Rs with southern twang. They say stuff like, "keeids" that's a drawl. Same with Detroit. I think Chicago, Flint, and Stl Louis is just the deepest. Saying, doe, Flo, poe- lice, "own ma momma," Like it's a whole lot words that I can't even write down that has a full on drawl. Certain places in Cali like Inglewood talk proper, and have proper tone too. It just depends. I'm not saying it sounds backwoods Alabama or Atalanta cus they be mumbling sometimes, but there's times in goes in for a deep southern dive and back in certain places.
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